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Link to original content: http://web.archive.org/web/20171219104229/https://www.metmuseum.org/toah/works-of-art/24.2.2
Kneeling statue of Amenemope-em-hat | Work of Art | Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History | The Metropolitan Museum of Art
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Kneeling statue of Amenemopetemhat

Period: Late Period, Saite

Dynasty: Dynasty 26

Reign: reign of Psamtik I

Date: 664–610 B.C.

Geography: From Egypt; Said to be from Memphite Region, Memphis (Mit Rahina), Ptah Temple

Medium: Meta-Greywacke

Dimensions: H. 64.5 × W. 32 × D. 40.5 cm (25 3/8 × 12 5/8 × 15 15/16 in.)

Credit Line: Rogers Fund, 1924

Accession Number: 24.2.2

Description

Amenemope-em-hat was director of the Singers of the North and Overseer of the Singers of Amenemope. The second title was inherited from his father, whose equally fine statue has recently been discovered at Tanis, where there was a cult of Amenemope, a form of the god Amun. The first title implies wider authority.



Amenemope-em-hat holds before him the cult object of the cow-eared goddess Hathor. The proportions of this figure, its muscularity, and such details as the slanted ridges of the collarbone and the shallow depression down the center of the torso represent a conscious attempt in the Late Period to emulate the classic works of the Old and Middle Kingdoms.

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