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Chau Chak Wing Museum

The Egyptian Galleries

Where
Chau Chak Wing Museum
Chau Chak Wing Museum
University Place, University of Sydney, Camperdown NSW 2006
When

Mondays to Wednesdays and Fridays, 10am to 5pm Thursdays, 10am to 9pm Weekends, 12pm to 4pm Tuesday 8 August 2023 to Tuesday 31 December

Cost

Free

In the 19th century, an obsession with ancient Egypt began to spread throughout the world. Discover why scientists, scholars and tourists continue to be drawn to this enigmatic culture.

Two new exhibitions take you on a journey through the modern history of Egyptomania and archaeological discovery, to the cutting-edge science revealing the lives and afterlives of four unique individuals from the land of the pharaohs.

The Mummy Room

Ancient Egyptians believed in life after death, but only if their body was preserved in a life-like form. Mummification was a practical response to this spiritual problem.

The Mummy Room contains the coffins and mummies of four people who lived in Egypt between 1200 BC and 100 AD. Their names are Meruah, Padiashaikhet, Horus and Mer-Neith-it-es and they have much to tell us. CT technology has allowed us to respectfully learn about their daily lives, including nutrition, health and disease.

Egyptians often wrote appeals to the living on the walls of their tombs, imploring visitors to speak their name and make offerings on their behalf. These acts of continued remembrance sustained the dead in the afterlife.

By studying the coffins and mummies of Meruah, Padiashaikhet, Horus and Mer-Neith-it-es, we speak their names again.

Pharaonic Obsessions: Ancient Egypt, an Australian story

Ancient Egypt and modern Australia are worlds apart, but we have been influenced by the land of the Pharaohs in many ways. In the 19th century, a wave of Egyptomania spread throughout the western world, spurring a generation of scientists, scholars and tourists to dig deeper into this enigmatic culture.

Each new discovery tantalised the public. Australians, deployed through Egypt during the World Wars or migrating via the Suez Canal, found themselves uniquely placed to explore the sites and wonders.

Since then, the style and secrets of ancient Egypt have reverberated through many aspects of our culture, from art to architecture and film. This exhibition examines Australia’s continuing fascination with the land of the Pharaohs, through the enigmatic artefacts collected by Australians and the archaeological sites that ignited our imagination.

Other events at Chau Chak Wing Museum

Consuelo Cavaniglia: seeing through you

Consuelo Cavaniglia: seeing through you

Consuelo Cavaniglia develops a contemporary art project to engage with the Chau Chak Wing Museum’s collections.
Today 10am to 5pm
Instrumental: Collections from Science

Instrumental: Collections from Science

This is the 4th display in our ongoing series showcasing a range of tools used by physiologists and university students.
Today 10am to 5pm
Kerameikos the potters' quarter

Kerameikos the potters' quarter

This exhibition offers new ways of understanding Australia's oldest collections, pushing the boundaries of ceramics.
Today 10am to 5pm
Micro:Macro – models of insight and inspiration

Micro:Macro – models of insight and inspiration

Micro:Macro explores the role of models in understanding and exploring our world.
Today 10am to 5pm
Student Life: Max Dupain at the University of Sydney

Student Life: Max Dupain at the University of Sydney

This exhibition introduces Dupain’s modernist approach to photography in a series of candid shots.
Today 10am to 5pm
The trace is not a presence ...

The trace is not a presence ...

5 Australian artists from Chinese diasporic communities embrace their histories to celebrate the process of becoming.
Today 10am to 5pm
Union Made: Art from the University of Sydney Union 

Union Made: Art from the University of Sydney Union 

This dazzling exhibition showcases rare European works, contemporary Indigenous art and Australian modernism.
Today 10am to 5pm