Palette in the Form of a Fish

Description

Stone palettes were used for grinding eye paint worn for cosmetic purposes and to protect against sun glare and eye infections. There were two types: green, made from malachite (copper ore), and black, made from galena (lead ore). As funerary items, these ores may have had a deep significance for the deceased as symbols of regeneration and rebirth: the rich soil of the banks of the Nile (black), and the lush vegetation it sustained (green).

Provenance

Said to have been in the collections of Sir William Matthew Flinders Petrie and John Garstang. Purchased from Peter Scharrer, New York

Palette in the Form of a Fish

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c. 3500–2950 BCE

Accession Number

1989.32

Medium

graywacke

Dimensions

Overall: 10.5 cm (4 1/8 in.)

Classification

Implements

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

Bequest of Elizabeth M. Skala