Votive figure
ca. 2900 - 2500 B.C.
Is this man smarter than the gods?
A portrait from a time before the concept existed, this small Sumerian sculpture was meant to be a man’s exact double. Commissioned by a wealthy patron from a workshop of artisans, this votive figure would have been left in a temple by its owner. The statue’s supplicant pose, hands locked in constant devotion, was a clever attempt to deceive the gods into thinking that it was the man himself who dwelt in the temple in perpetuity. While the gods had the power to bless or disrupt all elements of life in the ancient Near East, people believed that they could fool the gods into believing that they were their stone doubles, and that the gods would therefore shower them with favor and success for their constant piety.
Alabaster
11 1/4 x 5 x 3 7/8 in. (28.58 x 12.7 x 9.84 cm)
Eugene Fuller Memorial Collection
41.34
Provenance: [H.F. Sachs, New York, by 1941]; purchased by the Seattle Art Museum (with funds from Eugene Fuller Memorial Collection), January 1941
Photo: Paul Macapia