
Francesca Hickin
Head of Department
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£18,000 - £22,000
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Head of Department

Associate Specialist
Provenance:
Anonymous sale; Sotheby's, London, 10th July 1972, lot 86.
Private collection, Switzerland.
Sculptures such as the above depict worshippers, and were dedicated in temples as devotional votives, offering continuous prayer to the gods in their owner's absence. The characteristic layered skirts worn by these figures are thought to have been modelled after sheepskin skirts worn by devotees during rituals. For a full statuette of the type, measuring just 20cm in height, see the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, acc. no. AN1919.65. Arguably the most extraordinary sculptures of this type come from Mari, situated in modern-day Syria, and were discovered in the Ninni-zaza Temple: an over life-sized statue of a seated woman, wearing the layered fleecy skirt along with a mantle of the same material, reproduced in C.J. Du Ry, Art of the Ancient Near and Middle East, New York, 1969, p.63, and the standing statue of King Iku-Shamagan. Both are now in the Damascus Museum.