Description
Beautifully illustrated throughout and with contributions by leading scholars, this book explores the imagined construction of ancient Egypt promoted through painting, sculpture, photography, architecture and film, as well as design, fashion and jewellery. It traces the journey across time, beginning with the ancient Romans who looted Egyptian monuments and adopted Egyptian gods into their Pantheon; to Napoleon Bonaparte's invasion of Egypt, and the elite taste for all things Egyptian it prompted; as well as the Victorian creation of an Orientalist fantasy popularised at World Fairs. Presented in a nuanced way, the story is not Eurocentric. For the first time, it also places Egypt's own story firmly into the narrative, exploring for example Egyptian artists' responses to nationalist calls for independence spurred by the discovery of Tutankhamun's tomb in 1922, while also addressing the popular impact of the 'Tutmania' craze in the West and its influence on Art Deco. The book also examines the enduring appeal of ancient Egypt in global contemporary art, across media from painting and sculpture, to film and multimedia installations. Artists both within and beyond Egypt continue to look to its ancient imagery to make statements about heritage, identity and race.
The book invites readers to debate and to discuss this complex history of the construction of ancient Egypt in art and design, and to ask who these visions serve - both then and now.
About the Author
Anna Ferrari is an independent curator and art historian specialising in late-nineteenth and twentieth-century art and design. She wrote her PhD thesis on the French modernist sculptor Henri Laurens and has previously curated exhibitions at Barbican Art Gallery, the V&A and the Royal Academy of Arts. Dr Benjamin Hinson is an Egytpologist and the assistant curator in the Middle East Section at the Victoria and Albert Museum, London.
Book Information
ISBN 9781739720001
Author Anna Ferrari
Format Paperback
Page Count 160
Imprint Sainsbury Centre
Publisher Sainsbury Centre