EGYPTIAN ART. 
229 
and other plants. The temples are rectangular, with heavy advanced 
gateways tapering to their summits, and doors of the same kind. The 
; courts are hypsethral, the walls externally and internally covered with 
I sculptures, and the approach generally by a dromos, or avenue of 
sphinxes or divinities. There is seldom any statue in the adytum, 
a living animal being in place of this. Other temples were hewn 
into the solid rock, and the tombs consist of galleries cut in the 
i same material, having their sides covered with paintings and sculp- 
| tures, referring to religious, historical, or domestic events. (See Spe- 
i cimens, Nos. 169-181.) In sculpture, the artists worked in full relief, 
bas-relief very slightly raised, the projecting parts being kept as much 
as possible in one plane, and in a peculiar relief cut below the original 
I surface, called cavo-rilievo, or intaglio rilievato; in the full relief 
I of stone, composition, and porcelain, the standing figures have a mass 
of stone between the legs reserved to support the figure, and the arms 
were not detached, but pendent at the sides, or raised to the breast; a 
plinth, resembling the side of an obelisk, was often placed behind, des- 
| tined to contain the inscriptions. In metal and wood the arms and 
1 legs w 7 ere detached. The hair is disposed in very regular masses of 
| vertical curls, falling from the crown of the head; the eyes, eyelashes, 
and brows w r ere represented prolonged to the ears, w 7 ith shelly or acute 
lids; the hole of the ear was on a level with the pupil, the lips 
! strongly marked, but expanding like the Nubian, the expression 
; smiling, as in the early art of iEgina ; the beard not spread along the 
cheek, but platted into a narrow mass of square or recurved form, 
with ribands passing to the cap. In bas-relief and cavo-rilievo, 
profile was generally used as more distinct and simple, the eyes w T ere 
elongated, with a full pupil, a peculiarity also of the earliest Greek art. 
The form is on the whole slender, the features calm and smiling, 
not betraying emotion ; the inner markings of the figure were not 
given, and indications of muscular movement never fully developed. 
Great regularity, squareness, and repose, w T ell adapted for architecture, 
characterize their art, which occasionally exhibits the delicacy of a 
cameo. Portraiture was early known, and a conventional character 
of feature assigned to different divinities, who, how r ever, are often 
made to resemble the reigning monarch. Three canons of Egyptian 
proportions are known : I. The canon of the time of the Pyramids ; 
the height was reckoned at six feet from the sole of the foot to the 
crown of the head, and subdivisions obtain by one-half or one-third 
of a foot. 2. The canon from the 12th to the 22nd dynasty is only 
an extension of the first. The whole figure was contained in a num¬ 
ber of squares of half a foot; and the whole height divided into 
eighteen parts. In these two canons the height above the sixth foot 
is not reckoned. Tablet, No. 579, has a scale of some human figures, 
under the 12th dynasty; and a board, probably the working drawing 
of a sculptor or painter, may be seen in Case No. 38, representing a 
figure of Thothmes III. 3. The canon of the age of the Psammetici, 
w r hich is mentioned by Diodorus, reckoning the entire height at 
twenty-one parts and a quarter from the sole to the crown of the 
head, taken to the upper part. The proportions are different, but with 
out any introduction of the Greek canon. (See the bust, No. 2279, 
