CHAPTER IV.
PAINTING AND SCULPTURE.
The statues and bas-reliefs which decorated the temples and tombs of Ancient Egypt were for the most part painted. Coloured stones, such as granite, basalt, diorite, serpentine, and alabaster, sometimes escaped this law of polychrome; but in the case of sandstone, limestone, or wood it was rigorously enforced. If sometimes we meet with uncoloured monuments in these materials, we may be sure that the paint has been accidentally rubbed off, or that the work is unfinished. The sculptor and the painter were therefore inseparably allied. The first had no sooner finished his share of the task than the other took it up; and the same artist was often as skilful a master of the brush as of the chisel.
1.--DRAWING AND COMPOSITION.
Of the system upon which drawing was taught by the Egyptian masters, we
know nothing. They had learned from experience to determine the general
proportions of the body, and the invariable relations of the various parts
one with another; but they never troubled themselves to tabulate those
proportions, or to reduce them to a system. Nothing in what remains to us of
their works justifies the belief that they ever possessed a canon based
upon the length of the human finger or foot. Theirs was a teaching of
routine, and not of theory. Models executed by the master were copied over
and over again by his pupils, till they could reproduce them with absolute
exactness. That they also studied from the life is shown by the facility
with which they seized a likeness, or rendered the characteristics and
movements of different kinds of animals. They made their first attempts
upon slabs of limestone, on drawing boards covered with a coat of red or
white stucco, or on the backs of old manuscripts of no value.
Fig 160.--Pestle and mortar for grinding colours.
New papyrus was too dear to be spoiled by the scrawls of tyros. Having
neither pencil nor stylus, they made use of the reed, the end of which,
when steeped in water, opened out into small fibres, and made a more or
less fine brush according to the size of the stem. The palette was of thin
wood, in shape a rectangular oblong, with a groove in which to lay the
brush at the lower end. At the upper end were two or more cup-like hollows,
each fitted with a cake of ink; black and red being the colours most in
use. A tiny pestle and mortar for colour-grinding (fig. 160), and a cup of
water in which to clip and wash the brush, completed the apparatus of the
student. Palette in hand, he squatted cross-legged before his copy, and,
without any kind of support for his wrist, endeavoured to reproduce the
outline in black. The master looked over his work when done, and corrected
the errors in red ink.
The
few designs which have come down to us are drawn on pieces of limestone,
and are for the most part in sufficiently bad preservation. The British
Museum possesses two or three subjects in red outline, which may perhaps
have been used as copies by the decorators of some Theban tomb about the
time of the Twentieth Dynasty. A fragment in the Museum of Gizeh contains
studies of ducks or geese in black ink; and at Turin may be seen a sketch
of a half-nude female figure bending backwards, as about to turn a
somersault. The lines are flowing, the movement is graceful, the modelling
delicate. The draughtsman was not hampered then as now, by the rigidity of
the instrument between his fingers. The reed brush attacked the surface
perpendicularly; broadened, diminished, or prolonged the line at will; and
stopped or turned with the utmost readiness. So supple a medium was
admirably adapted to the rapid rendering of the humorous or ludicrous
episodes of daily life. The Egyptians, naturally laughter-loving and
satirical, were caricaturists from an early period. One of the Turin papyri
chronicles the courtship of a shaven priest and a songstress of Amen in a
series of spirited vignettes; while on the back of the same sheet are
sketched various serio-comic scenes, in which animals parody the pursuits
of civilised man. An ass, a lion, a crocodile, and an ape are represented
in the act of giving a vocal and instrumental concert; a lion and a gazelle
play at draughts; the Pharaoh of all the rats, in a chariot drawn by dogs,
gallops to the assault of a fortress garrisoned by cats; a cat of fashion,
with a flower on her head, has come to blows with a goose, and the hapless fowl,
powerless in so unequal a contest, topples over with terror. Cats, by the
way, were the favourite animals of Egyptian caricaturists. An ostrakon in
the New York Museum depicts a cat of rank en grande toilette, seated
in an easy chair, and a miserable Tom, with piteous mien and tail between
his legs, serving her with refreshments (fig. 161). Our catalogue of comic
sketches is brief; but the abundance of pen-drawings with which certain
religious works were illustrated compensates for our poverty in secular
subjects.
Fig 161.--Comic sketch on ostrakon in New York Museum.
These works are The Book of the Dead and The Book of Knowing That
which is in Hades, which were reproduced by hundreds, according to
standard copies preserved in the temples, or handed down through families
whose hereditary profession it was to conduct the services for the dead.
When making these illustrations, the artist had no occasion to draw upon
his imagination. He had but to imitate the copy as skilfully as he could.
Of The Book of Knowing That which is in Hades we have no examples
earlier than the time of the Twentieth Dynasty, and these are poor enough
in point of workmanship, the figures being little better than dot-and-line
forms, badly proportioned and hastily scrawled. The extant specimens of
The Book of the Dead are so numerous that a history of the art of
miniature painting in ancient Egypt might be compiled from this source
alone. The earliest date from the Eighteenth Dynasty, the more recent being
contemporary with the first Caesars. The oldest copies are for the most
part remarkably fine in execution. Each chapter has its vignette
representing a god in human or animal form, a sacred emblem, or the
deceased in adoration before a divinity.
Fig 162.--Vignette from The Book of the Dead,
Saïte period
These little subjects are sometimes ranged horizontally at the top of the
text, which is written in vertical columns (fig. 162); sometimes, like the
illuminated capitals in our mediaeval manuscripts, they are scattered
throughout the pages. At certain points, large subjects fill the space from
top to bottom of the papyrus. The burial scene comes at the beginning; the
judgment of the soul about the middle; and the arrival of the deceased in
the Fields of Aalû at the end of the work. In these, the artist seized the
opportunity to display his skill, and show what he could do. We here see
the mummy of Hûnefer placed upright before his stela and his tomb (fig.
163). The
women of his family bewail him; the men and the priest present offerings.
The papyri of the princes and princesses of the family of Pinotem in the
Museum of Gizeh show that the best traditions of the art were yet in force
at Thebes in the time of the Twenty-first Dynasty.
Fig 163.--Vignette from The Book of the Dead,
from the papyrus of Hûnefer.
