Statue of lady standing (Lady of Brussels), protodynastic, 2nd dynasty (around 2650 BC), Saqqara (?), Limestone. Musée du Cinquantenaire (Brussels, Belgium). Made with RealityCapture.
This exceptional woman statue, often described in literature as the Lady of Brussels, is one of the oldest testimonies of private stone sculpture in Egypt. The archaic treatment of the forms, among others the absence of neck, makes it possible to date it from the end of the 2nd dynasty. The lady wears a heavy, finely woven wig and is dressed in a long, low-cut dress that reveals the shapes of her body. Although the origin of the statue is not known, it is probably a funerary statue from a necropolis of the capital, perhaps Saqquara. It is surprising that this woman of the elite is presented alone and not alongside her husband.
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