Egypt Reborn
Art for Eternity
Brooklyn Museum of Art
Long-Term Installation
Egyptian Galleries, 3rd Floor
Additional exhibits illustrate important themes about Egyptian culture, including women’s roles, permanence and change in Egyptian art, temples and tombs, technology and materials, art and communication, and Egypt and its relationship to the rest of Africa. More than 1,200 objects— comprising sculpture, relief, paintings, pottery, and papyri—are now on view, including such treasures as an exquisite chlorite head of a Middle Kingdom princess, an early stone deity from 2650 B.C., a relief from the tomb of a man named Akhty-hotep, and a highly abstract female terracotta statuette created over five thousand years ago.
The title of the installation refers to a central theme of Egyptian life and to the rebirth of Egyptian art at the Brooklyn Museum. The ancient Egyptians created many of the objects now on view to assist in the process of rebirth from this world to the next. This unifying idea led to an artistic conservatism in Egyptian culture that disguises stylistic changes. The balance between permanence and change is a theme that resonates throughout the installation’s seven gall
© All rights reserved Collection of the Brooklyn Museum of Art 2009 United States
Provenance not known; perhaps from Edfu Second Intermediate Period, second part of Dynasty XIII (circa 1721-after 1630 B.C.E.) Copper, 3 3/4 x 2 3/4 x 3 3/16 (9.5 x 7.0 x 8.1) Charles Edwin Wilbour Fund Collection of the Brooklyn Museum of Art
