[número]
Título : |
11 - November 2022 - Tut's Treasures : 100 years later |
Tipo de documento: |
texto impreso |
Fecha de publicación: |
2022 |
Número de páginas: |
136 p. |
Il.: |
fot. col. |
Dimensiones: |
17,5 x 25 |
Idioma : |
Inglés (eng) Idioma original : Inglés (eng) |
Materias: |
[Temas] Arquitectura:Historia [Temas] Egipto - Historia [Temas] Egipto - Historia - Hasta 332 aC [Temas] Fotografía [Temas] Historia de Egipto - Mundo antiguo
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Clasificación: |
(05) Revistas |
Resumen: |
How an obscure statue became our face of King Tut’s 100-year anniversary
Photographer Sandro Vannini used his decades-long knowledge of Tut’s antiquities to stitch together a stunning image of a guardian statue from 48 perfectly lit pictures.
The golden mask of ancient Egyptian pharaoh Tutankhamun, affectionately known as Tut, the boy king, is world famous. But other artifacts found in his tomb in November 1922 are more obscure, including two statues that stood guard outside his burial chamber. They depict Tut as Osiris, god of the underworld, their skin painted black as a symbol of death.
Sandro Vannini, an acclaimed Italian photographer who has devoted nearly three decades to documenting Egyptian artifacts, was delighted to capture one of the two life-size black-and-gold statues for National Geographic’s November cover. The issue commemorates the hundredth anniversary of the discovery of King Tut’s tomb—the treasures of which will soon be on display at the new Grand Egyptian Museum, or the GEM, in Cairo.
We spoke to Vannini about what it means to photograph delicate, beloved artifacts for such a momentous occasion—and for his first National Geographic cover, no less. |
Nota de contenido: |
TUT ANKH AMUN : THE BOY KING
WHAT'S INSIDE THE ISSUE
• How was King Tut’s tomb discovered 100 years ago? Grit and luck
• See the enduring power of King Tut as never before
• King Tut’s mummy hid many treasures. This graphic unwraps them
• Discover King Tut’s 5,000 treasures, by the numbers
• Egypt’s new billion-dollar museum is fit for a pharaoh
• Egypt’s audacious plan to build a new capital in the desert
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En línea: |
http://www.nationalgeographic.com/magazine/issue/november-2022 |
Link: |
https://biblioteca-colegio-estudio.com/gestion/opac_css/index.php?lvl=bulletin_d |
[número]
11 - November 2022 - Tut's Treasures : 100 years later [texto impreso] . - 2022 . - 136 p. : fot. col. ; 17,5 x 25. Idioma : Inglés ( eng) Idioma original : Inglés ( eng)
Materias: |
[Temas] Arquitectura:Historia [Temas] Egipto - Historia [Temas] Egipto - Historia - Hasta 332 aC [Temas] Fotografía [Temas] Historia de Egipto - Mundo antiguo
|
Clasificación: |
(05) Revistas |
Resumen: |
How an obscure statue became our face of King Tut’s 100-year anniversary
Photographer Sandro Vannini used his decades-long knowledge of Tut’s antiquities to stitch together a stunning image of a guardian statue from 48 perfectly lit pictures.
The golden mask of ancient Egyptian pharaoh Tutankhamun, affectionately known as Tut, the boy king, is world famous. But other artifacts found in his tomb in November 1922 are more obscure, including two statues that stood guard outside his burial chamber. They depict Tut as Osiris, god of the underworld, their skin painted black as a symbol of death.
Sandro Vannini, an acclaimed Italian photographer who has devoted nearly three decades to documenting Egyptian artifacts, was delighted to capture one of the two life-size black-and-gold statues for National Geographic’s November cover. The issue commemorates the hundredth anniversary of the discovery of King Tut’s tomb—the treasures of which will soon be on display at the new Grand Egyptian Museum, or the GEM, in Cairo.
We spoke to Vannini about what it means to photograph delicate, beloved artifacts for such a momentous occasion—and for his first National Geographic cover, no less. |
Nota de contenido: |
TUT ANKH AMUN : THE BOY KING
WHAT'S INSIDE THE ISSUE
• How was King Tut’s tomb discovered 100 years ago? Grit and luck
• See the enduring power of King Tut as never before
• King Tut’s mummy hid many treasures. This graphic unwraps them
• Discover King Tut’s 5,000 treasures, by the numbers
• Egypt’s new billion-dollar museum is fit for a pharaoh
• Egypt’s audacious plan to build a new capital in the desert
|
En línea: |
http://www.nationalgeographic.com/magazine/issue/november-2022 |
Link: |
https://biblioteca-colegio-estudio.com/gestion/opac_css/index.php?lvl=bulletin_d |
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