Model's Description:
Faience Hathor Sistrum 3D Model.
Download Faience Hathor Sistrum in various files formats such as Wavefront Object format, Autodesk FBX, DirectX 9.0, Stereo Lithography and HTML5 JSON format.
An ancient Egyptian arched sistrum (musical percussion instrument similar to a rattle). The provenance is unknown as the piece was purchased in Luxor in 1908. It likely dates to the Late Period.
The sistrum is pierced twice on each side of the arch where the moving pieces would have been inserted. Below the arch, we see a wedjat eye above a nb-sign. Hathor’s head is flanked by two columns and bears her characteristic plaited wig. This example is unusual for the lack of a double headed Hathor, only one side bears Hathor’s face with the back of the sistrum featuring the sun disk and horns (Hathor’s symbol).
The inscription reads “Words spoken by Bastet-Iru-Di-Set”.
See “Glimpses of ancient Egypt: Studies in Honour of H. W. Fairman” 1979, p.17 & pl.IV for more info.
Accession Number: E.202
Model and Photography Credit: Charlotte Sargent - Faience Hathor Sistrum - 3D model by Garstang Museum of Archaeology (@garstang) 3D Model is ready to download for free, this model contains 64000 polygons.
Model's Description:
Stylobate Lion 3D Model.
Download Stylobate Lion in various files formats such as Wavefront Object format, Autodesk FBX, DirectX 9.0, Stereo Lithography and HTML5 JSON format.
“Alert and looking toward each other, both lions jealously protect their prey—a lamb in one case and a calf in the other—beneath massive paws. The pair originally supported columns that would have been attached to their backs and probably flanked a small doorway of a church. By the mid-eighteenth century, they were placed at the door of a chapel near the village of Quattro Castella, near Reggio Emilia.” ~ https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/468447
Date: Early 13th century
Geography: Made in Reggio Emilia, Northern Italy
Culture: North Italian
Medium: Limestone (Red limestone)
Dimensions: Overall: 26 x 17 7/8 x 25 1/4 in. (66 x 45.4 x 64.1 cm)
Classification: Sculpture-Architectural
Credit Line: The Cloisters Collection, 1953
Accession Number: 53.64.1
207 photos, Canon G7X, daylight, RealityCapture + Blender - Stylobate Lion - Met Cloisters - 3D model by Thomas Flynn (@nebulousflynn) 3D Model is ready to download for free, this model contains 99658 polygons.
Model's Description:
Early medieval inscribed stone 3D Model.
Download Early medieval inscribed stone in various files formats such as Wavefront Object format, Autodesk FBX, DirectX 9.0, Stereo Lithography and HTML5 JSON format.
Joining fragments of cross incised carved stone. Incised image of cross shaft runs down centre of main face flanked by two partial Latin crosslets. it is not easy to find parallels to this stone from amongst the existing repertoire of early medieval stone sculpture from Anglo-Saxon England or from Scotland 3D Model is ready to download for free, this model contains 99999 polygons.
Model's Description:
Waterfall between walls 3D Model.
Download waterfall between walls in various files formats such as Wavefront Object format, Autodesk FBX, DirectX 9.0, Stereo Lithography and HTML5 JSON format.
Waterfall between walls - Buy Royalty Free 3D model by yelizegi 3D Model is ready to download for free, this model contains 1466779 polygons.
Model's Description:
The Queen of the Night 3D Model.
Download The Queen of the Night in various files formats such as Wavefront Object format, Autodesk FBX, DirectX 9.0, Stereo Lithography and HTML5 JSON format.
---------------------------------------------------------
Obtained from 33 photographs.
The Queen of the Night is a Mesopotamian terracotta plaque in high relief of the Isin-Larsa- or Old-Babylonian period, depicting a winged, , goddess-like figure with bird’s talons, flanked by owls, and perched upon two lions.
The relief is displayed in the British Museum in London, which has dated it between 1800 and 1750 BCE. It originates from southern Mesopotamia, but the exact find-site is unknown. Apart from its distinctive iconography, the piece is noted for its high relief and relatively large size, which suggest that it was used as a cult relief, making it a very rare survival from the period. However, whether it represents Lilitu, Inanna/Ishtar, or Ereshkigal is under debate. The authenticity of the object has been questioned from its first appearance in the 1930s, but opinion has generally moved in its favour over the subsequent decades 3D Model is ready to download for free, this model contains 19998 polygons.