Thursday, January 19, 2012

A History of the World in 100 Objects: Ain Sakhri Lovers Figurine

Wednesday, January 18th's object was the Ain Sakhri Lovers Figurine.


© Trustees of the British Museum

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This is the oldest known representation of a couple making love in the world. It depicts the couple face-to-face in a lover's embrace.


This figurine is about 11,000 years old and was found in a cave in Khareitoun, Judea.


© Trustees of the British Museum


 Here are some drawings of multiple views of the figurine.


© Trustees of the British Museum


Marc Quinn, Artist, wrote:

An artefact is something from a particular time that stays in that time like a piece of pottery and it becomes like a relic of that time. An artwork is something that is from a time but is also eternally in the present moment and I think you can definitely say that this sculpture is in the present moment.

That to me is the great strength of making artwork, you are making essentially emotional time machines. You’re making an object of meditation that will communicate with people in 10,000 years time (were it to survive) in a very direct way – I mean certain things are beyond time!


Jill Cook, Curator, British Museum, wrote:

A work of art may be appreciated across cultures and millennia because it expresses something which we can recognize on our own terms.

Whether we see the Ain Sakhri lovers as a piece of erotica, a tender expression of homosexual or heterosexual love, a symbol of fertility, masculinity or a metaphor for creation, depends on our own background and beliefs. As we enjoy the ingenious composition and skilful artistry, we connect our present to its deep past and a period of significant transformation in human history.

11,000 years ago the Natufian people of the Middle East lived by hunting gazelle with their pet dogs. Gazelle have fixed territories so where it was also possible to collect seasonally abundant figs, acorns, pistachios, as well as wild lentils, chick peas and wheat grains, these hunter gatherers could stay longer in one place allowing some permanently occupied villages to develop.

Although it was probably only a temporary shelter, even the toolkit from the cave of Ain Sakhri includes little flint blades which slotted into the wooden handles of reaping knives. By gathering wild wheat and barley, Natufian gatherers were preferring strains which did not release their grains in the slightest gust of wind.

This accidental process of selection began the slow genetic modification of cereals which enabled the growing of crops Sheep, goats, cattle and pigs were also gradually domesticated from wild species for farming. Like Adam and Eve, the lovers’ descendents, particularly the women, faced a future of hard labour in fields.

For more information, visit the website.

-VB