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17. Pendant: Female Head in Profile The front perforation exit is smoothly worn on its upper edge, suggesting pulling. Details are smoothed at the tip of the cap on the obverse and at the middle of the pendant’s back more than elsewhere, probably through use. The opaque brown surface reflects the original surface level, visible on the cheek and jaw. The surface is crazed, and extensive flaking and cracking all over reveal a reddish, sugary, translucent sublayer. In ambient light, the amber is yellow-brown. At the modern breaks, the interior is translucent and bright orange. In transmitted light, the pendant is translucent and dark red. There are no visible inclusions. Description This pendant is oblong, its obverse slightly convex, and its reverse flat and plain. 82.AO.161.3 represents the head and neck of a female in profile. The forehead is broad and rounded. The large, almond-shaped eye is plastic, bulging out almost as in nature; it is recessed at the corners. The lids are rendered as shallow grooves with slightly curved upper and lower rims of varying thickness. Above the eye is the eyebrow ridge, which continues into the temple area. A longer and deeper groove extends from the inner canthus of the eye to the chin, a combination of the nasolabial line and the mouth furrow. The nose is indented at the root. The ears are smooth, rounded shapes Accession 82.AO.161.3 at the angle of the jaw; the right ear is more legible than Number the left. The area between the nose and the upper lip is short. The upper lip slightly overhangs the lower. The Culture Italic mentolabial sulcus is a shallow curve. Although the chin Date 500–450 B.C. is prominent, it is recessed from the line of the brow. The jaw intersects the neck, forming a small, recessed Dimensions Height: 46 mm; width: 45 mm; depth: 11 triangular area. mm; Weight: 3 g The figure wears a conical cap covered with a wrapping Provenance of cloth (showing three distinct sections), and over it a crown. No hair shows on the forehead. At the back of the –1982, Jiří Frel, 1923–2006, and Faya Frel (Los Angeles, head is a fall of hair (a ponytail-like section?) marked with CA), donated to the J. Paul Getty Museum, 1982. diagonal grooves, except for the plain terminal section. Condition The carver has taken advantage of natural protrusions in the original amber blank for the modeling of the face. The The pendant is intact, but there are losses on the head and long groove that runs from the temple to the top of the at the suspension perforation exit on the back of the head. cap is plausibly a trace of fissure removal. The suspension 179

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