Last week, we already encountered several kinds of sculpture (Venus of Willendorf, Head of an Akkadian Ruler) and the different potential functions that three-dimensional art objects might play. This ancient Egyptian bust of Queen Nefertiti offers a new category of sculpture: the portrait bust. This portrait head carved from limestone, and completely in the round, was kept as a model in the artist's studio for the creation of standard likenesses of the ruler. Nerfertiti served as priestess in the new religion established under her husband's rule and thus has exceptional prominence in the history of Egyptian queens, which perhaps motivated a greater demand for portraits representing her. The right eye of this bust was never completed with inlay crystal and a painted pupil, likely because this was a model and not a finished work. We will discuss more background on Queen Nerfertiti in class, but based simply on these images, what would you see makes this work a portrait? What details of the bust indicate that she is an individual and not just an ideal type, or do you think it is some combination of the two?
And just for fun, here is a clever and humorous take on the difference between Egyptian and Greek approaches to representing the body (sent to me by one of your classmates):