Two-Sided Plaque with Gazelles ca. 1550–664 New Kingdom–Third Intermediate Period This two-sided plaque is decorated with incised scenes, depicting a pair of gazelles on each side. Residues of green glaze suggest it was once pale blue-green in color. Dorcas gazelles can be recognized here, with their distinctive lyre-shaped horns bent backwards in a slight S-shape. They are depicted with different attitudes that are related to the gazelle’s behavior in the context of the desert hunt. Although it is difficult to reconstitute the appearance of the object to which it belonged originally, fai


Two-Sided Plaque with Gazelles ca. 1550–664 New Kingdom–Third Intermediate Period This two-sided plaque is decorated with incised scenes, depicting a pair of gazelles on each side. Residues of green glaze suggest it was once pale blue-green in color. Dorcas gazelles can be recognized here, with their distinctive lyre-shaped horns bent backwards in a slight S-shape. They are depicted with different attitudes that are related to the gazelle’s behavior in the context of the desert hunt. Although it is difficult to reconstitute the appearance of the object to which it belonged originally, faience bowls and chalices with similar incised scenes representing the desert and the marshes were produced in the Late Periods, reminiscent of the New Kingdom and its "bucolic" representations of Two-Sided Plaque with Gazelles. ca. 1550–664 Faience. New Kingdom–Third Intermediate Period. From Egypt


Size: 4000px × 2667px
Photo credit: © MET/BOT / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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