An interdisciplinary examination into the materiality, production, and decoration of ancient Egyptian stelae
This interdisciplinary project examines 19 ancient Egyptian stelae, and fragments, made from limestone, pottery and wood, in the Chau Chak Wing Museum that were produced and decorated from the Second Intermediate Period (c 1650-1550 BC) to the Ptolemaic Period (c 332–30 BC).
It brings together an environmental scientist, geologist, stone carver, conservators and an archeometallurgist who are conducting the technical analyses on the stelae, in conjunction with Egyptologists, to provide a holistic understanding of ancient Egyptian stelae.
The focus is on the type of material used, and its origins, how they were made and decorated, the types of tools and pigments used, and evidence of modifications and reuse.
Findings will be interpreted in the context of the objects' history, inscriptions and iconography, and are currently being prepared as an edited monograph titled 'Egyptian stelae in the Chau Chak Wing Museum: their history, production and usage in context.'
The New Kingdom component of this study has been generously supported by the Centre for Ancient Cultures, Heritage and the Environment (CACHE) at Macquarie University. For more about this, visit CACHE's website.
Chau Chak Wing Museum
External collaborators
Header image: Lower fragment of a former round-topped limestone funerary stele, 18th Dynasty (1479–1390 BC), Thebes, Upper Egypt, Nicholson Collection, NMR.7