Minerva - January/February 2016
English | 68 pages | True PDF | 10.5 MB
English | 68 pages | True PDF | 10.5 MB
The new Phidias
As well as his own magnificent work, the recently refurbished Musée Rodin is displaying a fine collection of Classical antiquities amassed by the great French sculptor. Caroline Bugler
Egypt in Italy
With excellent Egyptological museums in Turin and Florence, now it is Bologna’s turn to put on a show – with some help from the National Museum of Antiquities in Leiden. Dalu Jones
The riddle of the sphinx
It weighed 13 tons and travelled nearly 6000 miles from Memphis to Philadelphia, but only now has the full story of the Penn Museum’s sphinx been told. Dr Jennifer Houser Wegner
Faith after the pharaohs
From the paganism of Egypt, Greece and Rome to Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, an exhibition at the British Museum reveals the many faiths that once co-existed peacefully by the Nile. Lucia Marchini
In love with life in ancient Egypt
Writer and broadcaster Professor Joann Fletcher tells us about her passion for the land of the pharaohs and her fascination with its people – from every level of society. Diana Bentley
Remembrance of things past
Although the antiquarian and collector Sir John Soane had a penchant for antiquities, he also had his eyes firmly fixed on the future – as an exhibition on the architecture of legacy shows. Lucia Marchini
On the rocks
New Mexico has an abundance of petroglyphs scattered across hundreds of miles of wild country, but the location of many of the sites have to be kept secret to ensure they are not vandalised. Carol P Chamberland