Piecing together the past
Egypt

Piecing together the past


http://www.newsobserver.com/105/story/564409.html
An article looking at archaeology, not just Egyptology, and what it seeks to achieve. It focuses on Caroline Rocheleau, a curatorial research fellow at the N.C. Museum of Art who helped put together the new Temples and Tombs: Treasures of Egyptian Art From the British Museum for its Raleigh run:
"A girl might dream about the glorious moments of discovery -- the tomb of King Tutankhamun, a Greek civilization that predated Homer, or the Madaba Map, a mosaic of the oldest known Holy Land map. But an archaeologist's fascination with ancient people runs deeper than that, sustaining interest in a field that extracts the big picture from small shards of culture.
Most people wouldn't commit to long, hot days sifting through layers of civilization. But they are more than willing to pay for the privilege of seeing ancient artifacts in museums. Before "The Treasures of Tutankhamun" toured the world in the 1970s, the word "blockbuster" wasn't in the museum vocabulary. Nearly 8 million Americans cued up to see the King Tut artifacts then.
Passion continues to run high. The five-city "Temples and Tombs" tour, which features 85 objects covering 3,000 years, overlaps with a new King Tut exhibit now in Philadelphia. Meanwhile, "The Past Is Present: Classical Antiquities at the Nasher Museum" is a yearlong display of ancient objects from the Mediterranean that were given to the museum last year. And "Fashioning the Divine: South Asian Sculpture at the Ackland Art Museum" drew from the UNC-Chapel Hill museum's collection."

The story is accompanied by the following:
http://www.newsobserver.com/105/story/564342.html
It is a little hair-raising to see Belzoni described as an archeaologist, but the above page has a list of "archaeologists associated with prominent excavations", amongst them Belzoni, Flinders-Petrie, Carter and, of course, Lara Croft and Indiana Jones. Make of it what you will!




- Exhibition: Wonderful Things
Michael C Carlos Enews, February 2009 The thrill of discovery, chronicled as a turning-point in the appreciation of ancient art and societies, connects the exhibition “Wonderful Things: The Harry Burton Photographs and the Discovery of the Tomb of Tutankhamun”...

- Exhibition: Wonderful Things
Media-Newswire The thrill of discovery, chronicled as a turning-point in the appreciation of ancient art and societies, connects the exhibition “Wonderful Things: The Harry Burton Photographs and the Discovery of the Tomb of Tutankhamun” at the Michael...

- Egyptological Events To Mark Exhibition
http://www.newsobserver.com/327/story/563378.htmlThanks to Tony Marsonf or sending me this piece about an Egyptology themed Spring festival , which looks like a lot of fun: "Imagine a 50-ton sand sculpture molded into the head of an Egyptian king, complete...

- Exhibition: More On Tutankhamun And The Golden Age Of The Pharaohs
http://www.altoonamirror.com/Life/articles.asp?articleID=9682"King Tutankhamun became perhaps the world’s oldest media darling when British archaeologists discovered his approximately 3,300-year-old tomb in 1922. A display of his treasures set traveling...

- Albany Museum Displays Petrie Artefacts
http://tinyurl.com/bo3ve (Pressconnect.com)"The Albany Institute of History & Art, with GE as a sponsor, will host a world-class traveling exhibition, beginning Jan. 21, showcasing important Egyptian treasures from the Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology...



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