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Women at a Banquet by Nina de Garis Davies

Women at a Banquet

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Artist
Nina de Garis Davies
Date
A.D. 1922; original ca. 1400–1390 B.C.
Medium
Tempera on paper
Dimensions
facsimile: h. 29.5 cm (11 5/8 in); w. 58 cm (22 13/16 in), scale 1:1; framed: h. 33 cm ( 13 in); w. 61 cm (24 in)
Department
Egyptian Art
Gallery
135
Location
135
Credit
Rogers Fund, 1930

Description

Overview Women at a Banquet Twentieth Century; original New Kingdom Nina de Garis Davies A.D. 1922; original ca. 1400–1390 B.C. On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 135 This detail of a banquet scene shows a female guest offering another guest a yellow mandrake fruit, which the ancient Egyptians associated with love and sexuality. The fruit has a pleasing smell when ripe, while the mandrake plant itself has hallucinogenic and aphrodisiac effects but is toxic. Several lotus flowers are also depicted. Each headband features a lotus bud, and two guests hold a lotus flower; one is open (though partially destroyed), and another is closed. The lotus flower, which also has a pleasing scent, was a symbol for regeneration and rebirth because its petals open and close every day. Additionally, the Nymphaea species of lotus has narcotic properties and may have been used to achieve an altered state. View more