Object Image

Jar with paired birds in panels

This jar has a flat base, squat body, a carinated shoulder, and everted rim. It is made of buff clay, and has dark brown painted decorations in two registers. The lower register alternates geometric decorations, namely crosshatching and vertical rows of circles, with images of birds. The birds have short, bent legs, big heads and long beaks. The upper register has panels whose lower corners are filled with studded triangles, perhaps meant to indicate wooded slopes. The panels each contain one to three suns.

Vessels with very similar decoration have been found at Tepe Giyan and Godin Tepe in western Iran. At both sites they come from graves, and it is difficult to say whether these vessels served a ritual purpose or were objects of everyday life (or both). This jar was formerly in the possession of the archaeologist Ernst Herzfeld, who briefly excavated at Tepe Giyan. Herzfeld published the jar as coming from Giyan, but he never provided a full report on his excavations, and it is thus impossible to know if he dug up the jar himself or purchased it at or near the site.

Credit: Rogers Fund and Gifts of Lucy W. Drexel, Theodore M. Davis, Helen Miller Gould, Albert Gallatin, Egypt Exploration Fund and Egyptian Research Account, by exchange, 1950

c. 1600-1400 B.C.
Ceramic, paint
14.9cm
51.25.25
Image and text © Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2019

Where you'll find this

The Metropolitan Museum of Art
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Permanent collection