Figurines 

221 creative works found

  • Another one down, like 15 to go, lol. One of the reasons i have been so absent. i feel bad, but i am really trying to get this book done. One drawing takes forever, getting the composition can take days, or longer, then starting the sketch. i started this in pencil on 2 May, 2009. Finished in pencil & started in Prisma colored pencils on 9 May (my brother Chris’ birthday), & just finished today, 22 May (my Dad’s birthday). i will take a slight break & hopefully have time to come around. Really missing you all, but i gotta keep cracking the whip, really hoping to get this book completed.

  • / CHUNKIE Mother and Boy Child / / CHUNKIE Calendar Series One now available / / Chunkies are a new series of figurines I am working on .. / / CHUNKIE Birthday Fairy / / CHUNKIE Owl / / CHUNKIE Sunshine / / CHUNKIE / Elephant / / CHUNKY Diver / / CHUNKY Indian / / CHUNKIE Surfer / / CHUNKIE Ballerina / / CHUNKIE Geisha / / CHUNKIES in love / / CHUNKIE Hula girl / / CHUNKIE China / / CHUNKIE Lollipop Lover / / CHUNKIE Forest / / CHUNKIE Party / / CHUNKIE Pirate / / CHUNKIE Mod Girl / / CHUNKIE Tooth Fairy / / CHUNKIE Mother and Child / / CHUNKIE Wedding / Next in line is CHUNKIE Lotus Love, wears a beautiful blue/green kimono tied with a white obi together with silver adornments in her hair, she is made from both plasticine and air dry terracotta and natural clay. She wears a little lotus on her head, symbolic of her royal status and the lotus symbolises strong and lasting affection. Around her feet are tiny white pebbles …...she is surrounded by water, on a golden pond…you can see her reflection (i used silver cardboard for the backdrop and ground) Once the Chunkies are created and photographed, I usually dismantle them to be used in the creation of more chunkies, so I am recycling the plasticine. These Chunkies have been very therapeutic to create over the holidays, whilst taking a break from red bubble and having my family around. I have many more to come, and although I won’t be on RB as much, I hope to also be doing some serious painting this year…so i look forward 2009 with much anticipation …

  • The Venus Of Omrah
    by Sticky Flower

    US$4.99–US$114.00

    Reload / One of a series of three drawings I did for a friend. / Based on the VenusofWillendorf / It is taken from an image I found on the net of the figurine in a mans hand. / I added the decorative details, all personal symbolism relates to my friend.Including the proportions of the figurine herself and the fact that she is so tiny in a mans hand. / Big girls do cry. Be mindful of that, and the fact that this figurine was created as a representation of all that is important and beautiful in a woman.She was also created without a means of standing, drawing the conclusion that she is meant to be held….... / :-) /

  • A friend for Theodore
    by melbourne

    US$4.32–US$98.80

    Spikey red hair, spikey green grass and a man with a camera… nothing more to say! MELBOURNE IN PHOTOS

  • CHUNKIE Diver
    by Karin Taylor

    US$5.22–US$119.32

    1 sale of this design so far / / CHUNKIE Calendar Series One now available / / Chunkies are a new series of figurines I am working on .. / / CHUNKIE Birthday Fairy / / CHUNKIE Owl / / CHUNKIE Lotus Love on Golden Pond / / CHUNKIE Mermaid / / CHUNKIE Sunshine / / CHUNKIE Forest / / CHUNKIE Party / / CHUNKIE Pirate / / CHUNKY Elephant / / CHUNKY Indian / / CHUNKIE Surfer / / CHUNKIE Ballerina / / CHUNKIE Geisha / / CHUNKIE China / / CHUNKIE Hula girl / CHUNKIES in love / / / CHUNKIE Lollipop Lover / / CHUNKIE Forest / / CHUNKIE Party / / CHUNKIE Pirate / / CHUNKIE Mod Girl / / CHUNKIE Tooth Fairy / http://www.redbubble.com/people/karin/art/2491861-3-chunkie-mother-and-child / Next in line is CHUNKIE Diver ….I did this one especially because Matt T my diving friend and super dooper underwater cameraman, dared me too…..Here she is underwater, viewing the sealife and enjoying herself….while all the little fishies go ‘blob, blob, blob’ saying hello in their usually ‘fishy’ way….and the seastars are underfoot, hiding a variety of other little creatures…which I’m sure will come out to say hello too…but you must be gentle and remember they have feelings too…otherwise they won’t appear Once the Chunkies are created and photographed, I usually dismantle them to be used in the creation of more chunkies, so I am recycling the plasticine. These Chunkies have been very therapeutic to create over the holidays, whilst taking a break from red bubble and having my family around. I have many more to come, and although I won’t be on RB as much, I hope to also be doing some serious painting this year…so i look forward 2009 with much anticipation …

