Head from a Statuette of Isis
Head from a Statuette of Isis
Faience; H. 8.6 cm; W. 5.5 cm; D. 6.3 cm
Alexandria Region; 125–100 BCE
Charles Edwin Wilbour Fund; Brooklyn Museum: 58.1
© Brooklyn Museum Photograph
The syncretistic representations of the Greek and Egyptian gods Aphrodite, Zeus, Osiris, Isis, Hathor, Serapis, and Ammon reflect the Ptolemaic strategy of embracing existing religious traditions while adapting them to fit royal propaganda and appease the kingdom’s multicultural subjects.
This faience statuette of the goddess Isis was most probably meant to be displayed together with a similarly rendered statuette of the god Zeus Serapis, also on display in the exhibition.
E. Riefstahl. Ancient Egyptian Glass and Glazes in the Brooklyn Museum. The Brooklyn Museum, 1968. 113, no. 89.