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More About the Works on View Hatshepsut was the principal queen of her half-brother Thutmose II, fourth king of Dynasty 18. After his untimely death, she acted as regent for her young stepson/nephew Thutmose III. Within a few years, she had assumed the position of senior co-ruler, and adopted the title of king. "Hatshepsut: From Queen to Pharaoh" examines the phenomenon of Hatshepsut as a female pharaoh and the effects of her reign on Egyptian history, culture, and the astonishingly creative artistic output of the time.The exhibition, arranged thematically, includes sculpture that represents Hatshepsut's immediate predecessors and also outstanding members of her court. Particular attention is given to statuary of the royal steward Senenmut, who oversaw Hatshepsut's estates when she was queen, tutored her daughter, Neferure, and eventually became the Great Steward of Amun, the most powerful god of the Egyptian pantheon. Of all the members of Hatshepsut's court, Senenmut was the best known and the most often represented. On view are six striking examples of his innovative statuary—including one in which he holds a cryptogram of Hatshepsut's throne name—that influenced the sculpture of later periods. The exhibition above all features statues of Hatshepsut herself, including images of her as a female ruler, as a masculine king, and as a sphinx. These link the special exhibition to the Museum's permanent collection of Egyptian art, which includes a gallery devoted to statues of Hatshepsut that were excavated by the Museum's Egyptian Expedition in the late 1920s and early 1930s and were allotted to the Museum by the Egyptian government in the division of finds. (The Metropolitan Museum's excavation team was largely responsible for the discovery, excavation, and reconstruction of the statuary that once decorated Hatshepsut's temple at Deir el-Bahri in western Thebes, and many works related to Hatshepsut entered the Museum's collection as a result of these excavations.) Numerous objects that belonged to Egyptians from the time of Hatshepsut are also on view. These include elegant stone vessels, jewelry, and furniture. Exhibition Catalogue A fully illustrated catalogue, published by the Metropolitan Museum and distributed by Yale University Press, is available in the Museum's bookshops and online in The Met Store. Educational Programs A variety of educational programs are being offered in conjunction with the exhibition, including gallery talks, films, off-site school programs, and a Sunday at the Met afternoon of lectures on May 7, 2006. For more information, please see the online calendar. Audio Guide Two Audio Guide programs for the exhibition are available—one for general visitors and another for families with children. The fees for rentals are $5 for Members of the Museum, $6 for non-Members, and $4 for children under 12.
Audio Guides are free for visitors with visual impairments and for those who are hard of hearing. They are equipped with volume control and are available with headsets or neck loops for hearing aids with T-switches. Transcripts in regular and large print are also available. The Audio Guide program is sponsored by Bloomberg. Exhibition Organizer and Venues The exhibition is organized at the Metropolitan by Catharine Roehrig, curator, Department of Egyptian Art. The exhibition was on view at the M. H. de Young Memorial Museum, San Francisco, from October 15, 2005, through February 5, 2006. After its showing at the Metropolitan, it will travel to the Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth (August 24–December 31, 2006). |
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