When I went to the Louvre in 2015, this was one of my must-see pieces! The love story of Akhenaten ππππ³π ππ and Nefertiti π€ππππ has always fascinated me . This painted limestone ππππ statue ππ ±ππΎ reminds me of the popular βcouples statues,β which depict a husband and wife sitting together, that were prominent in burials during the Old Kingdom!
Nefertiti π€ππππ was the βGreat Royal Wife πππππ ¨β of Akhenaten ππππ³π ππ. This statue depicts Nefertiti π€ππππ (left) and Akhenaten ππππ³π ππ (right) holding hands and walking forward. We know they are walking forward because one foot is placed in front of the other.
Letβs talk about their clothing! They both have sandals πΏπππΈπͺ on their feet and wearing broad collars π ±π΄ππΊππ¦, the necklace π ππππ§ of choice for royals and the gods πΉπΉπΉ. Akhenaten ππππ³π ππ is also wearing the blue Khepresh crown π£πππ on his head, while Nefertiti appears to be wearing what looks like the red crown π§ππππ, but there is blue ππΉππΏπΈπ₯ paint π¨ππ ±ππΈπ¦ on it! . The Uraeus πππππ is still present on the front of both crowns!
What was the purpose of this statue ππ ±ππΎ? This most likely came from a private home, where it was used in a shrine πππ ππ to worship πΌπΏπ’ Akhenaten ππππ³π ππ and Nefertiti π€ππππ. The common people would worship Akhenaten ππππ³π ππ and Nefertiti π€ππππ because they were thought to be manifestations π£π£π£ of the Aten ππππ³ here on Earth.
The typical Amarna-style (elongated faces and limbs, more body fat in the stomach and thighs) is present here, which makes it very easy to identify these figures as Nefertiti π€ππππ and Akhenaten ππππ³π ππ. The Amarna art revolution is so interesting because Egyptian art didnβt change much until Akhenatenβs ππππ³π ππ rule, then there was this drastic change, and then once Akhenaten ππππ³π ππ died, the ancient Egyptians πππππͺ reverted back to the traditional art style and it stated that way for the rest of the civilization.
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