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Wednesday, February 6, 2019

Reminder: ARCE-NC Lecture Feb. 10 - Visualizing the Dead: Interpretations of Funerary Shrouds from Roman Egypt

Please join us this Sunday for a presentation by Dr. Lissette Jimenez, Lecturer and Museum Studies Program Acting Director at San Francisco State University.

Glenn



 
The American Research Center in Egypt, Northern California Chapter, and the Near Eastern Studies Department, University of California, Berkeley, invite you to attend a lecture by Dr. Lissette Jimenez, Lecturer in Museum Studies, San Francisco State University





Visualizing the Dead:  Interpretations of Funerary Shrouds from Roman Egypt

Sunday, Febraury 10, 3 pm
Room 20 Barrows Hall
UC Berkeley Campus

(Near the intersection
of Bancroft Way
and Barrow Lane)




Image courtesy of Dr. Lissette Jimenez

 

About the Lecture:

Funerary shrouds, often overlooked or dissected into dichotomous parts because of their Hellenistic and Egyptian hybrid visual nature, provide unparalleled insight into religious and social facets of life and death in Roman Egypt. Moving beyond the aesthetic properties of these objects and focusing on the symbolic and magical functions of the imagery on the shrouds enables a fuller understanding of individual and collective social aspirations of the population. By placing the shrouds in their Egyptian contexts and by analyzing both the physical portrait of the dead and the surrounding iconography, one can comprehend how death was both physically and visually translated within an ancient multicultural context.
 


About the Speaker:

Lissette Jimenez is a Lecturer in Museum Studies in the School of Art at San Francisco State University and is currently the Acting Director of the Museum Studies Program. She has also served as Interim Director and Associate Curator for the Badè Museum of Biblical Archaeology at the Pacific School of Religion. Lissette holds a BA in Archaeology from Columbia University and a PhD from UC Berkeley in Near Eastern Studies with an emphasis in Egyptian Art and Archaeology. She has conducted archaeological fieldwork at El-Hibeh and Amheida in Egypt, Nemea and Aidonia in Greece, and Pompeii in Italy. Her research interests include museum and curatorial studies, gender and childhood in ancient Egypt, and ancient Egyptian art and archaeology, with an emphasis on Greco-Roman Period commemorative funerary practices and material culture. Lissette is currently researching the history and provenance of the Sutro Egyptian Collection in the Global Museum at San Francisco State University.
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Parking is available in U.C. lots after 5 p.m. on weekdays and all day on weekends for a fee. Ticket dispensing machines accept either $5 bills or $1 bills, and debit or credit cards. The Underhill lot can be entered from Channing way off College Avenue. Parking is also available in lots along Bancroft, and on the circle drive in front of the Valley Life Sciences building.

A map of the campus is available online at http://www.berkeley.edu/map/
For more information about Egyptology events, go to http://www.facebook.com/NorthernCaliforniaARCE or https://www.arce-nc.org.

--   Sent from my Linux system.

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