Egypt, Middle Kingdom, ca. 2000 BC
Egyptian faience was often used to make funerary statuettes. It is a ceramic that consists mainly of quartz and is very easy to glaze. The addition of copper lends it its blue-green colour.
Images of hippopotami – often decorated with stylised lotus leaves – accompanied the dead. The hippo was viewed as a symbol of new life and fertility because the Nile constituted Egypt’s aorta.
Hippos were also dangerous and were associated with Seth, the god of evil and chaos. Hippopotami attacked fishermen and trampled fields along the Nile. It was also an animal to befriend in the afterlife as it could protect the deceased from the omnipresent dangers. One or more legs were often broken of the statuette before it was placed in the grave to avoid the animal turning against the individual.
Size: 15 x 8,5 cm.

Beauty in Freedom
What a Wonderful World
Crazy Giraffe Large
Beauty in the City
Teapot stars
Fatigues (medium resin)
Crazy Giraffe Medium
Balloon Dog Gold
Dali - Soft self-portrait with fried bacon
Baarsfant 2
Crazy Giraffe Small
Polar Bear 18 cm
He Who Walks with Silver
Peacock
Hugo
Mother & Child statue
Cowpernicus (large)
Flower Lover Cow (medium ceramic)
Stork with Orange Beak
Big City Cat Yellow, Nino
Bus
Crazy Giraffe XS
Escher "Sphere with Fish" Mini
Crazy Giraffe Medium
Dancing Beauty
Goddes of Shopping (medium resin)
Crazy Giraffe XS
Love is in the Air
Mini Miffy (silver) 9cm
The Yawner
Snoopy Peanuts Snoopy Charlie Dance
Elephant "Ollie" Medium
Polar Bear 11cm 


Nederlands
Français