Curator

  • Art Institute Chicago
  • Harvard art museum
  • My Exhibition
A molded terracotta sculpture of a standing lion on a short platform. It has a short main, large ears, a flat back, and its tail lies on top of its rear. It is off-white and green in color and the platform is red. It is standing with its mouth open.

Lion

Hurrian

Lion standing with legs close together. It is made of five parts: both forelegs in one piece, separate rear legs, upper body and head, and base. The open mouth reveals the hollow interior of the statue. Modeled face. The long tail curls over the animal's back, pointing to its left flank. Body and head are largely intact, although the legs were discovered broken into several fragments. The right rear leg is missing a fragment at the upper end. The rectangular base of the statue is flat; its coarse reddish clay glazed only where the coating has dripped down from the figure. The vitrified glaze is the only apparent adhesive holding together the components of the statue. The glaze is generally faded, although occasional bright patches of color remain, particularly on the legs. Starr assembled the fragments in Iraq following their discovery. The lion was disassembled and restored in 1980 in the Straus Center for Conservation and Technical Studies of the Harvard Art Museum.

Glazed terracotta

Mitannian period

Sculpture