My work in the Wilbour Library involves keeping an eye out for books the Library needs, and carrying out archival research into the history of the Egyptian collections in support of the Library’s educational mission. In the Library’s Special Collections I’ve been particularly intrigued by a small group of eighteenth century drawings of Egyptian objects. These were probably made by the German artist Johann Justin Preissler (1698-1771), and provide a rare glimpse into early studies of Egyptian objects.
At the time Preissler made his drawings, Egypt was an inaccessible, mysterious land. Few objects were held in Western museums or collections, and hieroglyphic inscriptions could not be read. Preissler’s drawings are of interest not only because they record objects that may now be lost or damaged, but also because they show how these Egyptian objects appeared to an eighteenth century eye.

J. J. Preissler. Enthroned figure of the god Harpocrates, rear view. Red chalk on paper, c. 1725-1771. Wilbour Library of Egyptology, Special Collections
My favourite drawing shows the back view of a long-haired figure, its right arm bent at the elbow, seated on a falcon-backed throne. It’s hard (but not impossible!) to identify an object just from its backside, and I started to look for other works by Preissler to see if he’d made any other studies of this figure. As luck would have it, the Binghamton Art Gallery has two drawings of the front and side.

(left) J. J. Preissler. Enthroned figure of the god Harpocrates, front view. Red chalk on paper, c. 1725-1771. Binghamton University Art Museum. (right) J. J. Preissler. Enthroned figure of the god Harpocrates, left profile view. Red chalk on paper, c. 1725-1771. Binghamton University Art Museum.
These showed a naked child, holding one hand to his chest, and sitting on a throne shaped like a pair of lions. The Binghamton and Brooklyn drawings show a figure of the child god Harpocrates, and were probably copied from a small bronze statuette, like this Harpocrates now in Brooklyn (not the original of the drawings).

Seated figure of Harpocrates. Bronze, Egypt, Late Period, 664-323 BC. 37.686E, Charles Edwin Wilbour Fund.
In Egypt children were shown with a long plaited side-lock of hair, sucking their index finger. Preissler has misunderstood Harpocrates’s gesture, and the curly end of his sidelock has been turned into a horn floating above his hand. His soft, podgy body and his inquiring face are also more Western than Egyptian in appearance. Preissler didn’t make a straightforward copy of a the bronze figure, but turned Harpocrates into a flesh and blood sketch that looks almost like a study from a living sitter. I wonder if he actually arranged a model in the same pose as the bronze, or if this was all done from the original figure?
Thanks to museum displays and over two hundred years of Egyptological research, we’re now familiar with the basic conventions of Egyptian art: we can easily recognize what makes an object look Egyptian. The drawings show Preissler confronted with an unfamiliar, peculiar object from a far-off land, and struggling to understand and describe it. His puzzlement and wonder are still visible—and contagious—nearly 300 years later.

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Eastern Parkway/Brooklyn Museum
The drawing is indeed a fascinating glimpse of cultural crossover. The basic iconography of the chair seems Egyptian (at least to my eye) while the figure has the soft naturalistic lines of a European Renaissance putto.
Fascinating research! It’s so impressive, when experts make connections like that. It’s one of the things I like best about museums.
I love the way the artist “translated” the Egyptian figure into his 18th-century idiom. It has an air of intimacy and playfulness, like in Boucher, which couldn’t be present in the statue. You can easily imagine him sitting like that while looking at himself in a mirror that’s on top of a little Rococo table.
Glad you like the piece.
Clem, the throne is indeed all-Egyptian. Lions are an enduring part of royal / divine iconographies, however – British monarchs are still crowned in Westminster Abbey seated on this chair, which is supported by some rather odd looking Gothic lions:
http://www.victorianweb.org/art/architecture/feist/17.html
Thank you for your comment on museum experts making connections. Having the capability to blog about objects opens up the door to researchers to view and comment easily. This is a neat way to gather both historical and contemporary data together and to shine a light on “hidden” collections especially those held in museum libraries and archives.
So helpful to have an historical context for the drawings. The back story to this kind of work is very rarely available to us and does enrich our understanding of them!
wow! gorgeous drawings!
Thanks Tim. Good to hear from you. Tell us about your new book which is inspired by Egypt? We enjoyed your previous exhibition and are always interested in a contemporary artists’ look at the ancient world. Deirdre