Under the succeeding dynasties, that art fell into rapid decadence, and
during some centuries the drawings continue to be coarse and valueless. The
collapse of the Persian rule produced a period of Renaissance. Tombs of the
Greek time have yielded papyri with vignettes carefully executed in a dry
and minute style which offers a singular contrast to the breadth and
boldness of the Pharaonic ages. The broad-tipped reed-pen was thrown aside
for the pen with a fine point, and the scribes vied with each other as to
which should trace the most attenuated lines. The details with which they
overloaded their figures, the elaboration of the beard and the hair, and
the folds of the garments, are sometimes so minute that it is scarcely
possible to distinguish them without a magnifying glass. Precious as these
documents are, they give a very insufficient idea of the ability and
technical methods of the artists of ancient Egypt. It is to the walls of
their temples and tombs that we must turn, if we desire to study their
principles of composition.
Their conventional system differed materially from our own. Man or
beast, the subject was never anything but a profile relieved against a flat
background. Their object, therefore, was to select forms which presented a
characteristic outline capable of being reproduced in pure line upon a
plane surface. As regarded animal life, the problem was in no wise
complicated. The profile of the back and body, the head and neck, carried
in undulating lines parallel with the ground, were outlined at one sweep of
the pencil. The legs also are well detached from the body. The animals
themselves are lifelike, each with the gait and action and flexion of the
limbs peculiar to its species. The slow and measured tread of the ox; the
short step, the meditative ear, the ironical mouth of the ass; the abrupt little trot
of the goat, the spring of the hunting greyhound, are all rendered with
invariable success of outline and expression. Turning from domestic animals
to wild beasts, the perfection of treatment is the same. The calm strength
of the lion in repose, the stealthy and sleepy tread of the leopard, the
grimace of the ape, the slender grace of the gazelle and the antelope, have
never been better expressed than in Egypt. But it was not so easy to
project man--the whole man--upon a plane surface without some departure
from nature. A man cannot be satisfactorily reproduced by means of mere
lines, and a profile outline necessarily excludes too much of his person.
The form of the forehead and the nose, the curvature of the lips, the cut
of the ear, disappear when the head is drawn full face; but, on the other
hand, it is necessary that the bust should be presented full face, in order
to give the full development of the shoulders, and that the two arms may be
visible to right and left of the body. The contours of the trunk are best
modelled in a three-quarters view, whereas the legs show to most advantage
when seen sidewise. The Egyptians did not hesitate to combine these
contradictory points of view in one single figure. The head is almost
always given in profile, but is provided with a full-face eye and placed
upon a full-face bust. The full-face bust adorns a trunk seen from a three-
quarters point of view, and this trunk is supported upon legs depicted in
profile. Very seldom do we meet with figures treated according to our own
rules of perspective. Most of the minor personages represented in the tomb
of Khnûmhotep seem, however, to have made an effort to emancipate themselves from the
law of malformation. Their bodies are given in profile, as well as their
heads and legs; but they thrust forward first one shoulder and then the
other, in order to show both arms (fig. 164), and the effect is not happy.
Yet, if we examine the treatment of the farm servant who is cramming a
goose, and, above all, the figure of the standing man who throws his weight
upon the neck of a gazelle to make it kneel down (fig. 165), we shall see
that the action of the arms and hips is correctly rendered, that the form
of the back is quite right, and that the prominence of the chest--thrown
forward in proportion as the shoulders and arms are thrown back--is drawn
without any exaggeration.
Figs. 164 and 165.--Scenes from the tomb of Khnûmhotep at
Beni Hasan, Twelfth Dynasty.
The wrestlers of the Beni Hasan tombs, the dancers and servants of the
Theban catacombs, attack, struggle, posture, and go about their work with
perfect naturalness and ease (fig. 166). These, however, are exceptions.
Tradition, as a rule, was stronger than nature, and to the end of the
chapter, the Egyptian masters continued to deform the human figure. Their
men and women are actual monsters from the point of view of the anatomist;
and yet, after all, they are neither so ugly nor so ridiculous as might be
supposed by those who have seen only the wretched copies so often made by
our modern artists. The wrong parts are joined to the right parts with so much skill
that they seem to have grown there. The natural lines and the fictitious
lines follow and complement each other so ingeniously, that the former
appear to give rise of necessity to the latter. The conventionalities of
Egyptian art once accepted, we cannot sufficiently admire the technical
skill displayed by the draughtsman. His line was pure, firm, boldly begun,
and as boldly prolonged. Ten or twelve strokes of the brush sufficed to
outline a figure the size of life.
Fig 166.--From a tomb-painting in the British Museum,
Eighteenth Dynasty.
The whole head, from the nape of the neck to the rise of the throat above
the collar-bone, was executed at one sweep. Two long undulating lines gave
the external contour of the body from the armpits to the ends of the feet.
Two more determined the outlines of the legs, and two the arms. The details
of costume and ornaments, at first but summarily indicated, were afterwards
taken up one by one, and minutely finished. We may almost count the locks
of the hair, the plaits of the linen, the inlayings of the girdles and
bracelets. This mixture of artless science and intentional awkwardness, of
rapid execution and patient finish, excludes neither elegance of form, nor grace of
attitude, nor truth of movement. These personages are of strange aspect,
but they live; and to those who will take the trouble to look at them
without prejudice, their very strangeness has a charm about it which is
often lacking to works more recent in date and more strictly true to
nature.
We admit, then, that the Egyptians could draw. Were they, as it has been
ofttimes asserted, ignorant of the art of composition? We will take a scene
at hazard from a Theban tomb--that scene which represents the funerary
repast offered to Prince Horemheb by the members of his family
(fig. 167).
Fig 167.--Funerary repast, tomb of Horemheb, Eighteenth Dynasty.
The subject is half ideal, half real. The dead man, and those belonging to
him who are no longer of this world, are depicted in the society of the
living. They are present, yet aloof. They assist at the banquet, but they
do not actually take part in it. Horemheb sits on a folding stool to the
left of the spectator. He dandles on his knee a little princess, daughter
of Amenhotep III., whose foster-father he was, and who died before him. His
mother, Sûit, sits at his right hand a little way behind, enthroned in a
large chair. She holds his arm with her left hand, and with the right she
offers him
a lotus blossom and bud. A tiny gazelle which was probably buried with her,
like the pet gazelle discovered beside Queen Isiemkheb in the hiding-place
at Deir el Baharî, is tied to one of the legs of the chair. This ghostly
group is of heroic size, the rule being that gods are bigger than men,
kings bigger than their subjects, and the dead bigger than the living.
