Statue of Demedji and Hennutsen
Description
Limestone, paint
AI image analysis claude-haiku-4-5
Machine-generated from the object's image on May 2026. Not curatorial; treat deities, names, and signs below as the model's best reading, not authority.
A limestone statue depicting a seated man with a smaller standing figure beside him, both wearing traditional Egyptian dress and headdresses characteristic of the Old Kingdom.
This is a high-quality Old Kingdom limestone statue group showing a male figure seated on a block throne in a formal pose, wearing a simple linen kilt and a striped nemes headdress with a uraeus. He presents a conventional portraiture style typical of 4th-6th Dynasty private statues. To his right stands a smaller female figure, rendered at a proportionally reduced scale according to Egyptian representational conventions, wearing a simple wig and form-fitting dress. The seated figure's body is naturalistically carved with anatomical detail and dignity. Hieroglyphic inscriptions are visible on the sides of the throne block, though the specific text is not clearly legible in this image. The limestone shows patination and age consistent with Old Kingdom provenance, with traces of original red/ochre pigmentation visible. The compositional arrangement—with the female figure standing beside the male—is typical of paired statuary representing family relationships, likely a husband and wife or father and child.
Connections
Cross-references (4)
- Wikidata-Q Q116252296 tier-1
- Collection-QID Q160236 tier-2 (wikidata-mediated)
- Inventory-Number 51.37 tier-2 (wikidata-mediated)
- MET-Object 543902 tier-2 (wikidata-mediated)
About this record's data
- From the source institution — accession, description, dimensions, and dating are as catalogued by Metropolitan Museum of Art — Egyptian Art (Open Access).
- AI-inferred — the image-analysis panel (deities, names, signs) is machine-generated and may be wrong.
- Approximate location — most map points are plotted at the site centroid, not the exact findspot.
- Inferred links — cross-references marked with a match method other than explicit-source-field were matched by us, not stated by the source.