About the Artwork
Tukul-apil-esharra III (commonly known as Tiglath-Pileser), a powerful king of Assyria, built a royal palace in his capital of Kalhu, now called Nimrud, in northern Iraq. Its principal rooms and courtyards were decorated with large relief sculptures designed to awe visitors to his court. The king's power and majesty were expressed in scenes of war, the hunt, and solemn court ceremonies. In this relief, Tukul-apil-esharra, wearing a tall headdress and holding a bow, is receiving three courtiers. A helmeted warrior prostrates himself at the king's feet. A servant with a fly whisk stands behind the royal figure. Horizontal lines of a cuneiform inscription describing a military campaign run just above the heads of the figures.
The Assyrian King Tukul-apil-esharra III (also called Tiglath-pileser III) Receiving Homage
745 - 727 BCE
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Mesopotamian
Assyrian
Gypsum alabaster
Overall: 48 × 94 inches (121.9 × 238.8 cm)
Sculpture
Ancient Near Eastern Art
Founders Society Purchase, Ralph Harman Booth Bequest Fund
50.32
Public Domain
Markings
Inscribed, cuneiform characters, in band above figures: [translated: I conquered the city of Sibur together with the cities of its environs. I carried off their booty. The man Tanus fled to the mountains. I offered pure libations to the god Marduk who dwells in Til-Ashuri.]
Provenance
Esarhaddon, Southwest Palace, Nimrud (Calah).between 1845-1850, excavated at the Mound of Nimrud by Sir Austen Henry Layard [1817-1894] and Hormuzd Rassam [1826-1910] (Mosul, Iraq);
1850, Christian Anthony Rassam [1808-1872] H.B.M. British Vice-Consul (Mosul, Iraq);
Hon. Robert Henry Clive [1789-1854] London, England);
Robert Windsor-Clive, 1st Earl of Plymouth [1857-1923] (Hewell Grange, Redditch, Worcestershire, England);
Hon. Ivor Miles Windsor-Clive, 2nd Earl of Plymouth [1889-1943] (Worcestershire, England);
July 29,1946, sold by (Sotheby & Co. London, England, lot 162).
(Unknown Syndicate, offered in private sale);
by 1950, (Hagop Kevorkian [1872-1962] New York, New York, USA);
1950-present, purchase by the Detroit Institute of Arts (Detroit, Michigan, USA)
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Provenance pageExhibition History
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Illustrated London News (August 10, 1946): p. 164.
Catalog of an Important Assyrian Stone Bas-Relief, The Property of the Earl of Plymouth. Sales cat., Sotheby and Co. London, July 29, 1946, no. 162.
Pictures on Exhibit, vol. 12, no. 10 (1950): pp. 40-41.
Pallas, vol. 14, no. 14 (1950): p. 158.
"Art News of the Year: An Assyrian Relief of Tiglath- Pileser III," Art News, vol. 49, no. 7 (1950): p. 199.
"An Assyrian Relief of Tiglath-Pileser III," Art Quarterly, vol. 13, no. 3 (1950): p. 254 (ill.).
Country Life, vol. 112, no. 2911 (1952): p. 1389 (ill.).
Layard, A. "The Huge Mounds of Assyria," The Treasures of Time. 1961, p. 113.
Handbook. DIA. 1971.
Orthmann, W. "Der Alte Orient," Propylaen Kunst Geschichte vol. 14. 1975.
Peck, W.H. Archaeology, vol. 31 (May-June 1978): p. 14.
Bulletin of the DIA 29, no. 4. p. 86 (ill.).
Clive, R. Sketches between the Persian Gulf and the Black Sea. London, 1982.
Layard, A. H. Nineveh and its Remains, vol. 1. London, 1849, pp. 60, 379; New York, 1854, pp. 68, 307.
"Family Art Game," Detroit News (April 14, 1985): p. 25 (ill.). [DIA Advertising Supplement].
100 Masterworks from the Detroit Institute of Arts. DIA. New York, 1985, p. 24, 25 (ill.).
"Family Art Game: Details, Details, Details," The Detroit Free Press (April 29, 1990) p. 9 (ill.). [DIA Advertising Supplement].
Henshaw, Julia P., ed. A Visitor's Guide: The Detroit Institute of Arts. Detroit, 1995, p. 96.
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Credit Line for Reproduction
Assyrian, Mesopotamian; Neo-Assyrian, Mesopotamian, The Assyrian King Tukul-apil-esharra III (also called Tiglath-pileser III) Receiving Homage, 745 - 727 BCE, gypsum alabaster. Detroit Institute of Arts, Founders Society Purchase, Ralph Harman Booth Bequest Fund, 50.32.
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