From Saqqara to St. Louis to Philadelphia

Similar documents
h i s t om b an d h i s t r e a su r e s Worksheet CArter ArChAeoLoGY

BULLETIN OF THE MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS VOLUME XXXVII BOSTON, JUNE, 1939 NUMBER 221. Harvard University-Museum of Fine Arts Egyptian Expedition

Life and Death at Beth Shean

Exporting Egypt: Where? Why? Whose?

The early Kushite kings adopted all Egyptian customs and beliefs. kings were buried on beds placed on stone platforms within their pyramids.

FINDING LIFE FROM GRAVE GOODS

Tepe Gawra, Iraq expedition records

MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS BULLETIN OF THE VOLUME LII BOSTON, DECEMBER, 1954 NO. 290

BOSTON MUSEUM BULLETIN VOL. LXX 1972 NO. 359

Assyrian Reliefs Bowdoin College Museum of Art

BLACK HISTORY MONTH - Week 1 #BlackHistoryMatters

Nubia. Sphinx of Taharqo Kawa, Sudan 680 BC. Visit resource for teachers Key Stage 2

little treasures 2016

little treasures 2019

Opening: RED DOT ART FAIR Miami Dec. 5 9, 2018

King Tutankhamun: The Treasures Of The Tomb By Sandro Vannini, Zahi Hawass

SERIATION: Ordering Archaeological Evidence by Stylistic Differences

An archery set from Dra Abu el-naga

Tomb Raider: A Mantle of the Expert for ancient Egypt Prepare your area as well as you can to look like the inside of a tomb. Make it as dark as

XXIInd INTERNATIONAL BIENNIAL OF ARTISTIC CERAMICS CONTEMPORARY CREATION AND CERAMIC Vallauris July November 2012

FEDERAL REGISTER NOTICE

Part i. Analysis of the Cluster

Museums in a Box Teacher s Notes The Egyptians

NEWS RELEASE Pam Kosty, Public Relations Director

Xian Tombs of the Qin Dynasty

Information for the spectators

An Ancient Mystery UNIT 6 WEEK 4. Read the article An Ancient Mystery before answering Numbers 1 through 5.

DIPLOMA IN GEMMOLOGY

Chicago museum lifts lid on Egyptian mummy coffin 8 December 2014, bycaryn Rousseau

4th Morocco Home; International Home Textiles Fair Gathered visitors from 28 to 31 March 2018

1 Introduction to the Collection

DIPLOMA IN GEMMOLOGY

BY FREDERIC WILNER ILIADE PRODUCTIONS LES FILMS DE L ODYSSÉE. King Tut The treasure uncovered A 90 MINUTES DOCUMENTARY

British Museum's Afghan exhibition extended due to popular demand

Corroboree: 25 Years of Cooperation between Egyptians and Australians in the Field of Egyptology

News Shorts: Tomb Raiders

Cultural Corner HOW MUMMIES WERE MADE

Primary Sources: Carter's Discovery of King Tutankhamun's Tomb

DIYALA OBJECTS PROJECT

News Shorts: Tomb Raiders

Report to the Arizona Archaeological and Historical Society on Jakob W. Sedig s Trip to Fife Lake, Michigan to Assess Archaeological Collections

4th Morocco Style; International Fashion, Textile Accessories and Machinery Fair Gathered visitors from 28 to 31 March 2018

Durham, North Carolina

largest collection of Egyptian

Kangaroo Island Easter Art Exhibition Penneshaw Hall, Penneshaw Good Friday 30 March to Sunday 8 April 2018

largest collection of Egyptian

TRAVELLING EXHIBITIONS BY THE ISLAMIC ARTS MUSEUM MALAYSIA (IAMM)

WORKSHEET MUMMIES TOMB

INGRAM GALLERY FEBRUARY 23 MAY 28, 2018

Mechanical Engineering in Ancient Egypt: Part VI: Jewellery Industry (Royal crowns and Headdresses from 19 th to 30 th. Dynasties) Galal Ali Hassaan

King Tutankhamun: The Treasures Of The Tomb 2011 Calendar By Sandro Vannini READ ONLINE

The Lost World of Old Europe The Danube Valley, BC

Amanda K. Chen Department of Art History and Archaeology University of Maryland, College Park

CALL FOR ARTISTS 2019

ROYAL TOMBS AT GYEONGJU -- CHEONMACHONG

Special School Days

The 61 st Bangkok Gems & Jewelry Fair. The 62 nd Bangkok Gems & Jewelry Fair February 2018, hrs. 25 February 2018, hrs.