  • The Mermaid's Treasure
    by Foxfires

    US$4.16–US$95.00

    ©2007-2008 Aimee Stewart, Foxfires – please see my CC Terms of Use before considering using this image for any personal or commercial use http://foxfires.deviantart.com/journal/6266450/ / (Please do not repost this on Photobucket or Flickr!) / —-—-—-—-——- I sat upon a promontory, / And heard a mermaid, on a dolphin’s back, / Uttering such dulcet and harmonious breath, / That the rude sea grew civil at her song; / And certain stars shot madly from their spheres, / To hear the sea-maid’s music. / – William Shakespeare (This was something I uploaded previously – but had not added it for sale. Now it is! Thanks all!)

  • Brownie
    by smile4me

    US$4.16–US$95.00

    Little Brownie is part of my owl collection. Placed her beside an old vase. After taking quite a few shots of my owls…I am starting to think they all look pretty much alike :D / /

  • For the model horse collector! / This version has lighter writing, / to suit darker shirts. A range of my “stick horse” and / other horse designs can also be / seen in my cafepress shop See my horse, dog and pet cards etc here on redbubble

  • Now this sculpture is a blending of two worlds, the free world where dolphins can go anywhere in our oceans and the captive world like a zoo where only a small space of freedom is for our dolphins to be viewed, cared for and studied. Lisa C. Weber ©2008 (Created with Bryce 6.1) Visit My Complete Bubble for all My 3D Artwork. Thanks for dropping by and enjoy!

  • JUST "US" short for JUSTICE
    by Elf Evans

    US$27.79–US$148.20

    Justice was the topic of my pastor’s message today in Saint-Malo Bretagne, most appropriate for the coming elections back in the states coming up next month. This number four in the African Figurine Series. Nikon D70s, 200 iso, COPYRIGHT

  • This photograph was taken using the TtV technique and is part of my TtV: Through the Viewfinder Series Photographed using a vintage Argoflex Seventy-five and a Canon. Best viewed LARGE

  • Don’t get him mixed up with the “Ancient One”, he’s a slimmer relative :D He has been gazing out of the window for a while ,lost in memory lane.One of the many owls under my collection. / You can view and buy my other “Those Were The Days,My Friend” creations at my Zazzle Gallery:

  • All the Lonely People
    by Skip Hunt

    US$78.38–US$418.00

    Figurines of real people, created with a 3D scanner and output as small replicas in Santiago de Compostina, Spain. ~ 2003

  • The Chesslers Golden Bull
    by Lisa Weber

    US$4.26–US$97.28

    Lisa C. Weber ©2008 (Created with Bryce 6.1) Visit My Complete Bubble for all My 3D Artwork. Thanks for dropping by and enjoy!

  • and the band played.....
    by Anthony Mancuso

    US$4.99–US$114.00

    challenge winner, group avitar and featured in “statues and such” group / featured in “statues and such” group Some brass figurines inside my display cabinet. Texture and lighting added for effect. / galleria mancuso / new book – galleria mancuso – images of mine / my calendar series / /

  • The Evolution of Flex
    by Anna Ridley

    US$5.32–US$121.60

    Flex is the patriarch of my wooden “family”. I think they have a mind of their own sometimes, to be honest!

  • Giraffic Art
    by Maria Dryfhout

    US$4.48–US$102.60

  • New Shoes
    by Anna Ridley

    US$5.32–US$121.60

    I love my sneakers. I have a pair that I won’t part with. I remember how right they felt from the very first time I put them on.

