R2 Cat. 1
Heykel
Şist, Taş
Ca. 2500-2000 BC (?) (Erken Tunç Çağı)
Preserved are the lower body and legs tapering to small pointed feet. The interior of the legs is unfinished. This is an example of a flat idol of obese type.
According to D.G. Mitten it is “like a silhouette cut-out of a mother goddess figurine.”
R2 Cat. 2
Heykel
Mermer, Taş
Third Millenium BC? (Erken Tunç Çağı)
The round eye is made with a little chisel, the mouth by sawing and thin file or with abrasive. There were three strokes on the left of the neck to characterize feathers. This is not a Greek or Roman piece but either early Lydian or more likely Bronz...
R2 Cat. 3
Heykel
Mermer, Taş
ca. 600 BC (Lidya)
The hair is stylized in large “Daedalic” beads, with waves over the forehead; they are separated by incised lines on her right side with eight vertical beads in two tresses. Plain in back, the hair falls over the back of the throne. It curves around ...
R2 Cat. 4
Heykel
Mermer, Taş
580-570 BC (Lidya)
The lower part of the small female archaic statue is made in one piece with the base and has a back pillar. Her chiton falls in vertical folds down to the ground but leaves a niche for two schematized feet set apart. The oblique bit of garment seen a...
R2 Cat. 5
Heykel
Mermer, Taş
580-570 BC (Lidya)
Five near-vertical, straight chiseled folds flank either side of two wide ribbons which fall vertically from the belt. Preserved at the top right and left are bits of double-folded overhang from a himation. In addition to the overhang, there are thre...