International Training Programme 2015 Final Report Wesam Mohamed Abd El-Alim, Ministry for Antiquities Supported by the John S Cohen Foundation

ALUTIIQ MUSEUM & ARCHAEOLOGICAL REPOSITORY 215 Mission Road, Suite 101! Kodiak, Alaska 99615! ! FAX EXHIBITS POLICY

The Middle East Galleries at the. The University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, Philadelphia: A Permanent Exhibit

largest collection of Egyptian

NUBIAN EXPEDITION. oi.uchicago.edu. Keith C. Seele, Field Director

Imagining Egypt By Mark Millmore

GayNewOrleans.COM SouthernDecadence.COM GayAmerica.COM GayEasterParade.COM Oct , 2006 AmbushMag.COM MAIN~11 of 56

1 NORTHEAST 40 STREET,

What is Veluminous? Benefits of Using Veluminous

Children s Self-Guided Tour Of The Egyptian Museum In Cairo, Egypt. By Mona A. El-Bayoumi

Where and when. General Information. 1 P a g e

AHIS170 Lecture 1 Egyptian Archaeology: An Introduction. Module 1: Introduction to Egyptian Archaeology: Geography, Chronology and Society (Weeks 1-2)

GETTY VILLA UNVEILS A BEHIND-THE-SCENES LOOK AT OBJECT COLLECTION AND CONSERVATION IN THREE SIMULTANEOUS EXHIBITIONS

Robert Burns Public Memorials Missing, Destroyed or Undiscovered.

Camelid Sacrum in the Shape of a Canine

Guidelines for organising exhibitions in the Atrium Gallery at LSE

COLLECTING CHINESE ART

Guidelines for organising exhibitions in the Atrium Gallery at LSE

5,000 Year Old Ancient Mediterranean Artifacts Come to Calgary

The shabtis of the Lady TENT- IPET By Niek de Haan Second edition 2008

LIST OF FIGURES. 14. G 7000 X. East-west section of shaft with offering niche.

Mother Goddess Figurines on Stamps

Preserving Britain s cultural heritage: to restore a legendary theatrical dress

We hope that you have a Super Christmas time and a happy, healthy and prosperous New Year

Post Event Report of VICENZAORO SPRNG 2013, May 2013

Welcome. We are excited about taking this journey with you and honored that you have chosen to be part of our program. Enjoy the journey,

The Royal Mummies (Duckworth Egyptology) By G. Elliot Smith

Ancient Chinese Chariots

Jane C. Waldbaum Archaeology Field School Scholarship. It was difficult at first to adjust to the ten-hour time change, but my body quickly

55th Bangkok Gem & Jewellry Fair. (24-28 Feb, 2015) Introduction. Date: 24 th Feb-28 th Feb,2015.

Photographs. Unless otherwise acknowledged, all photographs are the property of Pearson Education, Inc.

The first men who dug into Kent s Stonehenge

ENTRY TERMS AND CONDITIONS 2017 CITY OF WHYLLA ART PRIZE

Woman's Club of Conshohocken records

Approved Workmen Are Not Ashamed (2 Timothy 2:15)

THE LAW SOCIETY OF ALBERTA HEARING COMMITTEE REPORT

Erich F. Schmidt excavation records from Tepe Hissar, Iran

Cosmetic palette Fish. Cosmetic palette Turtle

Guide to the Las Vegas Contemporary Arts Center Records

Proto- and Early Dynastic Necropolis of M i nshat Ezzat Dakahlia Province, Northeast Delta

Betye Saar: Selected Works Fine Arts Gallery, California State University, Los Angeles, CA, September 29 - October 2, 1973

Mechanical Engineering in Ancient Egypt: Part XVII: Ladies Headdress in the Old, Middle Kingdoms, Third Intermediate and Late Periods

SAVILE ROW ACADEMY The Pinnacle of Sartorial Excellence: Training the Elite Tailors of the Future. Savile Row Academy

Transcription:

world's fairs t h e w o n d e r o f From Saqqara to St. Louis to Philadelphia the chapel of Kaipure BY DAVID P. SILVERMAN 36 EXPEDITION Volume 57 Number 1

