‘On Top of the Pyramid: The Civilization of Ancient Egypt’ exhibition at Shanghai National Museum
The highly anticipated exhibition “On
Top of the Pyramid: The Civilization of Ancient Egypt” is now open at the
Shanghai National Museum in China, drawing an unprecedented number of visitors.
The exhibition, inaugurated by Mohamed
Ismail Khaled, Secretary-General of the Supreme Council of Antiquities, has
already sold out tickets for its first day, attracting 12,000 visitors and
selling a total of 250,000 tickets to date.
Attendees of the grand opening were
Zhao Jiaming, member of the Standing Committee and head of the Publicity
Department of the Communist Party of China's Shanghai Municipal Committee; Liu
Duo, Vice Mayor of the Shanghai Municipal Government; Ambassador Assem Hanafi,
Egypt's ambassador to China; Ambassador Mohamed Raslan, Consul General in
Shanghai, along with Luo Wenli, Deputy Head of the National Cultural Heritage
Administration, and several representatives from cultural institutions in China
and abroad.
“Despite not being the first of its
kind in the country, this exhibition is the largest since 2003 and is expected
to greatly enhance the promotion of Egyptian tourism, particularly cultural
tourism, in the Chinese market, which is a key target for Egypt,” Khaled said
highlighting the significant public interest the exhibition has aroused in
China.
Featuring 787 meticulously selected
artefacts from various esteemed Egyptian museums, the exhibition showcases the
grandeur of ancient Egyptian civilization from its early days during the Naqada
period and the Early Dynastic Period up to the New Kingdom. The artefacts
illustrate the ancient Egyptians' concepts of kingship, daily life, adornment
and jewellery, writing, religious beliefs, and the afterlife.
Highlights include statues of renowned
pharaohs, such as Ramses II, Akhenaten, Tutankhamun, Amenemhat III, and
Meneptah, and statues of Egyptian deities, like Osiris, Isis, Bastet, Hathor,
the Apis bull, and Thoth. The exhibition also features a collection of gold
bracelets encrusted with stones, royal crowns, cartouches, and items
representing the ancient Egyptians' concept of the afterlife, including colored
wooden coffins and canopic jars.
To further enrich the exhibition, the
Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities has included artefacts discovered by the
Egyptian mission in the Saqqara archaeological area, Egypt's oldest and largest
necropolis. These include several colored coffins, mummified animal remains, a
faience ushabti statue, and a collection of Old Kingdom statues made of colored
limestone.
The exhibition is organized into three
main halls: "The Land of Pharaohs," "Secrets of Saqqara,"
and "The Era of Tutankhamun." It will remain open until August 2025.
Source: State Information
Service