Male-to-male kissing as old as the pyramids
07.01.06
As the gay-cowboy film Brokeback Mountain
causes indignant protests among old Wyoming ranch-hands, it emerges that such
controversies are almost as old as art itself.
What may be the first depiction of a gay-male kiss was discovered
in a 4000-year-old Egyptian tomb.
Their arms entwined, their torsos and noses touching, Niankhkhnum
and Khnumhotep were painted together for eternity in an embrace usually
associated with heterosexual couples of the 5th dynasty.
Just as there have been protestations that "there ain't no
queer in cowboy" in Marlboro country over director Ang Lee's portrayal of
two gay ranch-hands, this intimate pair have long been a puzzle to
Egyptologists.
One of the largest and most beautiful of all the tombs in the
necropolis at Saqqara, south of Cairo, the two men's final resting place was
discovered in 1964.
The archaeologist Ahmed Moussa made the rare find of two men of
equal status buried together in a tomb decorated with images of them holding
hands or locked nose to nose.
In a talk at the University of Wales on sex and gender in Ancient
Egypt, academic Greg Reeder explained that the affectionate embrace might
suggest the pair were lovers.
Describing an image of the two men clasping each other, Reeder
said: "Here, in the innermost part of their joint tomb, the two men stand
in an embrace meant to last for eternity."
The official view by one of the world's most eminent
Egyptologists, Zahi Hawass, is that they were brothers, perhaps conjoined
twins.
Other academics have also suggested the similarities in the names
would suggest this to be the case, and there is a danger that modern European
eyes fail to resist the temptation of seeing the images as homoerotic.
Nevertheless, the tomb has become a favourite for gay couples. The
Tomb of the Hairdressers, or Tomb of Two Brothers, was the burial place of King
Niuserre's manicurists.
While the paintings do show wives and children, the two men are
obliterated or omitted from a scene of a final banquet.
"Same-sex desire must be considered as a probable
explanation," Reeder said.
"The carvings show a profound intimacy between the two men,
and the people who built the tomb were possibly unsure how to portray
this."
Such depictions of the "love that dare not speak its
name" have been setting audiences a-flutter for years.
The 1971 film Sunday, Bloody Sunday was the first
mainstream movie to show two gay characters kissing, and there was a tabloid
furore when British soap Brookside aired a lesbian kiss more than a
decade ago.
Since then countless soaps have followed suit, and the series Queer
as Folk broke all barriers with explicit sex scenes.
- INDEPENDENT