having worked at the 1964 New York World s Fair when I was a teenager, I thought that I knew a great deal about how things operated in such venues. Much later, I learned through my research at the Penn Museum, however, that, in addition to visiting exhibitions, tasting exotic foods, and buying souvenirs, one could also purchase valuable antiquities. In fact, one of the most popular items in our ancient Egyptian collection the limestone offering chamber of Kaipure, dating to the late 5th to early 6th Dynasty (ca. 2350 BCE) is a prime example. This impressive structure originally comprised almost half of the above ground part of a tomb that the owner, an official of the treasury, had built at Saqqara to ensure a successful afterlife. Today, it still retains almost all of its beautifully carved and painted reliefs and texts. This architectural masterpiece, part of the Louisiana Purchase Exposition in St. Louis (also known as the St. Louis World s Fair), had been on exhibit since the Fair opened on April 30, 1904. A few months later, the Penn Museum learned of its availability for acquisition. It was Mr. John Wanamaker, president of the wellknown Philadelphia department store chain, and a manager of the Museum, who made the transaction possible. the Kaipure chapel in egypt Although early scholars had noticed this tomb, it was Auguste Marriette, Director of Egypt s Antiquities Service, who first provided valuable ABOVE: In the late 1800s, August Marriette created a rough plan of the Kaipure offering chamber. From A. Mariette, Les Mastaba de l Ancien Empire. (Paris: F. Vieweg, 1885), p. 272. RIGHT: The Chapel of Kaipure in situ in Saqqara, prior to its exhibition in St. Louis in 1904. EXPEDITION Spring 2015 37

reliable details in his published report of 1869. About 20 years later, he conducted a more thorough study in which he pointed out that the surviving parts of the original structure consisted of two rooms and a connecting corridor. He included a rough plan and described the scenes and texts that appeared on the walls. As was the tradition in his publications, he made hand copies of the inscriptions using generalized hieroglyphs rather than more detailed ones that closely resembled particular signs. In addition, the orientation of the texts was incorrect in many passages. Early in the 20th century, photographs were taken of some of the walls of the tomb in situ. Its original location was the Old Kingdom cemetery at Saqqara, in an area north of Djoser s 3rd Dynasty Step Pyramid. During the following years, reports, descriptions, articles, and references appeared in print. A full publication is now underway. Once officials in Egypt decided to participate in the 1904 Exposition in St. Louis, one of the exhibits they The Egyptian exhibit in the Anthropology Hall, 1904. Photo courtesy Missouri History Museum, St. Louis. chose to include was focused on ancient Egypt, with the well-preserved remains of Kaipure s mastaba as one of its highlights. The Anthropology Hall of the Fair housed collections of articles from several parts of the world, including Egypt. Along with the Kaipure structure, ancient Egyptian material on display included mummies, coffins, a sarcophagus, statuettes, pottery vessels, scarabs, necklaces, and shabti figurines. To augment this collection and to prevent the display from becoming too tired, as one reporter, prior to the opening of the fair, wrote in the St. Louis Republic (March 6, 1904), the exhibition also had several reproductions of statues and architectural elements, as well as three dioramas with mannequins to illustrate aspects of life in ancient Egypt: beer making, a noblewoman applying makeup, and a nobleman at dinner. To accompany the exhibit to St. Louis, officials in Egypt had chosen J.E. Quibell, Chief Inspector in the Antiquities Service, who was between his terms directing work in the Delta and Middle Egypt and that in Lower Egypt. He arrived prior to the opening with Herman A. Lawford, Commissioner in the Service in Egypt. Quibell, with assistance from his ABOVE: Upper part of Kaipure s false door in the Penn Museum. UPM object #E15729. BELOW: Mariette s hand copy of the false door, printed with incorrect orientation. wife Annie, prepared all of the material for display, composed text and labels, unpacked the objects, placed them in the cases, and arranged the accompanying dioramas. In addition to Lawford s administrative duties, he also had the responsibility of finding appropriate institutions that might have an 38 EXPEDITION Volume 57 Number 1

Kaipure s mastaba, as presented in 1904 in St. Louis. Photo courtesy Missouri History Museum, St. Louis. EXPEDITION Spring 2015 39

interest in purchasing the Egyptian artifacts for their own collections after the Fair had concluded. Not long after the opening, he began writing to different venues in the United States regarding this proposition. On August 8, 1904, he sent a letter to the Free Museum of Science and Art (now the Penn Museum), offering the entire collection, including the dioramas. sara yorke stevenson works to build the MuseuM collection Needless to say, the proposal generated much interest, and it especially captured the attention of Sara Yorke Stevenson, President of the Department of Archaeology at the Museum who, a few years earlier, had begun Dioramas depicting ancient Egyptian life were on display at the St. Louis Exposition. Photo courtesy Missouri History Museum, St. Louis. efforts to increase the size of the ancient Near Eastern and Mediterranean collections. A strong supporter of the institution and an influential Philadelphian, she founded the American Exploration Society which financially supported excavations in Egypt. One of her acquaintances, the renowned British archaeologist, Sir William Flinders Petrie, received funding from the Society, and he provided the Museum, in turn, with artifacts from his excavations. Both the palace of Merneptah and our monumental Sphinx are items that resulted from that collaboration. Ms. Stevenson also utilized reputable agents in Egypt to secure other excavated material. At the end of the 19th century, she organized the first of Penn s own excavations (at Dendereh), 40 EXPEDITION Volume 57 Number 1

