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The Royal Descendant Hetepheres
The Royal Descendant Hetepheres
Image © Worcester Art Museum, all rights reserved.

The Royal Descendant Hetepheres

DateOld Kingdom, about 2543–2120 BCE
Mediumlimestone
Dimensions137.2 x 44.6 x 26.5 cm (54 x 17 9/16 x 10 7/16 in.)
ClassificationsSculpture
Credit LineMuseum Purchase
Object number1934.48
Label TextHetepheres was the mother of the pharaoh's hairdresser, Re-Wer, who was honored in a stone tomb at Giza. Carved in high relief from a single slab, this life-size statue of Hetepheres was originally part of a family sculptural group of five figures that included her husband, son, and grandchildren. Her sculpted likeness furnished a recognizable image for her ka, or life essence, to inhabit, should her mummified physical body be destroyed. It also served as a focal point for veneration by her survivors, who would visit the necropolis on feast days. Now headless, Hetepheres stands with her left arm at her side; her right arm was once raised, probably to embrace her grandchild. Enlivened by the subtle modeling of swelling breasts, slender waist, and hips revealed beneath a sheer garment, the rigid, artificial pose of the figure- fixed for eternity- is typical of Old Kingdom art.ProvenancePaul Mallon, Paris, France; then sold to the Worceser Art Museum, 1934.
On View
On view
black background
Ancient Egyptian
about 1360 BCE
Djefhapy
Ancient Egyptian
Middle Kingdom, about 1980–1760 BCE
Ram of Mendez-Sculptor's Model
Ancient Egyptian
Saite
Ancient Egyptian
Old Kingdom, 4th - 5th Dynasty, about 2560 BCE
Conservation Status: After Treatment
Ancient Egyptian
Old Kingdom, about 2543–2120 BCE
Flying Bird Relief
Ancient Egyptian
about 2030–1650 BCE, Middle Kingdom
Kohl Pot
Ancient Egyptian
Middle Kingdom, about 1980–1760 BCE
Carved Column
Ancient Maya
800–900 CE
Maya Wall Panel
Ancient Maya
about 800 CE
Head
Sumerian
2750–2500 BCE
Antioch
late fourth or early fifth century C.E.