For some reason, this very simple relief of two π» hands π§ππ¦ was one of my favorite things that I saw at the Petrie Museum in London!
Flinders Petrie was one of the main excavators at present-day Tel el-Amarna, the site of Akhenaten’s ππππ³π ππ new capital of Egypt ππ ππ.Β Amarna as it is commonly referred to as, is the modern name ππ for βAkhetaten πππππππ – Horizon of the Aten,β which replaced Thebes πππ as the capital of Egypt ππ ππ.Β
During excavations at Amarna πππππππ the workshops π―πππ¦ of artists were found, which contained a lot of unfinished reliefs. These “trial pieces” are though to have been made by young artists who were learning their craft. Even though this is such a simple relief of hands π§ππ¦ with many cracks, I find it to be so beautiful π€. The art of the Amarna period fascinates me because it is so different stylistically from other Egyptian art! I love seeing all of the unfinished pieces that were found at Amarna – itβs kind of like getting a behind the scenes view of the art!
A lot of reliefs in Egypt ππ ππ were made on limestone ππππ. From a geological perspective, limestone ππππ (due to its composition of the mineral calcite π± – which comes from dead marine organisms), is a very easy rock ππππ to sculpt and work with because calcite π± is a softer mineral ππ»ππ ±π. Egypt ππ ππ used to be completely under water π hundreds π²π²π² of millions π¨π¨π¨ of years ago, hence why limestone ππππ (and sandstone ππ ±π§πππ) are so abundant – both of these rocks πππππ¦ are classified as sedimentary rocks, which are primarily formed under large bodies of water π!
Limestone ππππ is composed of dead π ππ± marine organisms, which I find correlates with ancient Egypt ππ ππ as a whole – their entire life πΉ/religion focused on preparing for death π ππ±, and they basically built ππ€π ±π΄π§ their civilization out of dead π ππ± things!
Itβs so fascinating how geology and Egyptian history are so closely interrelated! Did you know that Petrie was a geologist and that he was the first to apply stratigraphy (studying rock layers) to the field of archaeology?!