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ClassificationsAncient Egyptian Art

Door for Falcon Casket

Place CreatedEgypt, Africa
CultureEgyptian
Date722-332 BCE
MediumBronze
Credit LineGift of the Georges Ricard Foundation
Dimensions2 5/8 x 2 1/2 in., 3/16 in., 10 g (6.7 x 6.3 cm, 0.5 cm, 3/8 oz.)
Object number2018.010.108B
Label TextIn the 1st millennium, animal cults became increasingly popular. The ancient Egyptians worshiped certain animals as the embodiments of a god’s power on earth. Falcons represented the god Horus and his various cultic forms. Falcons were bred at sites such as the sacred animal necropolises at Saqqara and Abusir. Pilgrims could purchase ritually sacrificed and mummified falcons contained within metal coffins to present as offerings to the cults of Horus.

Horus rests on a rectangular box as a shrine with cornice molding. The god wears a double crown of Upper and Lower Egypt, with the curling element of the lower Egyptian crown intact. The feathering and the rough skin of the falcon’s talons are carefully incised. The fierce expression of the raptor is rendered with unusual intensity. The panel at the rear end of the shrine could be removed to place the mummified falcon inside the casket.
Exhibition HistoryLife and the Afterlife: Ancient Egyptian Art from the Senusret Collection, Michael C. Carlos Museum, February 4 - August 6, 2023
Published ReferencesMelinda K. Hartwig, ed., Life and The Afterlife: Ancient Egyptian Art from the Senusret Collection (Atlanta: Michael C. Carlos Museum, 2023), catalogue entry 54.
ProvenanceSaid to be ex coll. Lord George Talbot. Ex coll. Georges Ricard Foundation, Santa Barbara, California, possibly purchased from Roger Fernand Galliano, Paris, France.
Status
Not on view
Collections
  • Ancient Egyptian, Nubian, and Near Eastern Art