Art Museum Visit
This particular piece of art is a limestone statue, which in all likelihood, originally was a painted piece. Limestone was a precious mineral, and would have most likely been honed and by prepared by a servant or slave for the artisan to work with. This statue is considered to be sculpture in the round as there are no additional supports required (Barnet 113). A great deal of detail is carved into the headdress, and because of the realism qualities, the statue is of a woman. A number of these statues were designed in small decorative forms; however, many were crafted in life size and even larger forms. The proportions seem to be to scale. The Egyptian use of proportions is a method that depicts the human figure in a consistent way, using measurements derived from the observation of real bodies and related to Egyptian metrology (Baines 9). Every detail of the statues extremities are visually clear, with regard to the fingers, demarcation for toes, etc. The face is beautifully carved and the features are proportionate as well. Typically, these kinds of statutes represented a person of high status in Ancient Egypt.
Egyptian representation in art is considered central to the definition of the culture and depicts, defines, and embodies the order of the world as they knew it (Baines 23). This kind of art work is rarely without a value basis. Given the detail of the composition suggests that artists had considerable prestige and autonomy. Moreover, the representations show a sincere concern with the "visual image, but they are subordinate to the socially important purpose which representation serves (Freeman & Cox 124).
The artwork of the New Kingdom can be viewed as the last of the classic Egyptian style of the Middle Kingdom...
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