Идеалы женской красоты в древности.
Матриархальные статуэтки
Marble female figure
Marble
Cycladic
Early Cycladic II
ca. 2600–2400 B.C.
Attributed to the Bastis Master
Standing female figure wearing a strap and a necklace
Bronze Age
3rd–2nd millennium B.C.
Southwestern Arabia
Sandstone, quartzite
Seated female
Halaf
ca. 5600–5000 B.C.
Mesopotamia or Syria
Ceramic, paint
Figure from a Reliquary Ensemble: Seated Female
19th–early 20th century
Fang peoples, Okak group
Gabon or Equatorial Guinea
Wood, metal
Female Figure
early 19th century
Ha'apai Islands
Tonga, Ha'apai Islands
Whale ivory
Figure of a reclining woman
Parthian
ca. 2nd century B.C.–2nd century A.D.
Mesopotamia, said to be from Ctesiphon
Alabaster (gypsum)
Figure
Royal figure with jewelled diadem
11th century
Iran or Afghanistan
Stucco; incised, painted
Seated goddess with a child
Hittite Empire
ca. 14th–13th century B.C.
Central Anatolia
Gold
Marble grave stele of a little girl
Marble, Parian
Greek
Classical
ca. 450–440 B.C.
House-Post Figure
19th century
Sentani people
Indonesia, Papua Province (Irian Jaya), Kabiterau village, Lake Sentani
Wood
Stele of Ushumgal
Early Dynastic I-II
ca. 2900–2600 B.C.
Mesopotamia, probably from Umma (modern Jokha)
Gypsum alabaster
Mother and Child
15th–20th century
Bamana peoples
Mali, Bougouni or Dioila region
Wood
Power Figure: Male (Nkisi)
19th–20th century
Songye peoples
, copper, brass, iron, fiber, snakeskin, leather, fur, feathers, mud, resin
Wood, copper, brass, iron, fiber, snakeskin, leather, fur, feathers, mud, resin
Lime Container (Poporo)
1st–7th century
Quimbaya
Colombia
Gold