Share your favorites on Show & Tell

Wood Cat from thrift store today!

In Folk Art > Animal Folk Art Objects > Show & Tell and Animals > Cats > Show & Tell.
Recent Activity2831 of 7733?- 2 Brass Western StatuesOwl made from 6 different kinds of hardwood
9
Love it
0
Like it

MoyMoy loves this.
kwqdkwqd loves this.
auraaura loves this.
vintagemadvintagemad loves this.
ManikinManikin loves this.
Moonstonelover21Moonstonelover21 loves this.
musikchoomusikchoo loves this.
nldionnenldionne loves this.
vetraio50vetraio50 loves this.
See 7 more
Add to collection

    Please create an account, or Log in here

    If you don't have an account, create one here.


    Create a Show & TellReport as inappropriate


    Posted 11 years ago

    toracat
    (728 items)

    HELLO! $3.50 for this cat, It is signed and dated, 1961 and s n l or s n c, It is 9 inches tall and heavy, painted as you can see. Kind of Egyptian writing on him!? I had to buy! Any info. appreciated! WELL 4th photo is from museum N.York! see below Don
    Cat, Ptolemaic Period, ca. 400–30 B.C.
    Egyptian
    Bronze
    H. 11 in. (27.9 cm)
    Harris Brisbane Dick Fund, 1956 (56.16.1)

    NOT ON VIEW Last Updated April 26, 2013
    When fastened together along an almost invisible seam, the two cast halves of this figure became the container for a mummified cat. The cat was the sacred animal of the goddess Bastet. In rituals performed in her honor, mummified cats were buried within her temple precincts. Clearly this is not an ordinary cat. Its pierced right ear once held a gold ring (now lost), and suspended from its incised necklace is a wedjat-eye pendant. An impression of majesty is created by the cat's erect and dignified pose and the alert expression of the eyes. The sleek muscles and long graceful legs convey a sense of controlled power.
    For the Egyptians, the goddesses Bastet and Sakhmet were two aspects of divine power. Sakhmet, the lioness, represented dangerous, potentially destructive forces. Bastet, the feline of the house, incorporated the benevolent aspects of a deity that could be pacified by rituals.
    Cats were first domesticated by the Egyptians in the Middle Kingdom for their mouse-hunting abilities. By New Kingdom times, they had also become household companions. In tomb scenes, they frequently appear seated beneath the chairs of their owners or on sporting boats in the Nile marshes, where they flush out birds for their. DON

    Unsolved Mystery

    Help us close this case. Add your knowledge below.

    logo
    Animal Folk Art Objects
    See all
    Antique 19th Century Farming Oil on Canvas Painting- Horse Ploughing Old Master
    Antique 19th Century Farming Oil on...
    $75
    SATTERLEE & MORY FORT EDWARD NY STONEWARE 1.5 GALLON JUG COBALT BLUE BIRD c1865
    SATTERLEE & MORY FORT EDWARD NY STO...
    $255
    ANTIQUE FOLK ART WEATHER VANE, NAIVE SHIRE HORSE, EARLY 20TH CENTURY
    ANTIQUE FOLK ART WEATHER VANE, NAIV...
    $225
    RARE VINTAGE SIGNED DN DON NOYES FOLK ART CARVED 7 BIRD TREE POLYCHROME PAINTED
    RARE VINTAGE SIGNED DN DON NOYES FO...
    $378
    logo
    Antique 19th Century Farming Oil on Canvas Painting- Horse Ploughing Old Master
    Antique 19th Century Farming Oil on...
    $75
    See all

    Comments

    1. toracat toracat, 11 years ago
      Thank you!!!

    Want to post a comment?

    Create an account or login in order to post a comment.