T. FISHER UNWIN
LONDON: ADELPHI TERRACE
LEIPSIC: INSELSTRASSE 20
First published in 1913
(All rights reserved)
PREFATORY NOTE
The following essays were written during a period of more than thirty years, and published at intervals of varying lengths. The oldest of them appeared in Les Monuments de l’Art Antique of my friend Olivier Rayet, and the others in La Nature at the request of Gaston Tissandier, in the Gazette des Beaux-Arts, in the Monuments Piot, and chiefly in the Revue de l’Art Ancien et Moderne, where my friend Jules Comte gave them hospitality. As most of these periodicals do not circulate in purely scientific circles, the essays are almost unknown to experts, and will for the greater part be new to them. Indeed, they were not intended for them. In writing them, I desired to familiarize the general public, who were scarcely aware of their existence, with some of the fine pieces of Egyptian sculpture and goldsmiths’ work, and to point out how to approach them in order to appreciate their worth. Some, after various vicissitudes, had found a home in the Museums of Paris or of Cairo, and I wrote the notices in my study, deducing at leisure the reasons for my criticisms. Others I caught as they emerged from the ground, the very day of or the day after their discovery, and I described them on the spot, as it were, under the influence of my first encounter with them: they themselves dictated to me what I said of them.
Some persons will perhaps be surprised to find the same ideas developed at length in several parts of the book. If they will carry their thoughts back to the date at which I wrote, they will recognize the necessity of such repetitions. Egyptologists, absorbed in the task of deciphering, had eyes for scarcely anything except the historical or religious literary texts; and so amateurs or inquirers, finding nothing in the works of experts to help them to any sound interpretation of the characteristic manifestations of Egyptian art, were reduced to register them without always understanding them, for lack of knowledge of the concepts that had imposed their forms on them. It is now admitted that such objects of art are above all utilitarian, and that they were originally commissioned with the fixed purpose of assuring the well-being of human survival in an existence beyond the grave. Thirty years ago, few were aware of this, and to convince the rest, it was necessary to insist continually on the proofs and to multiply examples. I might of course have suppressed a portion of them here, but had I done so, should I not have been reproached, and quite rightly, with misrepresenting and almost falsifying a passage in the history of the Egyptian arts? The ideas which govern our present conception did not at once reach the point where they now are. They came into being one after the other, and spread themselves by successive waves of unequal intensity, welcomed with favour by some, rejected by others. I had to begin over again a dozen times and in a dozen different ways before I obtained their almost universal acceptation. I was at first laughed at when I put forward the opinion that there was not one unique art in Egypt, identical from one extremity of the valley to the other except for almost imperceptible nuances of execution, but that there were at least half a dozen local schools, each with its own traditions and its own principles, often divided into several studios, the technique of which I tried to determine. In the end the incredulous rallied to my side, and it would have been bad grace on my part to leave out of the articles which helped to convert them, at least I hope so, the repetitions which led to their being convinced.
Besides, I am sure that they will render my readers of to-day the same service that they rendered formerly to my colleagues in Egyptology. When they have thoroughly entered into the spirit of the Egyptian ideas concerning existence in this world and the next, they will understand what Egyptian art is, and why it is above everything realistic. The question for Egyptian art was not to create a type of independent beauty in the person of the individuals who furnish the principal elements of it, but to express truthfully the features which constituted that person and which must be preserved identical as long as anything of him persisted among the living and the dead. But why should I epitomize here in a necessarily incomplete way ideas which are amply set forth in the book itself? I shall do better in using the small space left me in thanking the publishers who have kindly authorized me to reproduce the illustrations which accompanied my articles, Jules Comte, the directors of La Nature, and my old friends of the firm of Hachette. They have thus collaborated in this book, and it will owe a large part of its success to their kindness.
CONTENTS
| PAGE | |
| Prefatory Note | [5] |
| I | |
| Egyptian Statuary and its Schools | [17] |
| II | |
| Some Portraits of Mycerinus | [36] |
| III | |
| A Scribe’s Head of the IVth or Vth Dynasty | [49] |
| IV | |
| Skhemka, his Wife and Son: a Group found at Memphis | [55] |
| V | |
| The Crouching Scribe: Vth Dynasty | [60] |
| VI | |
| The New Scribe of the Gizeh Museum | [66] |
| VII | |
| The Kneeling Scribe: Vth Dynasty | [74] |
| VIII | |
| Pehournowri: Statuette in painted Limestone found at Memphis | [79] |
| IX | |
| The Dwarf Khnoumhotpou: Vth or VIth Dynasty | [85] |
| X | |
| The “Favissa” of Karnak, and the Theban School of Sculpture | [90] |
| XI | |
| The Cow of Deîr-el-Baharî | [106] |
| XII | |
| The Statuette of Amenôphis IV | [120] |
| XIII | |
| Four Canopic Heads found in the Valley of the Kings at Thebes | [126] |
| XIV | |
| A Head of the Pharaoh Harmhabi | [135] |
| XV | |
| The Colossus of Ramses II at Bedrecheîn | [140] |
| XVI | |
| Egyptian Jewellery in the Louvre | [145] |
| XVII | |
| The Treasure of Zagazig | [154] |
| XVIII | |
| Three Statuettes in Wood | [172] |
| XIX | |
| A Fragment of a Theban Statuette | [178] |
| XX | |
| The Lady Touî of the Louvre and Egyptian Industrial Sculpture in Wood | [183] |
| XXI | |
| Some Perfume Ladles of the XVIIIth Dynasty | [190] |
| XXII | |
| Some Green Basalt Statuettes of the Saïte Period | [195] |
| XXIII | |
| A Find of Saïte Jewels at Saqqarah | [201] |
| XXIV | |
| A Bronze Egyptian Cat belonging to M. Barrère | [208] |
| XXV | |
| A Find of Cats in Egypt | [214] |
| Index | [217] |