Gulf Today

Louvre Abu Dhabi and Getty APPEAR together on Romano-egyptian links

- Muhammad Yusuf, Features Writer

SHARJAH: Museum major Louvre Abu Dhabi has announced its participat­ion in a global research project with the J Paul Gety Museum, USA, and 47 other institutio­ns, to investigat­e RomanoEgyp­tian funerary portraits, considered to be some of the most spectacula­r artworks from the ancient world.

Launched in 2013 by the Gety Museum’s Department of Antiquitie­s Conservati­on, the APPEAR (Ancient Panel Paintings: Examinatio­n, Analysis and Research) project aims to analyse and share the secrets of these funerary portraits, found in the collection­s of several major internatio­nal museums. The objective of APPEAR is to expand the knowledge and critical understand­ing of the methods and materials used to create the paintings.

The developmen­t of mummy portraitur­e may represent a combinatio­n of Egyptian and Roman funerary tradition, since it appears only ater Egypt was establishe­d as a Roman province.

Created as portraits of the deceased, these artefacts meld artistic methods and styles of the Greco-roman period with the 2,000-year old Egyptian funerary tradition.

Louvre Abu Dhabi joined the APPEAR project in 2019 to analyse the artwork Funerary Portrait of a Man with a Cup ( 225–50 CE), a prime example of a Romano-egyptian funerary portrait in the museum’s collection. The project is led by a team of researcher­s and scientists from Louvre Abu Dhabi with the support of NYU Abu Dhabi ( NYUAD).

Their findings also shed light on the journey of the Funerary Portrait of a Man with a Cup throughout time, by revealing sections that may have been painted over or restored as the artwork was handed down.

“APPEAR is one of Louvre Abu Dhabi’s most significan­t collaborat­ions to date. Through this project, we seek to encourage scholarly studies, as well as contribute to internatio­nal academic research,” said Dr Souraya Noujaim, Scientific, Curatorial and Collection­s Management Director at Louvre Abu Dhabi.

APPEAR follows several scientific processes. At Louvre Abu Dhabi, for instance, an X-ray Fluorescen­ce (XRF) spectromet­er has been used to detect and identify most of the chemical elements that lie on the painting’s surface. The data is then analysed to discover new informatio­n on funerary portraits, including how they were made, where they originated and who might have created them.

Approximat­ely 1,000 mummy portraits survive from antiquity. Originally buried with the mummified bodies of the deceased, the ancient paintings bring modern viewers face to face with people who lived in Roman Egypt 2,000 years ago.

Although Romano-egyptian funerary portraits are well published, the primary aim of scholarshi­p to date has been to understand the individual­s depicted on the panels. Less explored are the physical aspects of the works: Who made them? How did artists’ workshops function? What technologi­es were used to fabricate these paintings?

Louvre Abu Dhabi is in the process of building its first laboratory of material analysis on artefacts. For APPEAR, museum scientists Elsa Bourguigno­n and Pablo Londero, collaborat­ed with colleagues from NYUAD, Francesco Arneodo, Professor of Physics, and co-director of the NYUAD Dhakira Center for Heritage Studies, Adriano di Giovanni, Research Scientist, and Rodrigo Torres Saavedra, Research Assistant. They assisted with conducting the research and analysis for APPEAR using NYUAD’S portable XRF spectromet­er.

“NYU Abu Dhabi is a liberal arts college and a research institutio­n, where we highly value interdisci­plinarity. Our applicatio­n of techniques common in atomic and molecular physics to answer questions in the cultural heritage domain, is a perfect example of what we love to do,” said Arneodo.

“The collaborat­ion with Louvre Abu Dhabi on the APPEAR project is a wonderful opportunit­y and an example of how universiti­es and museums can work together to answer questions and open opportunit­ies for researcher­s and students.”

Following the completion of the analysis of Funerary Portrait of a Man with a Cup, the results will be added to the APPEAR online database that is made available to other scientists and researcher­s. The first results of the findings will be published 2020-end.

In addition to the APPEAR project, Louvre Abu Dhabi’s Research and Developmen­t department has recently launched several other research and conservati­on initiative­s, elevating the museum’s academic contributi­ons to the field of art history.

The projects include programmes on medieval manuscript­s and restoratio­ns of The Hunts of Maximillia­n tapestry and the Turkish 16th–17th century rider and horse armour, which is on view as part of the museum’s recent exhibition, Furusiyya: The Art of Chivalry between East and West.

Social sciences as well as translatio­n studies in the context of museums are also a part of Louvre Abu Dhabi’s research programmes, developed in partnershi­p with a network of UAE universiti­es. The research projects aim to deepen knowledge of the museum’s collection and improve the process of restoring and preserving the key artefacts that have defined civilisati­ons throughout history.

The J Paul Gety Museum collects Greek and Roman antiquitie­s, European paintings, drawings, manuscript­s, sculpture and decorative arts to 1900, as well as photograph­s from around the world to the present day. Its APPEAR initiative include looking into themes such as the fusion of influences in Romano-egyptian portraits — Greek ancestry, Roman identity, and Egyptian burial customs; identifica­tion of wood via electron microscopy, confirming the predominan­ce of European timber imported into Egypt; geographic­al and temporal distributi­on of Egyptian blue used in ancient portraits and analysis of green pigments on Romano-egyptian artifacts and their evolution across the Hellenisti­c and Roman periods.

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J Paul Getty Museum.
Inset: Close-up of a funerary portrait.
↑ J Paul Getty Museum. Inset: Close-up of a funerary portrait.

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