Egyptian Seated Cat
This finely cast hollow bronze cat is depicted wide-eyed and alert, seated on its haunches with a snaking tail that mischievously curls to its forepaws. Her muzzle has been neatly incised with radiating whiskers and her ears, which exhibit horizontal striations, are pricked as if listening. Slender in form and with high shoulders, she cuts a clean form displaying the sculpture's ability to capture both naturalness and energy, in a particularly complicated shape to cast. She wears a lion-headed aegis on her chest, which hangs from a cowrie shell necklace. In ancient Egyptian tradition, an aegis was a type of gorget (a suspended neck shield) that usually bore a lion-face and was associated with Bastet, the feline goddess of warfare. In the Late Period (664-332 BC), such figurines were often deposited as ex-votos in the temples of Bastet to honour the goddess and attract her protection on the donor. She has a bronze khepri-scarab on her forehead which has been carved in high relief. Khepri was the ancient Egyptian god of rebirth and the sunrise, and took the form of a beetle-headed man.
Provenance
Publications
- , 28 November 1979, London
- , Sale 4925, Antiquities, London, South Kensington
Exhibitions
- Musée d'Art Classique de Mougins (MACM), Mougins, France, from 2020
N.B. Our online collection is being continually updated thanks to ongoing research and documentation efforts carried out by the MACM documentation team. Any additional information is welcome, please contact us.