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Univ of Penn Museum Opens Renovated Ancient Galleries
With fanfare and celebration, the University of Pennsylvania Museum of
Archaeology and Anthropology recently inaugurated the major re-installation of
its Roman and Etruscan galleries and heralded the completion of its nearly
10-year program to present its unique classical collections in a modern,
thematic context.
Totally renovated, The Etruscan World and The Roman World galleries is aided by
a brand new Introduction to the Classical World gallery and a newly-produced
video designed to orient visitors geographically, chronologically and culturally
to the civilizations of ancient Italy and Greece. The Etruscan World gallery
claims to be the only comprehensive exhibit of Etruscan objects currently
on display in the United States.
Worlds Intertwined: Etruscans, Greeks, and Romans is a multi-million dollar
project that completes the suite of four permanent classical galleries at the
University of Pennsylvania Museum. (The Greek World gallery opened in 1994.) The
new galleries invite the visitor to explore the rich, interconnected and
intertwined cultures of the sun-drenched ancient Mediterranean -- and to
discover anew how these cultures continue to influence and inspire our world
today.
More than one thousand ancient artifacts – including marble and bronze
sculptures, jewelry, metalwork, mosaics, glass vessels, gold and silver coins,
and pottery of exceptional artistic and historical renown – tell the
remarkable story of the Etruscan peoples, the first great rulers of central
Italy (800-100 BC), and their empire-building Roman successors (500 BC- AD 500).
Many of these objects have never before been on public display. They are drawn
from the Museum’s outstanding Mediterranean collection of more than 30,000
objects, dating from 3000 BC to the 5th century AD.
The earliest classical galleries, installed when the University of Pennsylvania
Museum opened in 1899, displayed objects in a typical 19th century eclectic
manner. The next major installations were in the 1920’s and again in the
1950’s, presented in the exhibition styles of their times.
"These newly-renovated galleries are part of the ongoing
‘modernization’ of the Museum," says Dr. Jeremy Sabloff, Director of
the University of Pennsylvania Museum. "We are delighted to be able to
invite visitors to explore and discover the classical world in a way that shows
its enduring legacy."
"We want the visitor to go away with a better sense of who these ancient
classical peoples were -- and how their vision of the world continues to
influence us today," said Dr. Donald White, Curator-in-Charge of the
Museum's Mediterranean Section.
Many objects on display in Worlds Intertwined: Etruscans, Greeks, and Romans
come from recorded excavations and are rich with information about their
context. Of special importance are artifact groups from the Etruscan tomb groups
excavated at Narce and Vulci, Roman statuary from the Sanctuary of Diana
Nemorensis on the shores of Lake Nemi, south of Rome, and sculpture and
architectural decoration from the Museum's own excavations at Minturnae, north
of Naples.
Like The Greek World gallery, The Etruscan World and The Roman World galleries
exhibit culturally and artistically important objects thematically, allowing
visitors to draw parallels and make comparisons among the cultures. Topics such
as ancient religion and the pagan gods, commerce and trade, daily life, written
language, and death and burial are explored through text, maps, models and the
artifacts themselves.
The Etruscan World Gallery
The Etruscan people and their long-lived civilization are known from
contemporary Greek commentary – much of which painted a decadent portrait of
these people – and through their own sophisticated and remarkable art and
artifacts, mostly unearthed from Etruscan tombs. The Etruscan civilization has
received a significant renaissance of interest in recent years, as
archaeologists and historians work to understand the Etruscans’ unique
language and customs and to elucidate the Etruscan contributions to Roman
culture – especially Roman numerals and the Latin alphabet, religious rituals,
concepts of city planning and tiled roofs. UPM’s Etruscan collection is among
the finest in the United States and encompasses the full range of Etruscan
culture from the 8th century BC to the final days of Etruscan civilization in
the 1st century BC.
Highlights from The Etruscan World include exceptionally fine bucchero pottery,
fired dark gray and black in shapes that recall luxury metalwork. There are
grand carved sarcophagi and ash urns with detailed sculptured images of Etruscan
men and women. Terracotta architectural ornaments from temples, some adorned
with relief heads, evoke the intriguing world of Etruscan religion and
mythology. Granulated and filigreed gold jewelry, as elegant today as in
antiquity, give evidence of high technical skills.
Engraved gems, bronze statuettes, arms and armor, and terracotta vessels all
point to a once-prosperous and influential culture. A brief audio segment
invites the visitor to hear the unusual sounds of the Etruscan language. Six
rare Etruscan inscriptions are on display in this gallery, with an explanation
of the importance of the Etruscan language for understanding who these people
were and where they came from.
At the height of their civilization in the late 8th through 6th centuries BC,
the Etruscans gained wealth from their rich mines and lively trade with their
neighbors, including the Greeks. The Etruscans greatly admired and collected
Greek art and, in fact, most of the exceptional Greek pottery in The Greek World
gallery comes from Etruscan tombs. This "intertwined" relationship
between the Greeks and the Etruscans is a key theme of the new exhibition.
The Roman World Gallery
Dominating the new Roman World gallery is an internationally famous military
relief, once part of a commemorative arch for the emperor Trajan, erected in AD
102 at ancient Puteoli near Naples. This monumental sculpture is also a prime
example of Roman politics combined with Roman practicality – the opposite side
of the marble block contains an earlier inscription honoring the emperor
Domitian. Visitors can see how the inscription was painstakingly, but
incompletely, chiseled off after Domitian's assassination and official disgrace
by the Roman Senate in AD 96.
