ANTINOUS is spending his summer holidays in Saint Louis in the United States.
This statue of Antinous as a very pensive Osiris is from the Alexandria Museum and it is part of the SUNKEN CITIES: EGYPT'S LOST WORLDS exhibition at the Saint Louis Art Museum which runs 9 September 2018.
It is among some fabulous Egyptian monuments and treasures which Antinous himself may have seen ... but which were lost at the bottom of the sea for centuries.
This 2nd Century AD statue depicts Antinous in a Romanized-Egyptian style as a royal personage striding with his left foot forward ... as was the traditional depiction of Egyptian pharaohs and gods.
He is wearing the traditional dynastic kilt which gods and pharaohs were always shown as wearing.
In addition, he appears to have a Uraeus stylized spitting cobra as the centerpiece of his wig-like headdress.
One fist is visible, clinched in the ages-old symbol of divine power seen on countless statues of deities and pharaohs throughout the ages.
It is one of the most unusual statues depicting Antinous as Osiris. The workmanship is more Greco-Roman than Egyptian around the head and face ... but the body adheres to traditional Egyptian artistic style mandates.
He has a rather pensive expression on his face, as if he is gazing off into the far distance.
Originally, of course, the eye sockets would have had gemstone-and-ivory eyes, perhaps outlined with copper "eyeliner."
This splendid statue is part of the stunning exhibition currently on show in London which includes sunken treasures.
You have all heard of Franck Goddio, the French marine archeologist who made headlines in the 1990s with his discovery in the Bay of Alexandria of ruins and artefacts which appear to have come from royal palaces, temples and perhaps even the Pharos lighthouse.
It is intriguing to think that Antinous may have gazed on those treasures when he and Hadrian visited Egypt in 130 AD.
Since first discovering the Alexandria treasures, Monsieur Goddio has gone on to trawl the waters a few kilometres east of Alexandria in hopes of discovering the fabled "Lost Cities" of Canopus and HERAKLEION (Heracleion), which he succeeded in finding in 2000.
Goddio's exhibition of "Egypt's Sunken Treasures" has traveled the world.
Now, Goddio is back with even more artifacts retrieved from the bottom of the sea … at the ST. LOUIS ART MUSEUM.
It offers a rare public viewing of newly discovered Canopus-Herakleion treasures since the two cities vanished below the waves in a series of floods and earthquakes, finally disappearing completely in the late 7th Century AD.
By that time, Egyptian priests had retreated to Canopus-Herakleion and Muslims were sweeping across the land.
Thus the exhibition offers a sort of time capsule of the waning days of paganism when the "barbarians" literally stood at the gates.
There are many statues, mostly fragmentary ones minus heads and limbs ... and one (alleged) statue of Antinous with a facial expression of pensive introspection.
Since first discovering the Alexandria treasures, Monsieur Goddio has gone on to trawl the waters a few kilometres east of Alexandria in hopes of discovering the fabled "Lost Cities" of Canopus and HERAKLEION (Heracleion), which he succeeded in finding in 2000.
Goddio's exhibition of "Egypt's Sunken Treasures" has traveled the world.
Now, Goddio is back with even more artifacts retrieved from the bottom of the sea … at the ST. LOUIS ART MUSEUM.
It offers a rare public viewing of newly discovered Canopus-Herakleion treasures since the two cities vanished below the waves in a series of floods and earthquakes, finally disappearing completely in the late 7th Century AD.
By that time, Egyptian priests had retreated to Canopus-Herakleion and Muslims were sweeping across the land.
Thus the exhibition offers a sort of time capsule of the waning days of paganism when the "barbarians" literally stood at the gates.
There are many statues, mostly fragmentary ones minus heads and limbs ... and one (alleged) statue of Antinous with a facial expression of pensive introspection.
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