Horemheb, his mother, and the women standing before them, occupy the front
level, or foreground. The relations and friends are ranged in line facing
their deceased ancestors, and appear to be talking one with another. The
feast has begun. The jars of wine and beer, placed in rows upon wooden
stands, are already unsealed. Two young slaves rub the hands and necks of
the living guests with perfumes taken from an alabaster vase. Two women
dressed in robes of ceremony present offerings to the group of dead,
consisting of vases filled with flowers, perfumes, and grain. These they
place in turn upon a square table. Three others dance, sing, and play upon
the lute, by way of accompaniment to those acts of homage. In the picture,
as in fact, the tomb is the place of entertainment. There is no other
background to the scene than the wall covered with hieroglyphs, along which
the guests were seated during the ceremony. Elsewhere, the scene of action,
if in the open country, is distinctly indicated by trees and tufts of
grass; by red sand, if in the desert; and by a maze of reeds and lotus
plants, if in the marshes. A lady of quality comes in from a walk (fig.
168). One of her daughters, being athirst, takes a long draught from a
"gûllah"; two little naked children with shaven heads, a boy and a girl,
who ran to meet their mother at the gate, are made happy with toys brought home and
handed to them by a servant.
Fig 168.--From a wall-painting, Thebes, Ramesside period.
A
trellised enclosure covered with vines, and trees laden with fruit, are
shown above; yonder, therefore, is the garden, but the lady and her
daughters have passed through it without stopping, and are now indoors. The
front of the house is half put in and half left out, so that we may observe
what is going on inside. We accordingly see three attendants hastening to
serve their mistresses with refreshments. The picture is not badly
composed, and it would need but little alteration if transferred to a
modern canvas. The same old awkwardness, or rather the same old obstinate
custom, which compelled the Egyptian artist to put a profile head upon a
full-face bust, has, however, prevented him from placing his middle
distance and background behind his foreground. He has, therefore, been
reduced to adopt certain more or less ingenious contrivances, in order to
make up for an almost complete absence of perspective.
Again, when a number of persons engaged in the simultaneous performance
of any given act were represented on the same level, they were isolated as
much as possible, so that each man's profile might not cover that of his
neighbour. When this was not done, they were arranged to overlap each
other, and this, despite the fact that all stood on the one level; so that
they have actually but two dimensions and no thickness. A herdsman walking
in the midst of his oxen plants his feet upon precisely the same ground-
line as the beast which interposes between his body and the spectator. The
most distant soldier of a company which advances in good marching order to
the sound of the trumpet, has his head and feet on exactly the same level; as
the head and feet of the foremost among his comrades (fig. 169).
Fig 169.--From wall-scene in tomb of Horemheb.
When a squadron of chariots defiles before Pharaoh, one would declare that
their wheels all ran in the self-same ruts, were it not that the body of
the first chariot partly hides the horse by which the second chariot is
drawn (fig. 170). In these examples the people and objects are, either
accidentally or naturally, placed so near together, that the anomaly does
not strike one as too glaring.
Fig 170.--From wall-scene, Ramesseum.
In taking these liberties, the Egyptian artist but anticipated a
contrivance adopted by the Greek sculptor of a later age. Elsewhere, the
Egyptian has occasionally approached nearer to truth of treatment. The archers of
Rameses III. at Medinet Habû make an effort, which is almost successful, to
present themselves in perspective. The row of helmets slopes downwards, and
the row of bows slopes upwards, with praiseworthy regularity; but the men's
feet are all on the same level, and do not, therefore, follow the direction
of the other lines (fig. 171). This mode of representation is not uncommon
during the Theban period.
Fig 171.--Archers, as represented on walls of Medinet
Habû.
It was generally adopted when men or animals, ranged in line, had to be
shown in the act of doing the same thing; but it was subject to the grave
drawback (or what was in Egyptian eyes the grave drawback) of showing the
body of the first man only, and of almost entirely hiding the rest of the
figures. When, therefore, it was found impossible to range all upon the
same level without hiding some of their number, the artist frequently broke
his masses up into groups, and placed one above the other on the same
vertical plane. Their height in no wise depends on the place they occupy in
the perspective of the tableau, but only upon the number of rows required
by the artist to carry out his idea.
Fig 172.--Phalanx of Egyptian infantry, Ramesseum.
If two rows of figures are sufficient, he divides his space horizontally
into equal parts; if he requires three rows, he divides it into three
parts; and so on. When, however, it is a question of mere accessories, they are made
out upon a smaller scale. Secondary scenes are generally separated by a
horizontal line, but this line is not indispensable. When masses of figures
formed in regular order had to be shown, the vertical planes lapped over,
so to speak, according to the caprice of the limner. At the battle of
Kadesh, the files of Egyptian infantry rise man above man, waist high, from
top to bottom of the phalanx (fig. 172); while those of the Kheta, or
Hittite battalions, show but one head above another (fig. 173).
It was not only in their treatment of men and animals that the
Egyptians allowed themselves this latitude. Houses, trees, land and
water, were as freely misrepresented.
Fig 173.--Hittite battalion, Ramesseum.
An oblong rectangle placed upright, or on its side, and covered with
regular zigzags, represents a canal. Lest one should be in doubt as to its
meaning, fishes and crocodiles are put in, to show that it is water, and
nothing but water. Boats are seen floating upright upon this edgewise surface;
the flocks ford it where it is shallow; and the angler with his line marks
the spot where the water ends and the bank begins. Sometimes the rectangle
is seen suspended like a framed picture, at about half way of the height of
several palm trees (fig. 174); whereby we are given to understand a tank
bordered on both sides by trees.
Fig 174.--Pond and palm-trees, from wall painting in
tomb of Rekhmara, Eighteenth Dynasty.
Sometimes, again, as in the tomb of Rekhmara, the trees are laid down in
rows round the four sides of a square pond, while a profile boat conveying
a dead man in his shrine, hauled by slaves also shown in profile, floats on
the vertical surface of the water (fig. 175). The Theban catacombs of the
Ramesside period supply abundant examples of contrivances of this kind;
and, having noted them, we end by not knowing which most to wonder at--the
obstinacy of the Egyptians in not seeking to discover the natural laws of
perspective, or the inexhaustible wealth of resource which enabled them to
invent so many false relations between the various parts of their
subjects.
When employed upon a very large scale, their methods of composition
shock the eye less than when applied to small subjects. We instinctively
feel that even the ablest artist must sometimes have played fast and loose
with the laws of perspective, if tasked to cover the enormous surfaces of
Egyptian pylons. Hence the unities of the subject are never strictly
observed in these enormous bas-reliefs. The main object being to perpetuate
the memory of a victorious Pharaoh, that Pharaoh necessarily plays the
leading part; but instead of selecting from among his striking deeds some
one leading episode pre-eminently calculated to illustrate his greatness,
the Egyptian artist delighted to present the successive incidents of his
campaigns at a single coup d'oeil.
Fig 175.--Scene from tomb of Rekhmara, Eighteenth
Dynasty.
