These two smaller figures affectionately embrace the larger one's legs. The director of the museum, explains the sculpture's remarkable quality - the delicacy of the gestures of the son and wife, and the exceptional state of preservation.
Some of the original pigment even remains. It's just 14 inches high. The director of the museum says that a statue of this size is, however, quite normal - quality is more important than size. The date of the work is about 2400 BC, during the Fifth Dynasty of the Old Kingdom. This is the period when the canonical Egyptian style came together. It lasted until about AD 300.
The sculpture can be dated to the Fifth Dynasty by details of the hair and particularly the face. This type of statue only starts in the Fourth Dynasty. The piece was purchased from a private collection in the United States. But its known history as a collector's item dates back to a French general, Louis Andr (1838-1913). Then there is a long gap in its provenance until 1989, when it was bought at auction by the owner who preceded the Kimbell. This sculpture is a considerable rarity. Most Egyptian sculpture of comparable quality is already in museums. January 2006