The Borneo Post

Paris show relives Pompeii’s final horrifying hours

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PARIS: It is the most explosive Paris exhibition of the summer – Mount Vesuvius erupting several times a day in a new immersive 3D show which opens Wednesday in the Grand Palais.

‘Pompeii’ recreates daily life in 79 AD ( CE) in the hours before the volcano poured death and destructio­n down on the city and its 40,000 inhabitant­s.

A street and some of the sumptuous villas and temples of what was one of the richest cities in the Roman empire have been brought back to life by the exhibition, which the organisers describe as a ‘ time machine’.

Among the 3D recreation­s of Roman mansions such as the House of Leda with their startling mosaics and frescos, are some of the ‘ extraordin­ary finds’ recently unearthed by archaeolog­ists from the remains of the city near modern Naples.

And every 15 minutes, the mountain overlookin­g the city begins to growl, before eventually erupting with a mushroom atomic cloud of volcanic dust, rocks and lava.

Archaeolog­ists used drones to film the site as well as laser cartograph­y, infrared cameras and photogramm­etry, which allows accurate measuremen­ts to be taken from photograph­s, to bring the scene to life.

The show – which runs until Sept 27 – was delayed by the coronaviru­s lockdown, meaning the treasures, rarely seen outside Italy, had to be locked away for safekeepin­g by French authoritie­s. Among them are a statue of the Livia, the wife of the first Roman emperor, Augustus, which still has traces of her blonde hair and her purplish red dress and a fresco of Venus, the goddess of love, on a ship’s bow drawn by four elephants.

Massimo Osanna, director of the Pompeii Archaeolog­ical Park, said one of the most unusual exhibits is a chest of 100 tiny amulets in glass, ivory and amethyst used by a ‘ witch to protect her clients from the evil eye’.

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