Head of a goddess or queen
about 300–270 B.C.
Medium/TechniqueBronze
DimensionsHeight: 25.5 cm (10 1/16 in.)
Credit LineCatharine Page Perkins Fund
Accession number96.712
On View
On viewClassificationsSculpture
Collections
This idealized female head, said to have been found at Memphis in Egypt, leaves it unclear who is represented. The flawless features and loosely fastened, undulating hair, are appropriate for a goddess such as Artemis or Aphrodite; the style may show the influence of Skopas, one of the leading Greek sculptors of the fourth century. Yet the head also bears a marked resemblance-especially the long, delicate nose-to portraits of Arsinoë II, queen of Egypt in the 270s B.C.; the ribbon in her hair could be a diadem, signature headgear of later Greek royalty.
ProvenanceBy 1892: Count Michel Tyszkiewicz Collection (according to W. Frohner, La Collection Tyszkiewicz, p. 39: trouvé en Égypte); by 1896: with Edward Perry Warren (according to Warren's records: Said to have been found in Egypt at Memphis.); purchased by MFA from Edward Perry Warren, October 1896
about 540–520 B.C.
about 500 B.C.
2nd century B.C.
about 210–170 B.C.
mid-4th century B.C.
mid-5th century B.C.
about 1700–1450 B.C.
about 750–700 B.C.
late 8th-early 7th centuries B.C.
750–700 B.C.
about 750 B.C.
about 750 B.C.