Thus treated, the pylons of Luxor and the Ramesseum show a Syrian night
attack upon the Egyptian camp; a seizure of spies sent by the prince of the
Kheta for the express purpose of being caught and giving false intelligence
of his movements; the king's household troops surprised and broken by the
Khetan chariots; the battle of Kadesh and its various incidents, so
furnishing us, as it were, with a series of illustrated despatches of
the Syrian campaign undertaken by Rameses II. in the fifth year of his
reign. After this fashion precisely did the painters of the earliest
Italian schools depict within the one field, and in one uninterrupted
sequence, the several episodes of a single narrative.
Fig 176.--Scene from Mastaba of Ptahhotep, Fifth
Dynasty.
The scenes are irregularly dispersed over the surface of the wall, without
any marked lines of separation, and, as with the bas-reliefs upon the
column of Trajan, one is often in danger of dividing the groups in the
wrong place, and of confusing the characters. This method is reserved
almost exclusively for official art. In the interior decoration of temples
and tombs, the various parts of the one subject are distributed in rows
ranged one above the other, from the ground line to the cornice. Thus
another difficulty is added to the number of those which prevent us from
understanding the style and intention of Egyptian design. We often imagine
that we are looking at a series of isolated scenes, when in fact we have
before our eyes the disjecta membra of a single composition. Take,
for example, one wall-side of the tomb of Ptahhotep at Sakkarah (fig. 176).
If we would discover the link which divides these separate scenes, we shall
do well to compare this wall-subject with the mosaic at Palestrina (fig.
177), a monument of Graeco-Roman time which represents almost the same
scenes, grouped, however, after a style more familiar to our ways of seeing
and thinking. The Nile occupies the immediate foreground of the picture,
and extends as far as the foot of the mountains in the distance. Towns rise
from the water's edge; and not only towns, but obelisks, farm-houses, and
towers of Graeco-Italian style, more like the buildings depicted in
Pompeian landscapes than the monuments of the Pharaohs. Of these buildings,
only the large temple in the middle distance to the right of the picture,
with its pylon gateway and its four Osirian colossi, recalls the general
arrangement of Egyptian architecture. To the left, a party of sportsmen in
a large boat are seen in the act of harpooning the hippopotamus and
crocodile. To the right, a group of legionaries, drawn up in front of a
temple and preceded by a priest, salute a passing galley. Towards the
middle of the foreground, in the shade of an arched trellis thrown across a
small branch of the Nile, some half-clad men and women are singing
and carousing. Little papyrus skiffs, each rowed by a single boatman, and
other vessels fill the vacant spaces of the composition.
Fig 177.--Palestrina mosaic.
Behind the buildings we see the commencement of the desert. The water forms
large pools at the base of overhanging hills, and various animals, real or
imaginary, are pursued by shaven-headed hunters in the upper part of the
picture. Now, precisely after the manner of the Roman mosaicist, the old Egyptian
artist placed himself, as it were, on the Nile, and reproduced all that lay
between his own standpoint and the horizon. In the wall-painting (fig. 176)
the river flows along the line next the floor, boats come and go, and
boatmen fall to blows with punting poles and gaffs. In the division next
above, we see the river bank and the adjoining flats, where a party of
slaves, hidden in the long grasses, trap and catch birds. Higher still,
boat-making, rope-making, and fish-curing are going on. Finally, in the
highest register of all, next the ceiling, are depicted the barren hills
and undulating plains of the desert, where greyhounds chase the gazelle,
and hunters trammel big game with the lasso. Each longitudinal section
corresponds, in fact, with a plane of the landscape; but the artist,
instead of placing his planes in perspective, has treated them separately,
and placed them one above the other. We find the same disposition of the
parts in all Egyptian tomb paintings. Scenes of inundation and civil life
are ranged along the base of the wall, mountain subjects and hunting scenes
being invariably placed high up. Sometimes, interposed between these two
extremes, the artist has introduced subjects dealing with the pursuits of
the herdsman, the field labourer, and the craftsman. Elsewhere, he
suppresses these intermediary episodes, and passes abruptly from the watery
to the sandy region. Thus, the mosaic of Palestrina and the tomb-paintings
of Pharaonic Egypt reproduce the same group of subjects, treated after the
conventional styles and methods of two different schools of art. Like the
mosaic, the wall scenes of the tomb formed, not a series of independent
scenes, but an ordinary composition, the unity of which is readily recognised by such
as are skilled to read the art-language of the period.
2.--TECHNICAL PROCESSES.
The preparation of the surface about to be decorated demanded much time
and care. Seeing how imperfect were the methods of construction, and how
impossible it was for the architect to ensure a perfectly level surface for
the facing stones of his temple-walls and pylons, the decorator had
perforce to accommodate himself to a surface slightly rounded in some
places and slightly hollowed in others. Even the blocks of which it was
formed were scarcely homogeneous in texture. The limestone strata in which
the Theban catacombs were excavated were almost always interspersed with
flint nodules, fossils, and petrified shells. These faults were variously
remedied according as the decoration was to be sculptured or painted. If
painted, the wall was first roughly levelled, and then overlaid with a coat
of black clay and chopped straw, similar to the mixture used for brick-
making. If sculptured, then the artist had to arrange his subject so as to
avoid the inequalities of the stone as much as possible. When these
occurred in the midst of the figure subjects, and if they did not offer too
stubborn a resistance to the chisel, they were simply worked over;
otherwise the piece was cut out and a new piece fitted in, or the hole was
filled up with white cement. This mending process was no trifling matter.
We could point to tomb-chambers where every wall is thus inlaid to the
extent of one quarter of its surface. The preliminary work being done, the
whole was
covered with a thin coat of fine plaster mixed with white of egg, which hid
the mud-wash or the piecing, and prepared a level and polished surface for
the pencil of the artist. In chambers, or parts of chambers, which have
been left unfinished, and even in the quarries, we constantly find sketches
of intended bas-reliefs, outlined in red or black ink. The copy was
generally executed upon a small scale, then squared off, and transferred to
the wall by the pupils and assistants of the master.
Fig 178.--Sculptor's sketch from Ancient Empire tomb.
As in certain scenes carefully copied by Prisse from the walls of Theban
tombs, the subject is occasionally indicated by only two or three rapid
strokes of the reed (fig. 178). Elsewhere, the outline is fully made out,
and the figures only await the arrival of the sculptor. Some designers took
pains to determine the position of the shoulders, and the centre of gravity
of the bodies, by vertical and horizontal lines, upon which, by means of a
dot, they noted the height of the knee, the hips, and other parts (fig.
