Babcock, Jennifer Miyuki (2022) Curated Desertscapes in Ancient Egyptian Tombs and Investigating Iconographies of the Wild. Arts, 11 (3). p. 59. ISSN 2076-0752
![[thumbnail of arts-11-00059.pdf]](http://eprints.asianrepository.com/style/images/fileicons/text.png)
arts-11-00059.pdf - Published Version
Download (4MB)
Abstract
Because of a long-standing bias toward examining human representation in Egyptian art, scholars have overlooked many details of how wild animals are rendered, at least until recently. Usually, the stylistic differences between animals and humans in ancient Egyptian art are emphasized to support the argument that animals and their environs encapsulate ancient Egyptian ideas of “chaos”, while humans and their cultivated world encapsulate “order”. A closer look at animal representations shows that the same artistic restraints were placed on both human and animal representation, such as with the use of the canon of proportions, strict register lines, and iconicity. This article examines predynastic and early dynastic material and surveys representations of desert animals from Egyptian tombs from the Old Kingdom to the New Kingdom to demonstrate that their artistic treatment is still rule-bound and conforms to a sense of visual order. This paper challenges some of the scholarly interpretations, which assert that dichotomous ideas of chaos and order were represented stylistically and iconographically. View Full-Text
Keywords: desert animals; ancient Egypt; chaos vs. order; tomb imagery; ceremonial objects; formal analysis; art history;
Item Type: | Article |
---|---|
Subjects: | L Education > L Education (General) |
Depositing User: | APLOS Library |
Date Deposited: | 23 Jun 2022 07:51 |
Last Modified: | 23 Jun 2022 07:51 |
URI: | http://eprints.asianrepository.com/id/eprint/388 |