The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Perth mummy project has award nomination all wrapped up

- JAMIE BUCHAN

APerth conservati­on project which has unearthed longhidden secrets of an ancient Egyptian mummy has been nominated for an internatio­nal award.

Experts are carrying out a painstakin­g assessment of a 3,000-year-old priestess known as TaKr-Hb – pronounced Ta h e r h e b – at Pe r t h Museum and Art Gallery.

It is hoped she will one day be a star attraction at the planned Perth City Hall museum.

Now the project, which is currently part of a public exhibition at the George Street venue, is in the running for a highly prestigiou­s accolade.

It has been nominated for the Internatio­nal Institute for Conservati­on of Historic and Artistic Works’ Keck Award.

Establishe­d in 1994, the title is granted to organisati­ons which have promoted public engagement and understand­ing of conservati­on, an activity which often takes place behind closed doors.

Previous winners include the Natural History Museum’s work on a 25me t r e , four-and-a-half tonne blue whale skeleton, and a long-standing scheme to preserve an 18th Century alter at St Nicholas’ Church in Tallinn.

Ta- Kr- Hb has been a source of fascinatio­n since she arrived at the Perth museum in the 1930s.

Conservati­onists found in March that the lower part of her coffin is a forensical­ly rich environmen­t featuring soil, plants and insects. Perhaps the most exciting discovery so far is a series of painted figures on the internal and external bases of the trough.

It is hoped that the finds will go some way to better explaining the ancient mummificat­ion process.

Anna Zwagerman, conser vation officer at Culture Perth and Kinross, said: “Conservati­on exhibition­s are very rare, and live conservati­on treatments few and far between.

“I am glad we are able to share this with our visitors.”

Culture Pe r t h and Kinross chairman Charles Kinnoull said he was delighted with the nomination. “We have always been proud of the e xcellent work of our curatorial and conservati­on colleagues,” he said.

The winner will be announced at the ICC Congress in Edinburgh next month.

 ??  ?? PAINSTAKIN­G: Dr Mark Hall and Anna Zwagerman work on the mummy.
PAINSTAKIN­G: Dr Mark Hall and Anna Zwagerman work on the mummy.

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