Consulter la cote et le prix de Very Rare Mummified Baboon Hand
Description : VERY RARE MUMMIFIED BABOON HAND
The practice of mummification has been performed for thousands of years throughout the world from South America to Asia, but of course the most famous mummies are those of ancient Egypt. Most often associated with important personages, mummification was also performed on certain animals important to the Egyptian people, either as pets or as representations of the gods, or simply as food for the deceased in the afterlife. Baboons were significant in this culture as representations of Thoth, one of the most important deities in the Egyptian pantheon, god of the Moon and of wisdom. He was frequently represented with the head of an ibis, or that of a baboon. Not being native to Egypt, baboons were imported at great cost during the New Kingdom and unsuccessfully bred as ritual animals. Baboons were bred specifically for their religious significance and sacred troops accompanied nobility in the afterlife as they were considered vessels for the gods to inhabit.
Although the provenance of the present specimen has been lost, it has been identified as the left hand of a baboon, with the characteristic hessian cartonnage. Where the covering is missing, the blackened skin is exposed, adding to the evocative effect, as do the curving fingers. The two middle fingers show exposed distal phalange bones, and at the wrist, part of the lunate bone protrudes amidst the straw-like tufts of desiccated flesh. A highly unusual specimen, it measures 6 1/4 inches long and 2 1/2 inches wide.
Prix: 0.00 USD🔓Accès libre sans carte bancaire.
Estimations(basse-haute) : 3000 USD-4000.0 USD🔓Accès libre sans carte bancaire.
À propos du lot
n° 272 Titre : Very Rare Mummified Baboon Hand I.M. Chait Gallery, Salle de vente
, Los Angeles, US🔓Accès libre sans carte bancaire. Titre de la vente : Asian & International Fine Arts Auction Date de la vente : 04/10/2015🔓Accès libre sans carte bancaire. Référence de l'enchère
: Live Sale