179). Others again, more self-reliant, attacked their subject at once, and
drew in the figures without the aid of guiding points. Such were the artists who
decorated the catacomb of Seti I., and the southern walls of the temple of
Abydos. Their outlines are so firm, and their facility is so surprising,
that they have been suspected of stencilling; but no one who has closely
examined their figures, or who has taken the trouble to measure them with a
compass, can maintain that opinion. The forms of some are slighter than the
forms of others; while in some the contours of the chest are more
accentuated, and the legs farther apart, than in others. The master had
little to correct in the work of these subordinates.
Fig 179.--Sculptor's sketch from Ancient Empire
tomb.
Here and there he made a head more erect, accentuated or modified the
outline of a knee, or improved some detail of arrangement. In one instance,
however, at Kom Ombo, on the ceiling of a Graeco-Roman portico, some of the
divinities had been falsely oriented, their feet being placed where their
arms should have been. The master consequently outlined them afresh, and on
the same squared surface, without effacing the first drawing. Here, at all
events, the mistake was discovered in time. At Karnak, on the north wall of
the hypostyle hall, and again at Medinet Habu, the faults of the original
design were not noticed till the sculptor had finished his part of the
work. The figures of Seti I. and Rameses III. were thrown too far back, and
threatened to overbalance themselves; so they were smoothed over with
cement and cut anew. Now, the cement has flaked off, and the work of the first
chisel is exposed to view. Seti I. and Rameses III. have each two profiles,
the one very lightly marked, the other boldly cut into the surface of the
stone (fig. 180).
The sculptors of ancient Egypt were not so well equipped as those of our
own day. A kneeling scribe in limestone at the Gizeh Museum has been carved
with the chisel, the grooves left by the tool being visible on his skin. A
statue in grey serpentine, in the same collection, bears traces of the use
of two different tools, the body being spotted all over with point-marks,
and the unfinished head being blocked out splinter by splinter with a small
hammer. Similar observations, and the study of the monuments, show that the
drill (fig. 181), the toothed-chisel, and the gouge were also employed.
Fig 181.--Bow drill.
There have been endless discussions as to whether these tools were of iron
or of bronze. Iron, it is argued, was deemed impure. No one could make use
of it, even for the basest needs of daily life, without incurring a taint
prejudicial to the soul both in this world and the next. But the impurity
of any given object never sufficed to prevent the employment of it when
required. Pigs also were impure; yet the Egyptians bred them. They bred
them, indeed, so abundantly in certain districts, that our worthy Herodotus
tells us
how the swine were turned into the fields after seed-sowing, in order that
they might tread in the grain. So also iron, like many other things in
Egypt, was pure or impure according to circumstances. If some traditions
held it up to odium as an evil thing, and stigmatised it as the "bones of
Typhon," other traditions equally venerable affirmed that it was the very
substance of the canopy of heaven. So authoritative was this view, that
iron was currently known as "Ba-en-pet," or the celestial metal.[35] The
only fragment of metal found in the great pyramid is a piece of plate-
iron;[36] and if ancient iron objects are nowadays of exceptional
rarity as compared with ancient bronze objects, it is because iron differs
from bronze, inasmuch as it is not protected from destruction by its oxide.
Rust speedily devours it, and it needs a rare combination of favourable
circumstances to preserve it intact. If, however, it is quite certain that
the Egyptians were acquainted with, and made use of, iron, it is no less
certain that they were wholly unacquainted with steel. This being the case,
one asks how they can possibly have dealt at will upon the hardest rocks,
even upon such as we ourselves hesitate to attack, namely, diorite, basalt,
and the granite of Syene. The manufacturers of antiquities who sculpture
granite for the benefit of tourists, have found a simple solution of this
problem. They work with some twenty common iron chisels at hand, which after a very
few turns are good for nothing. When one is blunted, they take up another,
and so on till the stock is exhausted. Then they go to the forge, and put
their tools into working order again. The process is neither so long nor so
difficult as might be supposed. In the Gizeh Museum is a life-size head,
produced from a block of black and red granite in less than a fortnight by
one of the best forgers in Luxor. I have no doubt that the ancient
Egyptians worked in precisely the same way, and mastered the hardest stones
by the use of iron. Practice soon taught them methods by which their labour
might be lightened, and their tools made to yield results as delicate and
subtle as those which we achieve with our own. As soon as the learner knew
how to manage the point and the mallet, his master set him to copy a series
of graduated models representing an animal in various stages of completion,
or a part of the human body, or the whole human body, from the first rough
sketch to the finished design (fig. 182). Every year, these models are
found in sufficient number to establish examples of progressive series.
Apart from isolated specimens which are picked up everywhere, the Gizeh
collection contains a set of fifteen from Sakkarah, forty-one from Tanis,
and a dozen from Thebes and Medinet Habû. They were intended partly for the
study of bas-reliefs, partly for the study of sculpture proper; and they
reveal the method in use for both.[37]
The Egyptians treated bas-relief in three ways: either as a simple
engraving executed by means of incised lines; or by cutting away the surface of the
stone round the figure, and so causing it to stand out in relief upon the
wall; or by sinking the design below the wall-surface and cutting it in
relief at the bottom of the hollow.
Fig 182.--Sculptor's trial-piece, Eighteenth Dynasty.
The first method has the advantage of being expeditious, and the
disadvantage of not being sufficiently decorative. Rameses III. made use of
it in certain parts of his temple at Medinet Habû; but, as a rule, it was
preferred for stelae and small monuments. The last-named method lessened
not only the danger of damage to the work, but the labour of the workman.
It evaded the dressing down of the background, which was a distinct economy
of time, and it left no projecting work on the surface of the walls, the
design being thus sheltered from accidental blows. The intermediate process
was, however, generally adopted, and appears to have been taught in the
schools by preference. The models were little rectangular tablets, squared
off in order that the scholar might enlarge or reduce the scale of his
subject without departing from the traditional proportions. Some of these
models are wrought on both sides; but the greater number are sculptured on
one side only. Sometimes the design represents a bull; sometimes the head
of a cynocephalous ape, of a ram, of a lion, of a divinity. Occasionally,
we find the subject in duplicate, side by side, being roughly blocked out
to the left, and highly finished to the right. In no instance does the
relief exceed a quarter of an inch, and it is generally even less. Not but
that the Egyptians sometimes cut boldly into the stone. At Medinet Habû and
Karnak--on the higher parts of these temples, where the work is in granite
or sandstone, and exposed to full daylight--the bas-relief decoration
projects full 6-3/8 inches above the surface. Had it been lower, the
tableaux would have been, as it were, absorbed by the flood of light poured
upon them, and to the eye of the spectator would have presented only a
confused network of lines. The models designed for the study of the round
are even more instructive than the rest. Some which have come down to us
are plaster casts of familiar subjects. The head, the arms, the legs, the
trunk, each part of the body, in short, was separately cast. If a complete
figure were wanted, the disjecta membra were put together, and the
result was a statue of a man, or of a woman, kneeling, standing, seated,
squatting, the arms extended or falling passively by the sides. This
curious collection was discovered at Tanis, and dates probably from
Ptolemaic times.[38] Models of the Pharaonic ages are in soft limestone, and
nearly all represent portraits of reigning sovereigns. These are best
described as cubes measuring about ten inches each way. The work was begun
by covering one face of a cube with a network of lines crossing each other
at right angles; these regulated the relative position of the features.
