Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt

(Frankie) #1

The canon of the human figure


develop scope and perspective. Once the carvings
were completed, the walls were given a light coat of
stucco, and some were touched by paints of various


hues. The figures were outlined one last time so that
they would come to life against the neutral back-
grounds.

art and architecture 49

The set of artistic regulations called the canon of the
human figure evolved in the Early Dynastic Period and was
used by the ancient Egyptians as a model for representing
the human figure in reliefs and paintings. This evolved
within the parameters of cultic traditions. The Predynastic
Period Egyptians, already deeply concerned with spiritual
matters, had a need to communicate ideas and ideals
through the representation of divine beings, human per-
sonages, and events. From the beginning, the Egyptians
understood the propagandistic aspects of art and formu-
lated ways in which artistic representations could serve a
didactic purpose. Art was meant to convey information.
The canon of the human figure was the result of such
concerns, and it was a convention by which representa-
tions could convey metaphysical concepts while at the
same time bringing a vision of the material world to the
viewer. The canon dealt mainly with paintings and reliefs
as they were used in mortuary structures and cultic
shrines, and it governed the representation of three-dimen-
sional elements on a two-dimensional surface, which
demanded anatomical knowledge, perspective, and ideal-
ized composition.
Early examples demonstrate an increasing sophistica-
tion in such compositions, represented by the NARMER
PALETTE of the Predynastic Period. The Narmer palette
integrated all of the earlier artistic elements while display-
ing a unique energy and vitality. With the start of the Old
Kingdom (2575 B.C.E.), artistic conventions were being
codified to provide generations of artists with formal
guidelines on the proper positioning of the human figures
within a scene or a pictorial narrative, or a framework of
hieroglyphs and cultic symbols. According to the canon,
the human figure was to be composed in a prescribed
manner. To facilitate execution in reliefs and paintings, a
surface was divided into 18 rows of squares (the 19th
reserved for the hair). In later historical periods more rows
were added.
The human figure, when sketched or traced onto a
surface, was depicted from a dual perspective. The head
was always shown in profile, but the human eye and eye-
brow were depicted in full view. The shoulders and upper
torso were also shown in full view, so that the arms, hands,
and fingers were visible. The abdomen from armpit to the
waist was shown in profile and the navel was normally
placed on the side of the figure, directly on the edge. The
legs and feet were also shown in profile, balancing the
head, and until the mid-Eighteenth Dynasty (c. 1400
B.C.E.) the inside of the feet was preferred over the outside
in human representations.
The canon was strictly observed when artists por-
trayed the ruling class of Egypt. The formality allowed by
the canon and its idealized conception lent grace and

authority, deemed critical to royal portraits. While one
might expect rigidity and a certain staleness to result from
this type of regimentation, the canon provided a frame-
work for continual elaboration, and the teams of artists
who worked together to adorn the private and public
shrines found a common ground for individual expression.
Artistic quality was maintained, and the needs of each
generation were incorporated into the standards regulating
fine art.

The canon of the human figure, the artistic standard
introduced in the Old Kingdom Period and demon-
strated in this mortuary relief of the official Hesiré.
(Hulton Archive.)
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