Met Exhibition to Offer Insights into Early Byzantine Life

Bowl with Interior Geometric Decoration, 4th - 7th century
Bowl with Interior Geometric Decoration, 4th - 7th century. Made in Kharga Oasis, Byzantine Egypt. Earthenware, slip decoration. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Rogers Fund, 1925 (25.10.20.177).
Image: © The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Exhibition Dates:
October 11, 2017 - September 30, 2018

Exhibition Location:
The Met Fifth Avenue, Floor 1, Mary and Michael Jaharis Galleries (Byzantine Crypt),
Gallery 302

In 1908, The Metropolitan Museum of Art began to excavate late-antique sites in the Kharga Oasis, located in Egypt’s Western Desert. The Museum’s archaeologists uncovered two-story houses, painted tombs, and a church and retrieved objects that reveal the multiple cultural and religious identities of people who had lived in the region between the third and seventh centuries A.D., a time of transition between the Roman and early Byzantine periods. The finds represent a society that integrated Egyptian, Greek, and Roman culture and art. Opening October 11 at The Met, the exhibition Art and Peoples of Kharga Oasis will feature some 30 works from these excavations.

By grouping objects according to the archaeological context in which they were discovered, the exhibition will explore the interpretation of ancient identities and artifacts and show how archaeological documentation can aid in understanding an object’s original function. On view will be copies of frescoes with Early Christian images, ceramics, ostraca (pottery shards that were used as writing surfaces), jewelry from burials, glassware, and early 20th-century site photography.

Students and scholars wishing to do further research may wish to consult “Excavations of the Late Roman and Early Byzantine Sites in the Kharga Oasis,” an online resource available through the Digital Collection portal of the Museum’s Thomas J. Watson Library.An excerpt from the 1989 documentary film Merchants and Masterpieces will feature footage of the landscape and monuments of Kharga Oasis.

The exhibition is organized by Helen Evans, the Mary and Michael Jaharis Curator of Byzantine Art, Department of Medieval Art and The Cloisters, and Andrea Myers Achi. Exhibition, graphic, and lighting design is by The Met Design Department.

The exhibition will be featured on the Museum’s website, as well as on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter.

 

MOBILE APP OF THE TRETYAKOV GALLERY MAGAZINE

Download The Tretyakov Gallery Magazine in App StoreDownload The Tretyakov Gallery Magazine in Google play