Published Catalogue Text: Ancient Mediterranean and Near Eastern Bronzes at the Harvard Art Museums
This stylized, flat female figurine, possible of a priestess, is mounted in a copper alloy knucklebone. She stands frontally with arms outstretched, and there are very few details of drapery or anatomy (1). The facial features shown—eyes, nose, and mouth—are large and irregular. There is no indication of hair, but a peaked head covering (a hat or possibly the edge of the mantle) is apparent. The figure wears a sleeveless garment, belted at the waist, with the mantle pulled around the body. The right hand is extended holding something flat, either a bowl for libations or a loaf of bread; the left hand is either covered with drapery or worn smooth. As similar figurines show, it probably would have held another vessel close to the body. The base is a knucklebone, similar to 2012.1.46. It is unlikely that the statuette was originally attached to this base.
NOTES:
1. Compare M. Bentz, Etruskische Votivbronzen des Hellenismus (Florence, 1992) 102-105, type 22, pl. 30; F. Jurgeit, Die etruskischen und italischen Bronzen sowie Gegenstände aus Eisen, Blei, und Leder im Badischen Landesmuseum Karlsruhe, Terra Italia 5 (Pisa, 1999) 84-85, nos. 114-15, pl. 37; A. Naso, I bronzi etruschi e italici del Römisch-Germanisches Zentralmuseum, Kataloge vor- und frühgeschichtlicher Altertümer 33 (Mainz, 2003) 35-36, nos. 43-45, pl. 20; and A. Caravale, Museo Claudio Faina di Orvieto: Vasellame (Milan, 2006) 93-104, nos. 98-112.
Lisa M. Anderson