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Article Issue 113.3

New Reconstructions of the “Mykenaia” and a Seated Woman from Mycenae

Bernice R. Jones

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Reconstruction of goddess
This study presents evidence for reconstructing two frescoes, including the well-known "Mykenaia," found at the Southwest Building at Mycenae. It argues that the Mykenaia did not depict a seated goddess facing right but a life-sized, standing woman striding to the left and that the other fresco portrays a half-life-sized enthroned woman, likely a goddess, facing right and holding a miniature female figure. The reconstructions are based on detailed examinations, drawings, and photographs taken to scale of the fragments and on comparanda. The argument is based on the innovative use of both experimental costume replications and digital imaging that superimposes details from other well-documented frescoes onto the fragments to test possible poses and details. The reconstructions proposed here are based on costume details depicted by the frescoes and on textual data, including intriguing Linear B ideograms. These reconstructions are then set within the larger spectrum of cult scenes in Aegean art, and some details of the dress worn in these frescoes are connected to Aegean cult.

Author bios

Volume 113 No. 3   
July 2009   
Table of Contents

Articles

Royal Gift Exchange Between Mycenae and Egypt: Olives as "Greeting Gifts" in the Late Bronze Age Eastern Mediterranean
Jorrit M. Kelder

Roussa Ekklesia, Part 1: Religion and Politics in East Crete
Brice E. Erickson

Settlement Structure in Laconia and Attica at the End of the Archaic Period: The Fractal Dimension
William Cavanagh

Four Hellenistic Funerary Stelae from Gephyra, Macedonia
Miltiades B. Hatzopoulos and Pierre Juhel

Egypt Embodied: The Vatican Nile
Molly Swetnam-Burland

Forum Note

Legal Threats to Cultural Exchange of Archaeological Materials
Sebastian Heath and Glenn M. Schwartz

Museum Review

Temples, Tombs, and Etruscan Treasures: From Tuscany to Dallas
John F. Hall

Review Articles

A Bull-Leaping Fresco from the Nile Delta and a Search for Patrons and Artists
Maria C. Shaw

The Bull-Leaping Scenes from Tell el-Dab'a
John G. Younger

Book Reviews

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Books Received

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