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‘The Moulton Pair'
These figures reside in the village of Moulton, Suffolk and were first reported by Dr Ron Baxter in the newsletter of the Corpus of Romanesque Sculpture in the British Isles. It is certainly 11th or 12th century, but most likely the second half of the 11th. Date attribution by Dr Ron Baxter in a newsletter issue 19, Spring 2005 of The Courtauld Institute of Art
The sculpture consists of a loose slab which at the time of writing was stored in the vestry under a shelf. It shows a male and female figure carved in relief with an ill-defined square floating between them. Both figures are jug eared and the male figure's hands are over large.
The female figure's hands gesture toward the groin which has been damaged at some point. What remains of the right hand appears to be cupped but this may just be down to the damage on the figure. The remains of the left hand appear to be holding back the left thigh. These positions are similar to other exhibitionist figures, the left hand holds the thigh and the right indicates to the vulva. Unfortunately due to the damage on the figure there is no indication of a vulva. If one did exist then it would have been a fairly modest affair. If the hand was cupping then this is unlike most other figures which are usually pointing to the vulva.
The lower half of the male figure is also damaged but there appears to be the remains of a penis hanging to the ground between the squatting legs. The hands are raised in the orans position as if praying. The figure is quite blackened so it is hard to make out any remaining features. The object between the figures is something of a mystery. It has been carved quite deliberately and appears to have a small section missing either deliberately or due to damage. Neither of figures is now overtly exhibitionist but from the poses and features which are similar to other exhibitionist figures it seems likely that they once were. The church is quite a grand affair for such small a village and the current building dates from the perpendicular and decorated periods. There was however a Norman incarnation the remains of which can still be seen in the fabric of the church. A number of later gargoyles and green men adorn the church exterior. It seems that this slab is a fairly recent find as it was not recorded in a study of the church in 1937 or in Pevsner's 1961 or 1975 editions. Pevsner took pains to record sheela na gigs so it would have been something that would usually appear in the entry for the church. In fact the first mention of the slab appears in D.P. Mortlock's The Popular Guide to Suffolk Churches from 1988. It would be interesting to find out when exactly the slab first appeared in the church.
Anthony Weir makes a comparison between these two figures and other figures in the church of Saint-Hilaire-le-Grand in Poitiers, France. The position of the hands is nearly identical the only difference being the female figure holds one hand up (another gesture common to sheela na gigs). This carving has been damaged too.
John Harding
Article and images taken from the following website: www.sheelanagig.org, accessed on Nov 22nd 2015.