Then the opposite side was attacked, the distances being taken from the
scale on the reverse face. A mere oval was designed on this first block; a
projection in the middle and a depression to right and left, vaguely
indicating the whereabouts of nose and eyes. The forms become more definite
as we pass from cube to cube, and the face emerges by degrees. The limit of
the contours is marked off by parallel lines cut vertically from top to
bottom. The angles were next cut away and smoothed down, so as to bring out
the forms. Gradually the features become disengaged from the block, the eye
looks out, the nose gains refinement, the mouth is developed. When the last cube is
reached, there remains nothing to finish save the details of the head-dress
and the basilisk on the brow. No scholar's model in basalt has yet been
found;[39] but the Egyptians, like our monumental masons, always
kept a stock of half-finished statues in hard stone, which could be turned
out complete in a few hours. The hands, feet, and bust needed only a few
last touches; but the heads were merely blocked out, and the clothing left
in the rough. Half a day's work then sufficed to transform the face into a
portrait of the purchaser, and to give the last new fashion to the kilt.
The discovery of some two or three statues of this kind has shown us as
much of the process as a series of teacher's models might have done.
Volcanic rocks could not be cut with the continuity and regularity of
limestone. The point only could make any impression upon these obdurate
materials. When, by force of time and patience, the work had thus been
finished to the degree required, there would often remain some little
irregularities of surface, due, for example, to the presence of nodules and
heterogeneous substances, which the sculptor had not ventured to attack,
for fear of splintering away part of the surrounding surface. In order to
remove these irregularities, another tool was employed; namely, a stone cut
in the form of an axe. Applying the sharp edge of this instrument to the
projecting nodule, the artist struck it with a round stone in place of a
mallet. A succession of carefully calculated blows with these rude tools
pulverised the obtrusive knob, which disappeared in dust. All minor defects being
corrected, the monument still looked dull and unfinished. It was necessary
to polish it, in order to efface the scars of point and mallet. This was a
most delicate operation, one slip of the hand, or a moment's forgetfulness,
being enough to ruin the labour of many weeks. The dexterity of the
Egyptian craftsman was, however, so great that accidents rarely happened.
The Sebekemsaf of Gizeh, the colossal Rameses II. of Luxor, challenge the
closest examination. The play of light upon the surface may at first
prevent the eye from apprehending the fineness of the work; but, seen under
favourable circumstances, the details of knee and chest, of shoulder and
face, prove to be no less subtly rendered in granite than in limestone.
Excess of polish has no more spoiled the statues of Ancient Egypt than it
spoiled those of the sculptors of the Italian Renaissance.
A sandstone or limestone statue would have been deemed imperfect if left to show the colour of the stone in which it was cut, and was painted from head to foot. In bas-relief, the background was left untouched and only the figures were coloured. The Egyptians had more pigments at their disposal than is commonly supposed. The more ancient painters' palettes--and we have some which date from the Fifth Dynasty--have compartments for yellow, red, blue, brown, white, black, and green.[40] Others, of the time of the Eighteenth Dynasty, provide for three varieties of yellow, three of brown, two of red, two of blue, and two of green; making in all some fourteen or sixteen different tints. Black was obtained by calcining the bones of animals. The other substances employed in painting were indigenous to the country. The white is made of gypsum, mixed with albumen or honey; the yellows are ochre, or sulphuret of arsenic, the orpiment of our modern artists; the reds are ochre, cinnabar, or vermilion; the blues are pulverised lapis- lazuli, or silicate of copper. If the substance was rare or costly, a substitute drawn from the products of native industry was found. Lapis- lazuli, for instance, was replaced by blue frit made with an admixture of silicate of copper, and this was reduced to an impalpable powder. The painters kept their colours in tiny bags, and, as required, mixed them with water containing a little gum tragacanth. They laid them on by means of a reed, or a more or less fine hair brush. When well prepared, these pigments are remarkably solid, and have changed but little during the lapse of ages. The reds have darkened, the greens have faded, the blues have turned somewhat green or grey; but this is only on the surface. If that surface is scraped off, the colour underneath is brilliant and unchanged. Before the Theban period, no precautions were taken to protect the painter's work from the action of air and light. About the time of the Twentieth Dynasty, however, it became customary to coat painted surfaces with a transparent varnish which was soluble in water, and which was probably made from the gum of some kind of acacia. It was not always used in the same manner. Some painters varnished the whole surface, while others merely glazed the ornaments and accessories, without touching the flesh-tints or the clothing. This varnish has cracked from the effects of age, or has become so dark as to spoil the work it was intended to preserve. Doubtless, the Egyptians discovered the bad effects produced by it, as we no longer meet with it after the close of the Twentieth Dynasty.
Egyptian painters laid on broad, flat, uniform washes of colour; they did not paint in our sense of the term; they illuminated. Just as in drawing they reduced everything to lines, and almost wholly suppressed the internal modelling, so in adding colour they still further simplified their subject by merging all varieties of tone, and all play of light and shadow, in one uniform tint. Egyptian painting is never quite true, and never quite false. Without pretending to the faithful imitation of nature, it approaches nature as nearly as it may; sometimes understating, sometimes exaggerating, sometimes substituting ideal or conventional renderings for strict realities. Water, for instance, is always represented by a flat tint of blue, or by blue covered with zigzag lines in black. The buff and bluish hues of the vulture are translated into bright red and vivid blue. The flesh-tints of men are of a dark reddish brown, and the flesh-tints of women are pale yellow. The colours conventionally assigned to each animate and inanimate object were taught in the schools, and their use handed on unchanged from generation to generation. Now and then it happened that a painter more daring than his contemporaries ventured to break with tradition. In the Sixth Dynasty tombs at Deir el Gebrawî, there are instances where the flesh tint of the women is that conventionally devoted to the depiction of men. At Sakkarah, under the Fifth Dynasty, and at Abû Simbel, under the Nineteenth Dynasty, we find men with skins as yellow as those of the women; while in the tombs of Thebes and Abydos, about the time of Thothmes IV. and Horemheb, there occur figures with flesh-tints of rose- colour.[41]
It must not, however, be supposed that the effect produced by this artificial system was grating or discordant. Even in works of small size, such as illuminated MSS. of The Book of the Dead, or the decoration of mummy-cases and funerary coffers, there is both sweetness and harmony of colour. The most brilliant hues are boldly placed side by side, yet with full knowledge of the relations subsisting between these hues, and of the phenomena which must necessarily result from such relations. They neither jar together, nor war with each other, nor extinguish each other. On the contrary, each maintains its own value, and all, by mere juxtaposition, give rise to the half-tones which harmonise them.