  • BAST – BASTET – UBASTET – PAKHET / Bast, Perfumed Protector, Cat Goddess In ancient Egypt the cat was worshipped as a sacred animal – the mother or creator. Bast is the Egyptian Goddess and protector of cats, women and children. She is Goddess of sunrise. Her goddess duty changed over the years, but, she is also known as a goddess of love, fertility, birth, music and dance. She has been dated to at least the Second Dynasty (c. 2890-2686 Before Common Era [B.C.E.]). Bast is depicted in art in many different ways. The most common is the body of young woman with the head of a domestic cat sometimes holding a sistrum. Her ‘sister’ Sekhmet, is shown with the head of a lioness. In early times Bast (written as ‘Bastet’ by scribes in later times to emphasize that the ‘t’ was to be pronounced) was a goddess with the head of a lion or a desert sand-cat and was regarded as mother of Mahes, a lion-headed god. She was usually depicted as a cat, or as a woman with the head of a cat or lion. She was also connected to Hathor, Sekhmet, Tefnut, Atum (her father) and Mut. It was only in the New Kingdom that she gained the head of a house cat and became a much more ‘friendly’ goddess, though she was still depicted as a lion-headed woman to show her war-like side. As with Hathor, Bast is often seen carrying a sistrum. Her name has the hieroglyph of a ‘bas’-jar with the feminine ending of ‘t’. These jars were heavy perfume jars, often filled with expensive perfumes – they were very valuable in Egypt, considering the Egyptian need (with the hot weather) of makeup, bathing, hygiene and (of course) perfume. Bast, by her name, seems to be related to perfumes in some way. Her son Nefertem, a solar god, was a god of perfumes and alchemy, which supports the theory. She was the mother of Mahes a Lion-headed God of healing. His main temple was at Leontopolis, although he did have a shrine at Bubastis. Bastet has another son in the form of the lion-headed god Mihos. There is some confusion over Bast and Sekhmet. She was also considered to be the mother of Nefertem, as were a few other goddesses! Sekhmet was given the title the ‘Eye of Ra’ when she was in her protector form… but Bast and Sekhmet are not the same goddess (unlike Hathor who becomes Sekhmet as the ‘Eye of Ra’). This all gives rise to a lot of confusion about these goddesses. Bast and Sekhmet were another example of Egyptian duality – Sekhmet was a goddess of Upper Egypt, Bast of Lower Egypt (just like the pharaoh was of Upper and/or Lower Egypt!)... and they were linked together by geography, not by myth or legend. These two feline goddesses were not related by family, they were both very distinct goddesses in their own rights. Bast was one of the older goddesses, mentioned in the Book of the Dead (this was a selection of spells, rather than an actual book): The Chapter of the Deification of the Members (From the Pyramid of Pepi I) The breast of this Meri-Ra is the breast of Bast; he cometh forth therefore and ascended into heaven. Rubric If this Chapter be known by the deceased upon earth, he shall become like unto Thoth, and he shall be adored by those who live. He shall not fall headlong at the moment of the intensity of the royal flame of the goddess Bast, and the Great Prince shall make him to advance happily. / Even from very old times, as protector, Bast was seen as the fierce flame of the sun who burned the deceased should they fail one of the many tests in the underworld. Some of Bast’s festivals included the ‘Procession of Bast’, ‘Bast appears to Ra’, the ‘Festival of Bast’, ‘Bast Goes Forth from Bubastis’ and ‘Bast guards the Two Lands’. There was even a ‘Festival of Hathor and Bast’, showing the connection between the two goddesses. Herodotus describes the ‘Festival of Bast’ where thousands of men and women traveled on boats, partying like crazy. They had music, singing, clapping and dancing. When they passed towns, the women would call out dirty jokes to the shore-bound, often flashing the townsfolk by lifting up their skirts over their heads! When they reached Bubastis, they made their sacrifices of various animals, and drank as much wine as they could stomach. No wonder it was such a popular festival!! When the people are on their way to Bubastis, they go by river, a great number in every boat, men and women together. Some of the women make a noise with rattles, others play flutes all the way, while the rest of the women, and the men, sing and clap their hands. As they travel by river to Bubastis, whenever they come near any other town they bring their boat near the bank; then some of the women do as I have said, while some shout mockery of the women of the town; others dance, and others stand up and lift their skirts. They do this whenever they come alongside any riverside town. But when they have reached Bubastis, they make a festival with great sacrifices, and more wine is drunk at this feast than in the whole year besides. It is customary for men and women (but not children) to assemble there to the number of seven hundred thousand, as the people of the place say. / —Herodotus, Histories Book II Chap 60 Her cult centre was in Bubastis (the temple is now in ruins, but it was made of red granite with a sacred grove in the centre, with the shrine of the goddess herself… it was also full of cats). She was also worshiped all over Lower Egypt. In Bubastis we see Bast holding a sistrum or rattle. Bastet wore an aegis or shield in the form of a semi-circular plate, embellished with a lion’s head. She was goddess of pleasure and inevitably became one of the most popular deities. Bubastis signifies The House of Cats in ancient Egyptian. Bast feast day is celebrated on October 31. The Egyptians celebrated the feast of Bast with merry making, music, dancing, drinking much like our modern Marti Gras. Bast’s devotees celebrated their lady with processions of flower-laden