~ Figural Urn.
Culture: Zapotec
Date: A.D. 450-650
Period: Late Classic, Monte Albán IIIb
Place of origin: Mexico, Oaxaca
Medium: Earthenware, post-fire paint (red).
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@slangfromthesun
~ Figural Urn.
Culture: Zapotec
Date: A.D. 450-650
Period: Late Classic, Monte Albán IIIb
Place of origin: Mexico, Oaxaca
Medium: Earthenware, post-fire paint (red).
John Brosio (American, 1967) - Two Earthlings (2003)
Hekateion, 1st–2nd century a.d. Roman Marble
H. 12 in. (30.48 cm) The Bothmer Purchase Fund, 1987 (1987.11.2)
This hekateion, or triple-bodied Hekate, recalls Alkamene’s Hekate Epipyrgidia, which was erected around 425 B.C. on the Athena Nike bastion of the Akropolis. Alkamene’s statue was one of the earliest representations of the retrospective style known as archaistic, which imitated the stiff, linear quality of drapery that marked works of the sixth century B.C. On this marble statuette, three figures of Hekate stand with their feet together. Each wears an archaistic peplos belted over a long overfold. A triangular pattern of folds converges between the breasts, and the drapery over the legs has central pleats and a regular pattern of folds. Each of the figures carries two torches, attributes of Hekate, the goddess who presided over pathways and crossroads, especially at night. Hekate was a goddess of the moon and of nocturnal sorcery, and, like Hermes, traveled to and from the underworld and earth. The three figures of the goddess also wear poloi, cylindrical headdresses often associated with female deities of rebirth.
Hekate was a popular deity and guardian from the time of Hesiod until late antiquity, the recipient of private as well as public cult worship. In addition to the statue of Hekate Epipyrgidia that presided over the entrance to the Athenian Akropolis, triple-bodied representations of the goddess frequently stood in front of private homes and at crossroads. As guardian of the gates to Hades, she is also associated with the chthonic realm. Qualities of permanence and stability that are inherent in the archaistic style are appropriate for an image that must be steadfast and inflexible in order to function properly. metmuseum
Thomas Theodor Heine (1867-1948), ‘Die Serpentintänzerin’, “Das Fest der Elemente” by Oskar Bie, 1909 Source
A carving depicting Jambudweep, The ancient idea of India Ranakpur Jain Temple, Rajasthan (via Instagram: Culturescroll)
Painting, fan leaf mounted as a hanging scroll. Ink and colour on mica-covered paper. Signed and sealed.Attributed to: Kawanabe Kyosai (河鍋暁斎) 19thC(late) Made in: Japan
The British Museum
Chalcedony ring stone, Venus with a supplicant at an altar to Priapus.
Roman, late 1st century BC - early 1st century AD
Faience Figurines of a Male Couple Engaging in Intercourse
Circa 1st Century AD to 3rd Century AD
Dimensions: 4.50″ (11.4cm) high x 7.25″ (18.4cm) wide
Medium Faience, Origin Egypt, Gallery Location UK
- The ideal Egyptian family was a very traditional one, consisting of father, mother and children and such concept was central to society and to official discourse. Regardless of that, we sometimes manage to notice glimpses of other relationships existing in spite of all such official attitudes. It remains vastly unclear what exact views Ancient Egyptians fostered about homosexuality, as the term is nowadays intended. All literary documents that actually contain sexually orientated stories, never name the nature of the sexual deeds but instead use rather stilted and flowery paraphrases. On the other hand, ancient Egyptian documents do not show same-sex relationships seen as neither reprehensible nor despicable, nor are there any mentions of homosexual acts as being set under penalty. During the Fourth, Fifth and Sixth Dynasties (ca. 2613-2181 BC) much artistic experimentation took place in the ways that affection could be represented between husband and wife on official monuments and it was during this period that a window of opportunity was adroitly used by two men, who were able to have their own funerary monument constructed as an example of demonstrating male to male intimacy and affection in an otherwise phallocentric society. The tomb inscriptions and frescos of two high offcials, Nyankh-khnum and Khnum-hotep, who both lived and served under the 5th Dynasty pharaoh Niuserre (2494-2345 BC) and who were buried together in the same mastaba are well known and suggest that homosexuality, in terms of sexual orientation, was completely accepted. Regardless of existing evidence that other family members were buried in their tomb, the tomb was expressly built for these two officials to co- habit for eternity, with their wives appearance being completely perfunctory. The scenes of two men embracing and holding hand are unique in private tombs and very little can be said about their meaning beyond the fact that they express publicly the close involvement of these two men, offering us the chance to view the relationship between Nyankh-khnum and Khnum-hotep in a different light. Our figurines of two men, with the penetrative partner kneeling in front of the receiving partner who is lying on his back, and lifting the receiving partner’s pelvis for penetration, although belonging to a much later period, are to be seen under the same tolerant light. Egyptian faience is a non-clay based ceramic, composed of powdered quartz or sand, with small amounts of calcite lime and a mixture of alkalis, the surface covered with a vitreous glaze and often containing copper pigments to create a bright blue-green luster. Faience has been very widely used for the creation of small objects from beads to statuettes, and is found in both elite and popular contexts. – (LO.1369)
Untitled, Zdislav Beksinski
Errol Le Cain
Illustration for Brother Grimms’ “Thorn Rose”,1977
Electrum falcon pendant, Egypt, 20th-18th century BC
from The Michael C. Carlos Museum
Crows Flying in a Snowstorm by Itō Sōzan (1920′s)
The Seikilos epitaph is the oldest surviving complete musical composition, including musical notation, from anywhere in the world. The song, the melody of which is recorded, alongside its lyrics, in ancient Greek musical notation, was found engraved on a 1st or 2nd century CE tombstone (a stele) from the Hellenistic town of Tralles near present-day Aydın, Turkey, near Ephesus. While older music with notation exists (for example the Hurrian songs), all of it is fragmentary; the Seikilos epitaph is unique in that it is a complete composition. The inscription is translated below:
“While you live, shine have no grief at all life exists only for a short while and Time demands his due.
I am a tombstone, an image. Seikilos placed me here as a long-lasting sign of deathless remembrance.”
You can listen to a recording of the Seikilos Song here: https://youtu.be/9RjBePQV4xE
Jean Delville, Prometheus, 1907.
Saraswati by Artist -Ankan Sarkar, Bengal
Illustration from ‘Book of Death’ series, Kay Nielsen, 1911
Scythian Griffin Holding a Stag’s Head Pazyryk, Russian Altai Mountains 14thC BC