The Daily News Egypt

Sunken Cities: Egypt’s charming world, second exhibition in US

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Egypt opened its latest overseas exhibition, ‘ The Sunken Cities: Egypt’s charming world’, in the Minneapoli­s Institute of Art ( Mia) in the US. Moustafa Waziri, secretary general of the Supreme Council of Antiquitie­s ( SCA), inaugurate­d the exhibition, which runs for the second time in the US, after it lasted for six months in Saint Louis city. The exhibition will run until April 2019.

Waziri said in his opening speech that the exhibition attracted 113,000 visitors in its first city, which is considered a “huge success”, adding that it is expected for this exhibition to attract the same number of visitors.

The exhibition displays 293 antiquitie­s that were discovered submerged in the Mediterran­ean Sea, due to a severe earth quake that hit Egypt at the time. The relics belong to two main cities, located near Alexandria, that were once prominent trade centres in Egypt.

“These finds have deep scholarly significan­ce, giving us a greater understand­ing of the intermingl­ing of Egyptian and Greek politics, religion, and aesthetics, as well as ground- breaking insights on ancient secret rituals. Discovered and removed from the depths of the Mediterran­ean Sea, these objects transport the viewer to another time and place, with their grandeur, scale, sheer beauty, and the rich history they represent,” said Jan- Lodewijk Grootaers, curator of African art and head of Mia’s Department of Arts of Africa and the Americas, in a press release.

The exhibition includes giant statues of the goddess Isis and the sphinx, as well as relics of ancient Egyptian accessorie­s and cooking pots.

The exhibition has been touring Europe for almost four years now. It started in France in 2015, before going on to the UK, then reaching the US, where it is planned to take place in four different states.

 ??  ?? The exhibition displays 293 antiquitie­s that were discovered submerged in the Mediterran­ean Sea
The exhibition displays 293 antiquitie­s that were discovered submerged in the Mediterran­ean Sea

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