Turning from small things to large ones, from the page of papyrus, or the panel of sycamore wood, to the walls of tombs and temples, we find the skilful employment of flat tints equally soothing and agreeable to the eye. Each wall is treated as a whole, the harmony of colour being carried out from bottom to top throughout the various superimposed stages into which the surface was divided. Sometimes the colours are distributed according to a scale of rhythm, or symmetry, balancing and counterbalancing each other. Sometimes one special tint predominates, thus determining the general tone and subordinating every other hue. The vividness of the final effect is always calculated according to the quality and quantity of light by which the picture is destined to be seen. In very dark halls the force of colour is carried as far as it will go, because it would not otherwise have been visible by the flickering light of lamps and torches. On outer wall- surfaces and on pylon-fronts, it was as vivid as in the darkest depths of excavated catacombs; and this because, no matter how extreme it might be, the sun would subdue its splendour. But in half-lighted places, such as the porticoes of temples and the ante-chambers of tombs, colour is so dealt with as to be soft and discreet. In a word, painting was in Egypt the mere humble servant of architecture and sculpture. We must not dream of comparing it with our own, or even with that of the Greeks; but if we take it simply for what it is, accepting it in the secondary place assigned to it, we cannot fail to recognise its unusual merits. Egyptian painting excelled in the sense of monumental decoration, and if we ever revert to the fashion of colouring the façades of our houses and our public edifices, we shall lose nothing by studying Egyptian methods or reproducing Egyptian processes.
3.--WORKS OF SCULPTURE.
To this day, the most ancient statue known is a colossus--namely, the
Great Sphinx of Gizeh. It was already in existence in the time of Khûfû
(Cheops), and perhaps we should not be far wrong if we ventured to ascribe
it to the generations before Mena, called in the priestly chronicles "the
Servants of Horus."
Fig 183.--The Great Sphinx of Gizeh.
Hewn in the living rock at the extreme verge of the Libyan plateau, it
seems, as the representative of Horus, to uprear its head in order to be
the first to catch sight of his father, Ra, the rising sun, across
the valley (fig. 183). For centuries the sands have buried it to the chin,
yet without protecting it from ruin. Its battered body preserves but the
general form of a lion's body. The paws and breast, restored by the
Ptolemies and the Caesars, retain but a part of the stone facing with which
they were then clothed in order to mask the ravages of time. The lower part
of the head-dress has fallen, and the diminished neck looks too slender to
sustain the enormous weight of the head. The nose and beard have been
broken off by fanatics, and the red hue which formerly enlivened the
features is almost wholly effaced. And yet, notwithstanding its fallen
fortunes, the monster preserves an expression of sovereign strength and
greatness. The eyes gaze out afar with a look of intense and profound
thoughtfulness; the mouth still wears a smile; the whole countenance is
informed with power and repose. The art which conceived and carved this
prodigious statue was a finished art; an art which had attained self-
mastery, and was sure of its effects. How many centuries had it taken to
arrive at this degree of maturity and perfection? In certain pieces
belonging to various museums, such as the statues of Sepa and his wife at
the Louvre, and the bas-reliefs of the tomb of Khabiûsokarî at Gizeh,
critics have mistakenly recognised the faltering first efforts of an
unskilled people. The stiffness of attitude and gesture, the exaggerated
squareness of the shoulders, the line of green paint under the eyes,--in a
word, all those characteristics which are quoted as signs of extreme
antiquity, are found in certain monuments of the Fifth and Sixth Dynasties. The
contemporary sculptors of any given period were not all equally skilful. If
some were capable of doing good work, the greater number were mere
craftsmen; and we must be careful not to ascribe awkward manipulation, or
lack of teaching, to the timidity of archaism. The works of the primitive
dynasties yet sleep undiscovered beneath seventy feet of sand at the foot
of the Sphinx; those of the historic dynasties are daily exhumed from the
depths of the neighbouring tombs. These have not yielded Egyptian art as a
whole; but they have familiarised us with one of its schools--the school of
Memphis. The Delta, Hermopolis, Abydos, the environs of Thebes and Asûan[42], do
not appear upon the stage earlier than towards the Sixth Dynasty; and even
so, we know them through but a small number of sepulchres long since
violated and despoiled. The loss is probably not very great. Memphis was
the capital; and thither the presence of the Pharaohs must have attracted
all the talent of the vassal principalities. Judging from the results of
our excavations in the Memphite necropolis alone, it is possible to
determine the characteristics of both sculpture and painting in the time of
Seneferû and his successors with as much exactness as if we were already in
possession of all the monuments which the valley of the Nile yet holds in
reserve for future explorers.
The lesser folk of the art-world excelled in the manipulation of brush
and chisel, and that their skill was of a high order is testified by the
thousands of tableaux they have left behind them.
Fig 184. --Panel from tomb of Hesi.
The relief is low; the colour sober; the composition learned. Architecture,
trees, vegetation, irregularities of ground, are summarily indicated, and
are introduced only when necessary to the due interpretation of the scene
represented. Men and animals, on the other hand, are rendered with a wealth
of detail, a truth of character, and sometimes a force of treatment, to
which the later schools of Egyptian art rarely attained. Six wooden panels
from the tomb of Hesi in the Gizeh Museum represent perhaps the finest
known specimens of this branch of art. Mariette ascribed them to the Third
Dynasty, and he may perhaps have been right; though for my own part I
incline to date them from the Fifth Dynasty. In these panels there is
nothing that can be called a "subject." Hesi either sits or stands (fig.
184), and has four or five columns of hieroglyphs above his head; but the
firmness of line, the subtlety of modelling, the ease of execution, are unequalled.
Never has wood been cut with a more delicate chisel or a firmer hand.
