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LOT 0012B

Egyptian Painted Wood / Gesso Chair Legs - Lions (pr)

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Egypt, Late Dynastic Period, 26th to 31st Dynasty, ca. 664 to 332 BCE. An incredible and stylish matched pair of hand-carved wooden legs - used to support chair bodies or those of other large pieces of furniture - covered in gesso and painted with a myriad of citrine, vermilion, jet-black hues. Each leg presents with a stocky rectangular body surmounted by the head of a lion, a pair of delineated paws atop an integral plinth, and all above a thick foot portion. A pair of square mortises is present on the interior side and verso of each leg, with a fragment of an original stretcher bar still retained within one rear mortise. The amusing leonine faces boast recessed eyes and raised brows, broad snouts, puffy jowls with painted whiskers and red lips, protruding cheek bones, and perky ears, all framed around a red-and-black mane. The bodies are further decorated with three columns of red and black scales alternating between slender orange scales. Size of each: 3.125" W x 14.8" H (7.9 cm x 37.6 cm); 15.4" H (39.1 cm) on included custom stand.

For a stylistically similar example made from faience, please see The Metropolitan Museum of Art, accession number 1977.170

Provenance: private Pennsylvania, USA collection; ex-William Ashby estate collection, California, USA

All items legal to buy/sell under U.S. Statute covering cultural patrimony Code 2600, CHAPTER 14, and are guaranteed to be as described or your money back.

A Certificate of Authenticity will accompany all winning bids.

We ship worldwide to most countries and handle all shipping in-house for your convenience.

#149011
Condition Report: Both legs have losses to areas of lower foot, lion feet, bodies, and areas of head as shown. Nicks and abrasions to heads, bodies, feet, and bases, with chipping and light fading to original gesso and pigmentation commensurate with age, and several stable fissures that do not compromise the integrity of the legs. Nice earthen deposits and great traces of original pigmentation throughout, and fine patina to unpainted areas.

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Time, Location
26 Sep 2019
USA, Louisville, KY
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[ translate ]

Egypt, Late Dynastic Period, 26th to 31st Dynasty, ca. 664 to 332 BCE. An incredible and stylish matched pair of hand-carved wooden legs - used to support chair bodies or those of other large pieces of furniture - covered in gesso and painted with a myriad of citrine, vermilion, jet-black hues. Each leg presents with a stocky rectangular body surmounted by the head of a lion, a pair of delineated paws atop an integral plinth, and all above a thick foot portion. A pair of square mortises is present on the interior side and verso of each leg, with a fragment of an original stretcher bar still retained within one rear mortise. The amusing leonine faces boast recessed eyes and raised brows, broad snouts, puffy jowls with painted whiskers and red lips, protruding cheek bones, and perky ears, all framed around a red-and-black mane. The bodies are further decorated with three columns of red and black scales alternating between slender orange scales. Size of each: 3.125" W x 14.8" H (7.9 cm x 37.6 cm); 15.4" H (39.1 cm) on included custom stand.

For a stylistically similar example made from faience, please see The Metropolitan Museum of Art, accession number 1977.170

Provenance: private Pennsylvania, USA collection; ex-William Ashby estate collection, California, USA

All items legal to buy/sell under U.S. Statute covering cultural patrimony Code 2600, CHAPTER 14, and are guaranteed to be as described or your money back.

A Certificate of Authenticity will accompany all winning bids.

We ship worldwide to most countries and handle all shipping in-house for your convenience.

#149011
Condition Report: Both legs have losses to areas of lower foot, lion feet, bodies, and areas of head as shown. Nicks and abrasions to heads, bodies, feet, and bases, with chipping and light fading to original gesso and pigmentation commensurate with age, and several stable fissures that do not compromise the integrity of the legs. Nice earthen deposits and great traces of original pigmentation throughout, and fine patina to unpainted areas.

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Estimate
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Time, Location
26 Sep 2019
USA, Louisville, KY
Auction House
Unlock