See Inside ‘Divine Egypt,’ the Met’s Newest Ancient Egypt Blockbuster

With about 210 works included, “Divine Egypt” is the largest exhibition devoted to ancient Egyptian art in over a decade at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the venerable New York institution that is famous for its shows devoted to that area of art history. It’s an unusual kind of blockbuster, however, in which the smaller works steal the show away from monumental statues on loan from international institutions. (The Met itself owns around 140 of the pieces in the show.)

Curated by Diana Craig Patch, working with Brendan Hainline, the show explores how Egypt’s artisans depicted the 1,500 gods their people worshipped, focusing on roughly 25 of these deities. Across the amulets, sarcophagi, statues, and mummies surveyed, two things become obvious. One is that these gods were shapeshifters, in more sense than one, for their form changed depending on who was depicting them. Another is that the gods were just as strange then as they appear now.

Read a full review of the show here.

  • An open sarcophagus and a closed sarcophagus in a gallery with stars painted around the upper parts of its walls.
    Image Credit: Courtesy Metropolitan Museum of Art

    A section of the show features painted coffins, including some from the Met’s collection.

  • A painted relief of a woman with a feather in her crown. She is surrounded by hieroglyphics.
    Image Credit: Anna-Marie Kellen/©Metropolitan Museum of Art/Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Firenze, Florence

    Maat, the goddess depicted here, embodied the concept of maat, a combination of ideas related to righteousness and justice.

  • A blue sculpture of a bird-headed man walking with one leg forward.
    Image Credit: Anna-Marie Kellen/©Metropolitan Museum of Art

    Thoth, a divine scribe and healer, is commonly depicted with the head of an ibis. His pose, with one foot set before the other, is one that reappears throughout ancient Egyptian art.

  • A sculpture of a scarab on a raised section a gallery.
    Image Credit: Courtesy Metropolitan Museum of Art

    A giant quartz diorite sculpture of a scarab (at center) is one of the show’s stars. It symbolizes Khepris, god of the morning sun.

  • A partially eroded statue of a headless figure gripping his penis. The phallus itself has been broken off.
    Image Credit: Anna-Marie Kellen/©Metropolitan Museum of Art/Ashmolean Museum

    This fragment, which the curators say belonged to one of the earliest known monumental statues, represents Min, god of fertility. He once appeared with an erect phallus that has since been snapped off.

  • A gallery with two sculptures of seated gods on either side of a hallway.
    Image Credit: Courtesy Metropolitan Museum of Art

    “Divine Egypt” shows how various cultures translated and retranslated established iconographies in many forms.

  • A golden statue of two gods holding one arm each to a central figure with a headdress. The central figure sits on a blue column.
    Image Credit: Mathieu Rabeau/©Musée du Louvre, Dist. RMN – Grand Palais/Art Resource, NY

    The closes out on this statuette of a seated Osiris posed between Horus and Isis. Cast in dramatic lighting, it appears to gleam in an otherwise darkened gallery.

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