Hadrian Exhibition/Some More Gallery Updates
Mon, Aug 4 2008 05:42
| this website, museum visits
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I went up to the British Museum last Friday to take a look at the Hadrian exhibition. It's a pretty good, very well-lit exhibition. Unfortunately there was an enforced ban on photographs so I've nothing to show for it, but I put some other photos up in the Galleries, along with a rant about the state of affairs there. London has far too many public works that open amid great fanfare and then close down indefinitely, diverting money from the main museums (the Millennium Dome is an obvious example, but how much was spent on the Museum of the Moving Image?). I'm writing to try and get access to some of the other galleries - we'll see.
Back to the exhibition - the star item is the head (along with a leg and foot) of a statue found last year at Saglassos, in Turkey, and never before seen in public. The original statue would apparently have been four to five metres high. There are many other busts of Hadrian (who was fond of commissioning statues) from various stages of his career, from youth onwards. One of the statues has him stepping on the back of a conquered barbarian; the statue's from Rome but was obviously a common design since pretty much the same statue was in the museum at Istanbul (and can be seen in the photos).
There are interesting collections of busts of Hadrian, Trajan and their respective families near the entrance to the exhibition, and on the way out of Hadrian's potential and actual successors (Antoninus Pius, Aelius Caesar, Servianus and some remarkable busts of Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus as children.
The press has I think focused in the run up to the exhibition on, firstly, Hadrian's relationship with Antinous, of whom there is a fine collection of statues, and Hadrian's record in the second Jewish War; there's a collection of possessions belonging to Jewish refugees. There's also a collection of finds from Hadrian's wall.
The bookstore had some nice offers. Acquired Atlas of the Roman Empire at 50% off.
Finally, there's an advertisement on the way out for the next "big" exhibition, "Babylon", which I think comes along in October. I saw this earlier in the year in Paris, and I have to say it's not a patch on the Hadrian exhibition - too much "interpretations of Babylon over the ages" as opposed to actual stuff. The Louvre exhibition was however far more overcrowded, so the exhibition layout may also play a part.
Back to the exhibition - the star item is the head (along with a leg and foot) of a statue found last year at Saglassos, in Turkey, and never before seen in public. The original statue would apparently have been four to five metres high. There are many other busts of Hadrian (who was fond of commissioning statues) from various stages of his career, from youth onwards. One of the statues has him stepping on the back of a conquered barbarian; the statue's from Rome but was obviously a common design since pretty much the same statue was in the museum at Istanbul (and can be seen in the photos).
There are interesting collections of busts of Hadrian, Trajan and their respective families near the entrance to the exhibition, and on the way out of Hadrian's potential and actual successors (Antoninus Pius, Aelius Caesar, Servianus and some remarkable busts of Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus as children.
The press has I think focused in the run up to the exhibition on, firstly, Hadrian's relationship with Antinous, of whom there is a fine collection of statues, and Hadrian's record in the second Jewish War; there's a collection of possessions belonging to Jewish refugees. There's also a collection of finds from Hadrian's wall.
The bookstore had some nice offers. Acquired Atlas of the Roman Empire at 50% off.
Finally, there's an advertisement on the way out for the next "big" exhibition, "Babylon", which I think comes along in October. I saw this earlier in the year in Paris, and I have to say it's not a patch on the Hadrian exhibition - too much "interpretations of Babylon over the ages" as opposed to actual stuff. The Louvre exhibition was however far more overcrowded, so the exhibition layout may also play a part.
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More Istanbul pictures
Thu, Jul 10 2008 08:46
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I added some more pictures from Istanbul, this time from the monuments around the city, as opposed to the contents of the archeology museum. I'm planning to go back there in a couple of weeks but probably won't have much time for tourism. I do have some trips planned to the British Museum shortly, and am going to South West France in the summer. I'm currently trying to get a vacation trip to Cairo set up this Autumn (as in, I've bought a book, and worked out that I can afford a trip). I'll let you know how it goes.
Gallery Addition
Tue, Jun 24 2008 10:04
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Sorry, I've been a bit tardy getting this off the ground. Anyway, I've added a set of photos from my recent trip to Istanbul to the Galleries Section. I'm currently travelling again, and Slingshot 259 is nearly put to bed, so hopefully some more updates on this second blog over the next day or so.