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Cleopatra show unveils new treasures
Published in The Egyptian Gazette on 05 - 06 - 2010

PHILADELPHIA - Was Cleopatra a conniving temptress who seduced her way to the top, or the target of recorded history's most effective negative political campaign?
A splashy exhibit making its world premiere yesterday at The Franklin Institute
makes a case for the latter, using recently discovered artefacts to illustrate two
archaeologists' search for the truth ��" and the tomb ��" of one of antiquity's most
maligned figures.
"Cleopatra: The Search for the Last Queen of Egypt”, features many never-before
seen artefacts from a pair of ongoing Egyptian archaeological expeditions. It remains
in Philadelphia until January, when it begins a tour of five not-yet-announced
American cities.
The show employs theatrical lighting and sound, 17 video screens documenting archaeologists uncovering some of the 150 artefacts on display, and a fourminute video providing an overview of Cleopatra's life and loves in a style that looks and sounds like a trailer for a slick action movie.
"We're using ancient objects to tell a modern-day story about the search for Cleopatra," said John Norman of Arts and Exhibitions International, the company that organised the show.
The first of the exhibit's two sections showcases the discoveries of French underwater archaeologist Franck Goddio, whose 20-year Egyptian expedition so far has uncovered Cleopatra's palace, two ancient cities near the coast of the ancient city of Alexandria, and 20,000 artefacts and counting.
"These are the most important, the most beautiful of what we found," Goddio said.
The artefacts range from tiny gold coins to a pair of towering eight-tonne granite figures. All were raised by Goddio's team from submerged ruins near the coast of ancient Alexandria, where Cleopatra was born in 69 BC and where 39 years later, the legend claims, she chose a suicidal bite from an asp over capture by the conquering Romans.
Visitors will see, through a glass walkway under their feet, artefacts long hidden under the harbour's sediment after earthquakes and tsunamis submerged ancient Alexandria more than 1,500 years ago.
"We have found less than one per cent of what is there," Goddio said.
"I need three or four centuries to complete the entire excavation. I'm trying to stay in shape."
In the second portion are neverbefore- seen finds of Zahi Hawass, the Secretary-General of the Supreme Council of Antiquities in Cairo. Hawass, whom visitors may recognise from his appearances on archaeological documentaries, describes in a brief video his quest for the lost tomb of Cleopatra and her lover, the Roman general Mark Antony.
Hawass believes an artefact trail of sculpture, jewellery, mummies and subterranean shafts is leading his team tantalisingly close to the resting place of the ill-fated couple.
"As each new treasure is discovered, it could be the one that holds the answers to the mysteries surrounding her life," Norman said.
Beyond the historic items, the show examines the mystery and enduring legend of the iconic queen, who remains a figure of fascination thousands of years after her reign.
Cleopatra is an enigma in part because the conquering Roman general Octavian ��" later known as the emperor Augustus ��" ordered all images of her destroyed, so little evidence exists of what she looked like. Roman writers also posthumously painted her as nothing more than a coldhearted seductress of Julius Caesar and Mark Antony.
"What we do know is that she was extremely intelligent and very devoted to her country and her children," said David Silverman, an Egyptologist and curator at the University of Pennsylvania, Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology.
Attitudes towards women at different periods in history also changed how her story was told, and wildly contradictory portrayals of her in literature and art over the centuries have further clouded our view of her.
The artefacts in the exhibition provide a peek into her times and the ongoing search for the real Cleopatra.
"We know about Cleopatra through pop culture, we know her as Elizabeth Taylor," said exhibition designer Mark Lach, "but one of the reasons this is so special is that now, here, you're seeing her world”.


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