but this endeavor was ultimately not as productive as she had hoped. It would be another decade before a successful effort would take place. The late summer of 1904 was an opportune time for the arrival of Mr. Lawford s letter regarding the sale of Egyptian artifacts from the Fair. The Egyptian Commissioner listed the available items: all the material that the Antiquities Service had excavated in Egypt, some casts and reproductions, and three accompanying tableaux. The suggested price for these articles was around $10,000 (approximately $265,000 in today s dollars), a very good value. The Archives of the Penn Museum contain much correspondence regarding the details of the transaction. Several weeks passed before Penn asked Lawford about the availability of the material, and he responded on October 23, 1904, noting: The Egyptian Collection has not been sold as a whole & I am selling it in lots. Lawford and officials of the Museum exchanged letters and telegrams concerning which objects the sale would include, what the cost would be for packing and transporting the selected material, as well as the arrangement for its clearance of customs, and who would be responsible for which costs. Bargaining and some disagreements extended the time of the negotiations, but on December 15, 1904, Mr. Wanamaker sent a note to Ms. Stevenson confirming his transfer to her of $3,400 with which the account can be paid TOP: Kaipure s chapel on display in 1926 at the Penn Museum. BELOW: This relief, on view in the first floor Egyptian Gallery, records a butchery scene. when you are satisfied that the goods have come to you in proper order For this amount, the Museum was to receive Kaipure s offering chapel and corridor, a coffin and its mummy, a granite sarcophagus, two other artifacts, and many casts and reproductions. A further amount of $500 was the original estimate for the moving costs, but other miscellaneous charges accrued, so that the total amount reached roughly $4,000. Throughout the lengthy process, Mr. Wanamaker remained actively involved and committed to the project; he even participated in some of the original negotiations in St. Louis in September of 1904. During late November through early December, Mr. Lawford and an official at the Fair informed Mr. Wanamaker, Ms. Stevenson, and others at the Museum that the collection in St. Louis had to be removed by mid-december. In order to expedite the process the Museum arranged to send its own agent, John Watters, to St. Louis, but his inability to deal successfully with all aspects of the assignment created more delays, which in turn led to more negotiations; sometimes they were amicable, but often they were hostile. At one point Mr. Lawford even tried unsuccessfully to draw directly on funds from Mr. Wanamaker s account at State National Bank. A few days later, Lawford s telegram of December 16, 1904 assured Mr. Wanamaker that the Egyptian material was packed and would be shipped upon receipt of payment. Mr. EXPEDITION Spring 2015 41

Wanamaker then reauthorized Ms. Stevenson to transfer the money to Mr. Lawford, pending a report from Mr. Watters that the goods were packed in good order. The Export Shipping Company acknowledged payment on December 20th, but the same day, the Fair billed the Museum for the packing materials. A week later, Mr. Wanamaker wrote: the goods on exhibition at St. Louis have not yet cleared the Customs House. The release of the antiquities, therefore, could not take place on time, and the shipment did not leave St. Louis until January 1905. According to a letter from the Pennsylvania Railroad Company to the Museum: a shipment of Exhibits [was] delivered on January 28th. Finally, on February 17, 1905, Ms. Stevenson announced to members of the Museum s Board that the Egyptian collection from St. Louis had arrived. the Kaipure chapel in philadelphia The chapel blocks, stored for several weeks in the basement of the Museum, were due to be moved to the 2nd floor in mid-march of the same year, but the load-bearing capacity of the floor was deemed insufficient, and the mastaba, therefore, remained in the basement for more than 20 years. However, The Kaipure chapel, as part of the 1997 exhibition Searching for Ancient Egypt. visitors to the Museum could make special arrangements to view the reconstructed structure. When the Eckley B. Coxe Wing was completed in 1926, the Egyptian collection occupied the spacious galleries on the two floors of the new wing, with Kaipure s chapel on the lower floor. For almost 70 years, the offering chapel remained in that space as one of our most popular exhibitions. In 1996, the Museum began an intensive project to conserve the tomb s west wall, including its five-ton false door. This monument would become the focus of a new exhibition, Searching for Ancient Egypt, consisting of 146 artifacts from our collection that would travel from 1997 2000 to museums in several U.S. cities. This exhibition reached an audience of approximately 645,000 people. Today, we look forward to the conservation of the south and east walls; work that represents only one component of the Museum s ambitious plans for the reinstallation of the entire Egyptian collection. Soon, the completely restored offering chamber from Kaipure s mastaba will again take its place as a treasure of our collection and an iconic example of the heights of ancient Egyptian culture. Ä DAVID P. SILVERMAN is Eckley Brinton Coxe, Jr. Professor of Egyptology and Curator-in-Charge of the Egyptian Section. 42 EXPEDITION Volume 57 Number 1