WEBVTT 00:00:00.202 --> 00:00:04.425 [music playing] 00:00:04.425 --> 00:00:10.194 We're in the Louvre and we're looking at The Seated Scribe, which is an Old Kingdom sculpture that's not life-size 00:00:10.194 --> 00:00:17.092 from about 2600 B.C.E. or let's say about 4600 years old. 00:00:17.092 --> 00:00:20.295 Right, so it's from the Necropolis at Saqqara. 00:00:20.295 --> 00:00:23.498 Where the the step pyramid is, the Djoser step pyramid. 00:00:23.498 --> 00:00:26.394 So it's an important Old Kingdom site. 00:00:26.394 --> 00:00:29.580 The sculpture is important for a whole bunch of reasons. 00:00:29.580 --> 00:00:38.780 Not only what it tells us about Egyptian society, but also because it's a remarkably distinct sculpture in what is often a very rigid, pictorial tradition. 00:00:38.780 --> 00:00:46.468 In that he looks very informal. He is cross-legged, seated on the ground. He's holding a papyrus scroll. 00:00:46.468 --> 00:00:49.885 He would have been holding, of course, originally some sort of reed pen. 00:00:49.885 --> 00:00:58.250 And he does look very human, very natural, compared to the more hieratic way that we usually see Egyptian figures. 00:00:58.250 --> 00:01:05.168 And that has to do with the fact that he's not of kingly divine pharonic status. 00:01:05.168 --> 00:01:09.952 He's a scribe. He's important, extremely important in the hierarchy of Egyptian society. 00:01:09.952 --> 00:01:12.279 He can write, which was a very important skill. 00:01:12.279 --> 00:01:16.829 And was obviously of a very high class because he had a sculpture made of him. 00:01:16.829 --> 00:01:22.787 But still he's not a divine figure, and so he can be represented in this more naturalistic fashion. 00:01:22.787 --> 00:01:28.111 You know it's interesting you said that he was very important, and I think that's expressed in a number of subtle ways. 00:01:28.111 --> 00:01:32.403 Not only was he literate and entrusted in a sense with the writing of the state, presumably. 00:01:32.403 --> 00:01:39.167 But there's a little bit of fat around his middle, and archaeologists believe that that's actually a signifier for his wealth. 00:01:39.167 --> 00:01:46.625 You can also tell that he's middle aged because, you know not only from his fat, but he looks like he's lost some muscle tone in his arms and his chest. 00:01:46.625 --> 00:01:49.960 And he has a sense of wisdom to him. 00:01:49.960 --> 00:01:58.329 A little bit individualized, kind of thin lips and big ears and these inset eyes that make him look incredibly alive. 00:01:58.329 --> 00:02:03.172 The iris is a rock crystal. It's been drilled and there's a bit of color behind them. 00:02:03.172 --> 00:02:07.934 And they're really exceptional. There's some copper that actually surrounds the eye, which is really very beautiful. 00:02:07.934 --> 00:02:13.592 And he's painted with red ochre and also a color black for his hair. 00:02:13.592 --> 00:02:23.096 And if we think about the color, the inset eyes, his individuality, his relaxed informal pose, he's very natural. 00:02:23.096 --> 00:02:28.231 And I say that, but at the same time he's really not right because he's meant only to be seen from the front. 00:02:28.231 --> 00:02:36.303 He is a funerary sculpture and so there is also something meant to be transcendent here. 00:02:36.303 --> 00:02:43.515 Well it's interesting you said meant to be seen from the front - yes, but since this is for the interior of a tomb - no one was meant to see it at all. 00:02:43.515 --> 00:02:50.081 That's right it really is meant for the afterlife. And it's so interesting that here is sculpture that truly transcends human life 00:02:50.081 --> 00:02:54.609 and that was meant for the afterlife, meant for this sort of eternal existence. 00:02:54.609 --> 00:02:58.270 [music playing] 00:02:58.270 --> 99:59:59.999 This video was made possible by a generous gift from Kevin Bradshaw