Brooklyn Museum — Egyptian, Classical, Ancient Near Eastern Art · stela

Funerary Stela of Renefseneb

Source of record: Brooklyn Museum — Egyptian, Classical, Ancient Near Eastern Art — catalogued by the holding institution. View the original record →

Description

Object Label: My life and art have not been separated. They have been together. —Eva Hesse, 1970 1936 Eva Hesse, the second and youngest child of defense attorney Wilhelm Hesse and his first wife, Ruth Marcus Hesse, is born in Hamburg, Germany, on January 11. 1938 In November, Eva and her elder sister, Helen, flee Germany and Nazi persecution on a Jewish Kindertransport to Amsterdam, where they are taken in at a Catholic children’s home. Their parents follow three months later. 1939 In June, the entire family immigrates to the Washington Heights neighborhood of New York City. Wilhelm Hesse finds work as an insurance agent. Ruth Hesse suffers from depression and is eventually hospitalized. 1945 Eva’s parents are divorced. Her father remarries. He and his new wife, Eva Nathanson Hesse, assume custody of the two girls. 1946 Ruth Hesse commits suicide. 1949 Eva Hesse graduates from junior high school with honors. She decides to become an artist. 1952 After graduating from New York High School of Industrial Arts, Hesse enrolls at the Pratt Institute, in Brooklyn. 1954 Hesse quits Pratt early in her second year and begins drawing lessons at the Art Students League of New York. She gets a part-time job as an intern at Seventeen magazine. In September she enrolls at Cooper Union, in New York, where her teachers include influential representational painters Neil Welliver, Will Barnet, and Robert Gwathmey. She begins psychotherapy. 1957 After completing studies at Cooper Union in June, Hesse receives a scholarship to attend the Yale Summer School of Music and Art, in New Haven, Connecticut. In September, she enrolls at the Yale School of Art and Architecture. Her teachers include the highly influential German-born painter and educator Josef Albers. 1958 Hesse’s work is included in the First New Haven Festival of the Arts. 1959 Hesse graduates from Yale with a B.A. and returns to New York. She begins psychotherapy with a new doctor, and she remains in treatment for the rest of her life. 1960 In January, Hesse takes a part-time job as a textile designer at a major fabric house. She moves into her first apartment in New York on her own and settles into a shared studio. During the year, she completes a number of figurative paintings and, later, increasingly abstract works. 1961 Hesse is included in Drawings: Three Young Americans at John Heller Gallery; in his review of the show, the artist-critic Donald Judd claims Hesse’s work is the “most contemporary and proficient.” Hesse also participates in the 21st International Watercolor Biennial at the Brooklyn Museum. She meets her future husband, sculptor Tom Doyle, whom she marries on November 21. 1962 Hesse and Doyle participate in an Allan Kaprow “Happening” (an early and influential form of performance art) at the Art Students League’s summer school in Woodstock, New York. 1963 Hesse has her first one-person exhibition at Allan Stone Gallery, in New York. 1964 The German collector Arnhard Scheidt sponsors Doyle and Hesse for a year in Kettwig-an-der-Ruhr, near Essen, in exchange for a selection of their work. Hesse works intensively in a huge studio in an abandoned textile factory and draws pieces of cord and machine parts, materials that she later uses to make her first brightly painted constructions. She travels throughout Europe and makes contact with many artists. 1965 Hesse creates her last paintings. She has a one-person exhibition at the Kunsthalle in Düsseldorf. Returning to New York, she concentrates on sculpture. 1966 Hesse and Doyle divorce. Hesse’s reputation as a sculptor grows; she wins praise for works in major New York gallery shows and her art appears alongside pieces by influential artists such as Bruce Nauman and Louise Bourgeois, among others. Her father, Wilhelm Hesse, dies in Switzerland. 1967 Hesse makes works in series or using mathematical progressions and begins using latex and commissioning fabricated components for sculpture. 1968 Hesse is visiting artist at Oberlin College in Ohio. She has her only one-person sculpture show, Chain Polymers, at Fischbach Gallery, in New York, and her sculptures are included in significant group exhibitions. The first symptoms of Hesse’s illness appear. 1969 Hesse’s work is included in the influential exhibition When Attitudes Become Form, at the Kunsthalle Bern, in Switzerland, which travels internationally. Hesse collapses in April and is diagnosed with a brain tumor; she is operated on twice and undergoes radiation and chemotherapy at New York Hospital. Two of her sculptures are sold to the Museum of Modern Art, and another is included in an important exhibition at the Whitney Museum of American Art; she attends the opening in a wheelchair. Hesse spends Christmas and New Year’s back in the hospital. 1970 Although increasingly weak, Hesse continues to work. In March she reenters the hospital for a third surgery. An important interview is published in May’s Artforum magazine with her masterwork, Contingent, on the cover. Eva Hesse dies on May 29 at the age of thirty-four. Caption: Funerary Stela of Renefseneb, ca. 1759–1630 B.C.E.. Limestone, 15 15/16 x 11 1/4 x 2 13/16 in. (40.5 x 28.5 x 7.2 cm). Brooklyn Museum, Charles Edwin Wilbour Fund, 08.480.176. (Photo: Brooklyn Museum)

AI image analysis GPT-4o-2024-08-06

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.

An Egyptian stela with hieroglyphic inscriptions and figures depicted in seated positions.

The stela features six horizontal registers, each containing seated figures facing each other with hieroglyphic inscriptions above and around them. The figures appear to be engaged in offerings or ritual activities, characteristic of funerary art. The composition and style suggest a focus on the afterlife with detailed rendering of hieroglyphs and human figures.

funerary New Kingdom good
Materials limestone
Signs Ankh ×3 Djed Was

Connections

Found at Egypt
Materials Limestone

Cross-references (2)

  • BKM-Accession 08.480.176 tier-2
  • BKM-Object 3245 tier-2
About this record's data
  • From the source institution — accession, description, dimensions, and dating are as catalogued by Brooklyn Museum — Egyptian, Classical, Ancient Near Eastern Art.
  • 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.