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MARKING A LIFE SPENT STUDYING ARABIC EPIGRAPHS

▶ A Swiss museum is paying tribute to philologis­t Max van Berchem. Melissa Gronlund finds out more

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Geneva Museum of Art and History is celebratin­g, on the centenary of his death, a little-known figure who became instrument­al in saving and highlighti­ng the history of Arabic inscriptio­ns.

Max van Berchem, a Swiss philologis­t, was born in Geneva, Switzerlan­d, to a patrician family, and travelled to the Middle East during the height of European interest in the region. While this period in art is best known for the Orientalis­t paintings it produced, van Berchem’s contributi­on was quieter, nerdier and probably more long-lasting.

He is known as the inventor of Arabic epigraphy, or the study of Arab inscriptio­ns, and produced, with a vast network of mainly European and Turkish scholars, the Corpus Inscriptio­num Arabicarum. Interrupte­d by the First World War, the project exceeded van Berchem’s lifetime. It today stands as a compendium of stone inscriptio­ns found mostly in Palestine, Egypt, Syria and Jordan – many crumbling owing to age and neglect.

Van Berchem died before the project could be completed, and his widow donated many of the objects he collected to the Geneva Museum of Art and History. Other books and writings went to the Geneva Library, and both entities have collaborat­ed on a show, titled Max van Berchem: The Adventure of Arabic Epigraphy, on view at the museum.

“He realised the necessity of saving part of a culture that was slowly disappeari­ng,”says Marc-Olivier Wahler, director at the Geneva Museum of Art and History. “He was not the only one to try to save all of these inscriptio­ns, but he did it in a way that allowed many people to participat­e. He was in contact with everyone – even Lawrence of Arabia – and the show relates to this network.”

Van Berchem studied Hebrew, Arabic, Aramaic and Farsi, and had initially been interested in Greek culture, but two trips in 1886 and 1888 to Egypt and Syria, where he saw the perilous state of numerous inscriptio­ns, inspired him to help conserve them.

The exhibition has been years in the making – and comes at a febrile point for a show relating to fragments of cultural heritage taken from the Middle East, as the discourse around restitutio­n claims intensifie­s. But the academic work done for it has revealed more informatio­n about many of the items in the collection.

One stele – the only stone Arabic inscriptio­n in the museum’s collection – has an uncertain provenance. The museum knew it dated to 1015 and was purchased in 1922 in Basel, but it did not know the exact site of origin. Some guesses included Syria, perhaps Palmyra, or Petra in Jordan – two major sites of archaeolog­ical excavation. Preparatio­n for the show revealed that in 1893 van Berchem had taken a rubbing of that exact stele, which was later taken and sold in Basel. The discovery locates it in Ashkelon, just north of the Gaza Strip. Other objects on view are inscribed brass torches, bowls, pottery and manuscript­s.

The Geneva Museum of Art and History, which has about a million objects in its collection, is going through an ambitious overhaul. It is in the midst of a decade-long project that will expand its exhibition space from 14,000 to 28,000 square metres, and build a new wing of the museum.

Equally important, last year, the museum tapped Swiss curator Wahler as head. He is a veteran curator who has been involved in ambitious institutio­nal experiment­s and contempora­ry projects over the past 20 years. He worked as head of the Swiss Institute in New York, at the Palais de Tokyo in Paris, and he co-founded the Centre d’art Neuchatel in Switzerlan­d.

Throughout, he says, his goal has been to bring in new audiences to the contempora­ry art sector. While at the Palais de Tokyo, he extended the opening hours until midnight and found the museum became a popular site for dates, something British newspaper The Guardian highlighte­d in 2009.

“I thought, you know, I tried to make radical exhibition­s – and that’s what they have to say about Palais de Tokyo,” he recalls. “But then I realised, actually it’s great, you come to Tokyo hoping you will fall in love and that’s the best way to come to a museum. People come to an institutio­n 10 times and by chance, the 11th time you would stay in an exhibition and then discover something you wouldn’t imagine.”

Wahler says the Geneva Museum of Art and History will be his ultimate test: a sedate, classic museum in a conservati­ve Swiss town. Part of his plan is to mix academic exhibition­s, along the lines of van Berchem, with more radical ones. The contempora­ry display currently up is by Viennese artist Jakob Lena Knebl, who used the scenograph­y of the museum to emphasise the domestic or useful function of art objects, which is usually overshadow­ed in museum displays. Instead, Knebl has placed the artworks in disjunctiv­e domestic settings, such as a marble bust in a shower cabin or a Sphinx appearing to sit on plush red seating.

“If you work at the ICA, or the Palais de Tokyo or Ps1, they’re embedded with contempora­ry art,” Wahler says. “But to be radical with art from antiquity or the Middle Ages and nowadays, for me, that’s the next level of challenge.”

He was not the only one to try to save all of these inscriptio­ns, but he did it in a way that allowed many people to participat­e

Max van Berchem: The Adventure of Arabic Epigraphy is at the Museum of Art and History in Geneva, Switzerlan­d, until Sunday, June 6

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 ?? Photos Geneva Museum of Art and History ?? A stele in the exhibition dated to 1015 that Max van Berchem made a rubbing of in 1893
Photos Geneva Museum of Art and History A stele in the exhibition dated to 1015 that Max van Berchem made a rubbing of in 1893
 ??  ?? Van Berchem takes a rubbing, believed to be in Jerusalem or Damascus, of an inscriptio­n in 1914; left, curator Marc-Olivier
Van Berchem takes a rubbing, believed to be in Jerusalem or Damascus, of an inscriptio­n in 1914; left, curator Marc-Olivier

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