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"Servant"
Statue
Limestone, pigment
Old Kingdom, Dynasty 5, ca. 2477 B.C.
Giza
Purchased in Cairo, 1920
OIM 10628
 
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This
sculpture shows a potter using a hand-turned wheel to produce the clay
pots that were so necessary for cooking, eating, drinking, and storage
in ancient Egypt. So much pottery was used that pot sherds are the most
common artifacts found by archaeologists.
The
potter played a key role in ancient Egyptian society, but he lived at
the bottom of the social order. The arduousness of his work, which involved
hauling clay from the Nile and exposure to river parasites, is shown by
the way his ribs stand out and his gaunt look. To quote an ancient Egyptian
text from around 2000 B.C., "The potter is under the soil, though
as yet among the living; He grubs in the mud more than a pig, in order
to fire his pots…If air enters his nose, it comes straight from
the fire."
This
statue was placed in the tomb of a wealthy family to ensure that they
would have pottery to use forever in the afterlife. Other "servant"
statues from tombs are shown performing such tasks as bread-making, beer-brewing,
butchering, and even music-making, giving us a wealth of information about
daily life in ancient Egypt.
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