barges and orgiastic ceremonies. Her festivals were licentious and quite popular. Cities in which festivals of Bast were celebrated included Thebes, Memphis, Bubastis, and Esna. In her temple were kept sacred cats, who were supposed to be incarnations of the goddess. When they died they were carefully mummified. The Egyptians found something to worship in just about every animal they had: dogs, cats, lions, crocodiles, snakes, dung-beetles, hippos, hawks, cows and ibises. As the daughter of Re she is associated with the rage inherent in the sun-god’s eye, his instrument of vengeance. It was probably this ferocity that made the analogy so plausible between Bastet and lioness. Her development into the cat-goddess par excellence, of the Late Period of Egyptian civilization, retains the link with the sun-god but in some ways softens the vicious side of her nature. She becomes a peaceful creature, destroying only vermin, and unlike her leonine form she can be approached fearlessly and stroked. Images of Bast as a lion-headed figure holding a was-scepter (from the Hall of Osorkon at Bubastis ) or with a lion’s mane and holding the Eye of Ra can be found throughout Egyptian art from the Late Period on. Bast is shown in one depiction as wearing the Double Crown (the red and the white “nested” together) and suckling the Pharaoh – perhaps an allusion to the rise of popularity with Per-Bast or Bubastis, the Domain of Bast. Bast is often shown holding the ankh or the papyrus wand, and sometimes the was-scepter (usually only in connection to Bubastis, which was the home of Her cult – in the delta region, where a necropolis has been found containing mummified cats. ). The papyrus wand is a significant and slightly baffling item for her to be holding, as this item usually signifies a “first” or primordial god such as Ma’at and Tefnut (both of whom are daughters of Ra and Tem, respectively). This may provide a tantalizing clue as to Bast’s suspicious lack of representation in common Egyptian mythology, and may connect Her to Tefnut, Who, like Bast, is also the Eye of Tem-Ra and depicted with a feline head. Another popular form of Bast, is her Earthly form, as a seated cat. When in this form her name changes to Bastet. Bastet is a cat-headed goddess, a local deity of the Delta. Cats were sacred to Bast as a symbol of animal passion. In her earliest appearances in the Pyramid Era – Bastet is a goddess closely linked to the king. A magnificent example of precise engineering in the Old Kingdom, namely the valley temple of King Khafre at Giza, carries on its facade the names of two goddess only – Hathor of Southern Egypt and Bastet of the north. The latter is invoked as a benign royal protectress in the Pyramid Texts where, in a spell to enable him to reach the sky, the king proclaims that his mother and nurse is Bastet. From her epithet ‘lady of Asheru’, the precinct of the goddess Mut at Karnak, it is clear that Bastet had a place on Theban soil where she could be equated with the consort of Amun- especially since the lioness and the cat were also claimed as sacred animals by Mut. Reliefs in the temple of Karnak show the pharaoh celebrating ritual races carrying either four scepters and a bird or an oar in front of Bastet who is called ruler of ‘Sekhet-neter’ or the ‘Divine Field’- i.e. Egypt. No life-size -or greater – representations of Bast, in any form, have survived intact, although a great many smaller bronzes and statues have been recovered and can now be seen in museums around the world. But this does not necessarily mean that larger statues didn’t exist. In his ‘Histories’, Herodotus wrote that a statue of the Goddess existed in the main temple shrine at Bubastis, but gives no detailed description of her. Today, no shrines or temples remain of Bast in Egypt; even Bubastis was mostly ruins by the time Naville got around to it. There is a “Portal of Bast” on the Giza Plateau (fittingly, near the Sphinx), and statues have been discovered showing Khaefre accompanied by Her. A painting of Bast is present within the tomb of Nefertari at Abu Simbel, and dozens of bronze statues dating from the Late Period have been discovered amidst the cat cemetery found at Per-Bast. / / Alan Findlater is the host of Public Art and he launched a new challenge for the best pic of an animal statue Seeing that I am not living in a city where I can quickly snap a shot of a statue, I had to make do with an Ancient Egyptian Figure (an ornament, or what I like to call them, “dust gatherers”) This was given to me by my mother (she knows my love for Egyptian stuff) I have a few of these and now that I started on this one, I might as well capture a few more pics of my ornaments!

  • Ancient Wisdom
    by smile4me

    US$3.99–US$91.20

    This is one of the many owls in my collection. This one looks like he has wisdom in abundance :D / / You can view and buy my other “Ancient Wisdom” creations at my Zazzle Gallery:

  • For the model horse collector! This version has dark/black writing. A range of my “stick horse” and / other horse designs can also be / seen in my cafepress shop See my horse, dog and pet cards etc here on redbubble

  • Enjoy, its a group photo of people of all different places and faces and songs to sing….......singing…....enjoying life, if your down today get you a happy song and sing it….......dont stop till your happy….....try it , it works….......hugs to you all, and have happy days….....see you later..bi

  • High Street
    by Zuzana

    US$4.32–US$98.80

    A little bit of European fashion. Taken in Bruges, Belgium

  • The Victorian
    by Kimberly Palmer

    US$4.39–US$100.32

    Images copyright ©Kimberly Palmer. / Copying, displaying, manipulating or redistribution of any image from this portfolio without permission from the artist is strictly prohibited

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