The variety of attitude and gesture which we so much admire in the Egyptian bas-relief is lacking to the statues. A mourner weeping, a woman bruising corn for bread, a baker rolling dough, are subjects as rare in the round as they are common in bas-relief. In sculpture, the figure is generally represented either standing with the feet side by side and quite still, or with one leg advanced in the act of walking; or seated upon a chair or a cube; or kneeling; or, still more frequently, sitting on the ground cross-legged, as the fellahin are wont to sit to this day. This intentional monotony of style would be inexplicable if we were ignorant of the purpose for which such statues were intended. They represent the dead man for whom the tomb was made, his family, his servants, his slaves, and his kinsfolk. The master is always shown sitting or standing, and he could not consistently be seen in any other attitude. The tomb is, in fact, the house in which he rests after the labours of life, as once he used to rest in his earthly home; and the scenes depicted upon the walls represent the work which he was officially credited with performing. Here he superintends the preliminary operations necessary to raise the food by which he is to be nourished in the form of funerary offerings; namely, seed-sowing, harvesting, stock-breeding, fishing, hunting, and the like. In short, "he superintends all the labour which is done for the eternal dwelling." When thus engaged, he is always standing upright, his head uplifted, his hands pendent, or holding the staff and baton of command. Elsewhere, the diverse offerings are brought to him one by one, and then he sits in a chair of state. These are his two attitudes, whether as a bas-relief subject or a statue. Standing, he receives the homage of his vassals; sitting, he partakes of the family repast. The people of his household comport themselves before him as becomes their business and station. His wife either stands beside him, sits on the same chair or on a second chair by his side, or squats beside his feet as during his lifetime. His son, if a child at the time when the statue was ordered, is represented in the garb of infancy; or with the bearing and equipment proper to his position, if a man. The slaves bruise the corn, the cellarers tar the wine jars, the hired mourners weep and tear their hair. His little social world followed the Egyptian to his tomb, the duties of his attendants being prescribed for them after death, just as they had been prescribed for them during life. And the kind of influence which the religious conception of the soul exercised over the art of the sculptor did not end here. From the moment that the statue is regarded as the support of the Double, it becomes a condition of primary importance that the statue shall reproduce, at least in the abstract, the proportions and distinctive peculiarities of the corporeal body; and this in order that the Double shall more easily adapt himself to his new body of stone or wood.[43] The head is therefore always a faithful portrait; but the body, on the contrary, is, as it were, a medium kind of body, representing the original at his highest development, and consequently able to exert the fulness of his physical powers when admitted to the society of the gods. Hence men are always sculptured in the prime of life, and women with the delicate proportions of early womanhood. This conventional idea was never departed from, unless in cases of very marked deformity. The statue of a dwarf reproduced all the ugly peculiarities of the dwarf's own body; and it was important that it should so reproduce them. If a statue of the ordinary type had been placed in the tomb of the dead man, his "Ka," accustomed during life to the deformity of his limbs, would not be able to adapt itself to an upright and shapely figure, and would therefore be deprived of the conditions necessary to his future well- being. The artist was free to vary the details and arrange the accessories according to his fancy; but without missing the point of his work, he could not change the attitude, or depart from the general style of the conventional portrait statue. This persistent monotony of pose and subject produces a depressing effect upon the spectator,--an effect which is augmented by the obtrusive character given to the supports. These statues are mostly backed by a kind of rectangular pediment, which is either squared off just at the base of the skull, or carried up in a point and lost in the head-dress, or rounded at the top and showing above the head of the figure. The arms are seldom separated from the body, but are generally in one piece with the sides and hips. The whole length of the leg which is placed in advance of the other is very often connected with the pediment by a band of stone. It has been conjectured that this course was imposed upon the sculptor by reason of the imperfection of his tools, and the consequent danger of fracturing the statue when cutting away the superfluous material- -an explanation which may be correct as regards the earliest schools, but which does not hold good for the time of the Fourth Dynasty. We could point to more than one piece of sculpture of that period, even in granite, in which all the limbs are free, having been cut away by means of either the chisel or the drill. If pediment supports were persisted in to the end, their use must have been due, not to helplessness, but to routine, or to an exaggerated respect for ancient method.
Most museums are poor in statues of the Memphite school; France and
Egypt possess, however, some twenty specimens which suffice to ensure it an
honourable place in the history of art. At the Louvre we have the "Cross-
legged Scribe,"[44] and the statues of Skemka and Pahûrnefer; at Gizeh
there are the "Sheikh el Beled"[45] and his wife, Khafra[46], Ranefer,
the Prince and General Rahotep, and his wife, Nefert, a "Kneeling Scribe,"
and a "Cross-legged Scribe." The original of the "Cross-legged Scribe" of
the Louvre was not a handsome man (fig. 185), but the vigour and fidelity
of his portrait amply compensate for the absence of ideal beauty. His legs
are crossed and laid flat to the ground in one of those attitudes common
among
Orientals, yet all but impossible to Europeans. The bust is upright, and
well balanced upon the hips. The head is uplifted.
Fig 185.--The Cross-legged Scribe at the Louvre, Old
Empire.
The right hand holds the reed pen, which pauses in its place on the open
papyrus scroll. Thus, for six thousand years he has waited for his master
to go on with the long-interrupted dictation. The face is square-cut, and
the strongly-marked features indicate a man in the prime of life. The mouth, wide
and thin-lipped, rises slightly towards the corners, which are lost in the
projecting muscles by which it is framed in. The cheeks are bony and lank;
the ears are thick and heavy, and stand out well from the head; the thick,
coarse hair is cut close above the brow. The eyes, which are large and well
open, owe their lifelike vivacity to an ingenious contrivance of the
ancient artist. The orbit has been cut out from the stone, the hollow being
filled with an eye composed of enamel, white and black. The edges of the
eyelids are of bronze, and a small silver nail inserted behind the iris
receives and reflects the light in such wise as to imitate the light of
life. The contours of the flesh are somewhat full and wanting in firmness,
as would be the case in middle life, if the man's occupation debarred him
from active exercise. The forms of the arm and back are in good relief; the
hands are hard and bony, with fingers of somewhat unusual length; and the
knees are sculptured with a minute attention to anatomical details. The
whole body is, as it were, informed by the expression of the face, and is
dominated by the attentive suspense which breathes in every feature. The
muscles of the arm, of the bust, and of the shoulder are caught in half
repose, and are ready to return at once to work. This careful observance of
the professional attitude, or the characteristic gesture, is equally marked
in the Gizeh Cross-legged Scribe, and in all the Ancient Empire statues
which I have had an opportunity of studying.
The Cross-legged Scribe of Gizeh (fig. 186) was discovered by M. de Morgan at Sakkarah in the beginning of 1893. This statue exhibits a no less surprising vigour and certainty of intention and execution on the part of the sculptor than does its fellow of the Louvre, while representing a younger man of full, firm, and supple figure.