The artistic, commercial and technical achievements of the Romans are evident in
The Roman World gallery, which is filled with marble sculptures, including a
highly unusual head from a cult statue of the goddess Diana as well as other
deities, priests and men and women of the Roman Republic and Empire. Numerous
bronzes, including several 19th century cast replicas of objects excavated at
Pompeii and Herculaneum and given to UPM by department store founder and Museum
board member John Wanamaker in 1904, enhance the display of Roman domestic life.
Beautiful miniature engraved gems, jewelry and gold and silver coins reveal much
of the artistic skills of the Romans through their exquisite detail and
craftsmanship. Objects from the Museum's celebrated Roman glass collection -- an
exhibition of which recently traveled nationally -- offer colorful and sparkling
reminders of the sophistication of Roman taste and style. Amphoras from the
1950’s explorations of the renowned Jacques Cousteau off the coast of
Marseilles tell part of the story of Roman maritime trade. Portraits of Roman
women, perfume vials, jewelry and cosmetic implements fill out the theme of
women in Roman society, while portraits of children and their toys offer insight
into the lives of children in the Roman world.
Objects from the houses of Roman men and women, their dining vessels and
household decoration, such as painted wall plasters and mosaics, as well as
utilitarian objects -- the lead pipes that brought them drinking water -- are
seen in the section of The Roman World gallery on domestic life. The centerpiece
of this part of the gallery is a 4 ft. x 2 ft. model of a Roman house of the
type excavated at Pompeii and Herculaneum. Visitors can hear the
"voice" of Vitruvius, a famous Roman architect, describing variations
in housing design.
An Introduction to the Classical World Gallery
Visitors enter the Worlds Intertwined galleries through An Introduction to the
Classical World that sets these ancient Mediterranean cultures in time and
space, even as it challenges the viewer to look around and see the enduring
legacy of the classical world in modern architecture, philosophy, politics,
mathematics, commerce, language and art. An adjacent video theatre shows a new
10-minute video, produced for the Museum, focusing on the legacies of the
classical world right here in Philadelphia.
The Greek World Gallery (opened in 1994)
The storied world of the ancient Greeks is explained through exquisite painted
vases with depictions of ancient gods and myths, bronze armor, marble sculptures
and coinage. The 400-plus objects displayed in this gallery come from the Greek
homeland, the early colony foundations of the Greeks, Etruscan tombs and
far-flung outposts of the empire of Alexander the Great. Setting the format for
the newest galleries, The Greek World is organized into thematic sections,
including religion, daily life, commerce and trade, and death and burial.
Worlds Intertwined: Etruscans, Greeks, and Romans
Reminiscent of the sunny Mediterranean, the newly renovated classical galleries
of the University of Pennsylvania Museum make ample use of light -- through
windows, the re-creation of an original skylight and enhanced lighting
installations. The Museum building itself is a Victorian-era, eclectic-style
structure designed by Wilson Eyre that incorporates classical elements,
including the arched windows in these galleries.
Dr. Donald White, Curator-in-Charge of the Museum’s Mediterranean Section,
served as co-curator of Worlds Intertwined: Etruscans, Greeks, and Romans along
with Dr. Ann Blair Brownlee, Senior Research Scientist in the Mediterranean
Section, and Dr. Irene Bald Romano, Research Associate in the Mediterranean
Section, who also served as coordinator for this project. Etruscan scholar Dr.
Jean MacIntosh Turfa is the curatorial consultant for The Etruscan World.
A Guide to The Etruscan and Roman Worlds at the University of Pennsylvania
Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology accompanies the new exhibitions. ($14.95,
paperback; $29.95, cloth.112 pages, including color illustrations. University
Museum Publications. Available at the Museum Shop or by direct order
1-800-537-5487.)
Funding for the $3 million project of renovation and reinstallation of the
classical galleries and accompanying programs has come from a variety of
sources: The National Endowment for the Arts, the Institute of Museum and
Library Services, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, the William B. Dietrich
Foundation, the Samuel H. Kress Foundation and many other foundations,
corporations and individuals. Major funding for The Etruscan World gallery was
provided by a generous anonymous donor. The Greek World gallery has been
refreshed with a new coat of paint and improved lighting through the generosity
of the Hellenic University Clubs of Philadelphia and Wilmington and the Karabots
Foundation.
Especially gratifying for the Museum has been the support of the
Italian-American community in Philadelphia who raised the funds for The Roman
World gallery, named in honor of Andrew N. Farnese, Esq., a distinguished
son of Italy and citizen of Philadelphia. The Etruscan World gallery has been
named in honor of Kyle M. Phillips, Jr. (1934-1988), a noted American
archaeologist who excavated the important Etruscan site of Murlo.
The renovation of the galleries was undertaken by the architectural firm of
Atkin, Olshin, Lawson-Bell and Associates, with construction supervision by
Turner Construction Company. The exhibition was designed by Staples and Charles,
Ltd., in collaboration with John T. Murray, head of the Museum's Exhibition
Department. Avalon Exhibits, Inc. fabricated the exhibition furniture and
graphics. Conservation of objects was by the Museum's Conservation Department
under the direction of Virginia Greene, with the assistance of freelance
conservator Tamsen Fuller.
The University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology is
dedicated to the study and understanding of human history and diversity. Founded
in 1887, the Museum has sent more than 350 archaeological and anthropological
expeditions to all the inhabited continents of the world. With an active
exhibition schedule and educational programming for children and adults, the
Museum offers the public an opportunity to share in the ongoing discovery of
humankind's collective heritage.
The Museum is located at 3260 South Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104 (across from
Franklin Field). Museum hours are Tuesday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 4:30
p.m.; Sunday 1 to 5 p.m. Closed Mondays, holidays, and summer Sundays from
Memorial Day through Labor Day.
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