It is a limestone female figure with traces of painted detail in a stuccoed surface.
She is seated in an armchair, and an open space on the side is thought to have contained ashes from a cremation.
[1] The sculpture's name links it in the popular imagination to its more famous cousin, the Lady of Elche.
After conservation, the sculpture, which dates to the fourth century BCE, joined the enigmatic Lady of Elche deposited in the National Archaeological Museum of Spain in Madrid.
The chimera Bicha of Balazote and the standing Gran Dama Oferente, also called Dama del Cerro de los Santos, are exhibited in the same room of the museum.