Ancient Art and Antiquities For Sale

Cart

View Cart
  • No products in the cart.
  • My Account
    • Edit address
    • Change password
    • View order
  • English
    • Français
  • Login / Register
  • HOME
  • SHOP
  • ABOUT US
  • BLOG
  • CONTACT
  • BILIANAK.
  • PHOENIX ANCIENT ART
Back to top

Statuette of a Wild Sheep or a Ram

Home  / Amulets / Statuette of a Wild Sheep or a Ram

View cart “Amulet in the shape of a Frog” has been added to your cart.

Statuette of a Wild Sheep or a Ram

This Statuette of a Wild Sheep or a Ram was carved from a thin stone pebble, which is still partially translucent, despite the current dark and worn appearance of the surface.

Near Eastern art, Neolithic
4th millenium B.C., 5th millenium B.C.

In stock

In stock

Price:CHF 5'200

Categories: Amulets, Animals, Sculpture.

Love it, share it!

  • Description
  • Additional information
  • Product Inquiry

Product Description

This Statuette of a Wild Sheep or a Ram was carved from a thin stone pebble, which is still partially translucent, despite the current dark and worn appearance of the surface.

Stylistically, this figurine is characterized by simple and slightly naive shapes : the linear and accurate outlines confer a sense of strength and originality to the piece, which has quite few parallels in the panorama of Near Eastern Neolithic sculpture. This formal simplicity is a constant in artworks of such remote times and definitely attracts the modern eye too.

The sculptor used essential expressive means and a fine modeling to represent the animal in a very naturalistic way: the outline of the statuette is formed by a single uninterrupted, sinuous line. There are many anatomical details: the straight head with small holes for the eyes; the bumps on the back that indicate the neck and the croup; the well-rounded thighs and the legs represented by small stumps (the hooves are not indicated). The long, curved horns, carved in relief, descend to the lower neck and recall the horns of rams and wild sheep. Our figurine can be related to a contemporary statuette excavated in Susa, but in the terracotta example the horns are entirely three-dimensional.

All attested zoomorphic representations in the round originating from Near Eastern Neolithic are of small dimensions. The animals represented are not always easy to identify, but the large variety of the bestiary is astonishing, especially for the figural seals: among the most popular are caprids, ovids and bovids, species that were domesticated for a long time already. Their exact destination is often unknown, but it probably varied from case to case: ex-voto, funerary items, toys for children, container,s etc.

In the Neolithic period, when husbandry and agriculture were in their early stages, small livestock (caprids, ovids, pigs) was of paramount importance in the context of economic life (commodity money, production of meat and dairy products, manufacture of fabrics, etc.), what certainly explains its great success in iconography and art.

Additional information

Culture

Near Eastern art, Neolithic

Datation

4th millenium B.C., 5th millenium B.C.

Dimensions
Type

Amulet, Animal, Sculpture

Material

Stone

Colors

Green, White

Condition
Serial Number

Other Products

  • Statuette of a crouching woman - 12880
    Details Add to cart
    ADDED

    Statuette of a crouching woman

    Greco-Roman molded glass statuette / amulet of a crouching woman from the 3rd century B.C. – 2nd century A.D. Complete and in good condition despite few chips and cracks.

    CHF 2'800 Read More
  • Amulet of a standing Bes
    Details Add to cart
    ADDED

    Amulet of a standing Bes

    CHF 2'700 Read More
  • Details Add to cart
    ADDED

    Roman Statuette of a Reclining Man

    This statuette represents an adult, though beardless man with youthful features.

    CHF 2'900 Read More

Blog

Antique Idols

As soon as humans were able to think, they consistently […]

Antiquity’s Colors

English Translation Soon Les œuvres qui nous sont parvenues de […]

Glassware production

Glass, a luxury and exquisite material, whose technical virtuosity reached […]

Categories

  • Artifacts
  • Events & exhibitions
  • Facts & Figures
  • The gallery

Archives

  • December 2015
  • June 2015
  • March 2015
  • January 2015
  • December 2014
  • November 2014
  • October 2014
  • September 2014
  • August 2014
  • FAQs
  • Terms of Use
  • Terms of Sale
  • Contact us

©Designed by Webgenève - Création de site internet


Rue Etienne Dumont, 9 1204 Geneva
Tel. +4122 301 9378
Email: contact@young-collectors.com

This website uses cookies. If you continue browsing this website, your action is considered to be a cookie policy acceptance.