**Originally Listed At $1200**
Near East, Anatolia, Turkey / Central Asia, Mesopotamia, Sumer, ca. 2000 to 500 BCE. An adorable marble or alabaster effigy of an animal with an elongated body, nubbin legs, and pointed ears. Etched concentric circles form the eyes and decorate the periphery of the creature, and when backlit the stone glows due to its semitranslucent nature. The "loaf" like shape of the body suggests a resting a feline, perhaps a domesticated cat, or possibly a spotted wildcat or lynx. Whether cats were domesticated in Egypt about 5000 years ago, or in the Fertile Crescentnealy 10,000 years back - there is no denying the importance both wild and domesticated felines in Near Eastern Cultures. The circles may be wards against the "evil eye" and perhaps inlaid at one time with contrasting shards of stone. Size: 4" L x 0.4" W x 2.3" H (10.2 cm x 1 cm x 5.8 cm); 2.5" H (6.4 cm) on included custom stand.
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Provenance: East Coast collection, New York Gallery, New York City, New York, USA, acquired before 2010
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#177296
Condition
Age and exposure weathering, striations and abstaions across surface. Chips and nicks to high pointed areas. No repairs or restoration. Mineral and earthen encrustations on surface as shown.