
Bust of an Administrator of the Domain of Neith
An item at Metropolitan Museum of Art
This small, exquisitely carved bust was once part of a kneeling or a standing statue of a man who held before him either a smaller figure of a deity or a shrine containing the divine image. Traces of the object are still visible at the lower edge of his chest. The sophisticated sensibility of the face with its slanted eyes and small smiling protruding mouth belongs to a period of about fifty years around 600 BC, when the recoalescence of styles developed in the northern and southern parts of the country achieved a harmonious balance. The man's name, carved on the lower part of the back pillar, has been lost. The upper part gives his most important title, "Administrator of the Domains of Neith (goddess of Sais)," and the beginning of the curiously cryptic appeal to the "local god" that scholars call the Saite formula.
Egyptian Art
An exhibit at Metropolitan Museum of Art
The Met collection of ancient Egyptian art consists of approximately 30,000 objects of artistic, historical, and cultural importance, dating from about 300,000 BCE to the 4th century CE. A signifcant percentage of the collection is derived from the Museum's three decades of archaeological work in Egypt, initiated in 1906 in response to increasing interest in the culture of ancient Egypt.