Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Death Becomes You


I apologize in advance for this slightly morbid post, but there are a couple of fantastic exhibits around New York with slightly morbid subject matter:

First up, the Discovery Times Square Exhibition Tutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharaohs is on view right now. The show features artifacts from the tombs King Tut and several other 18th dynasty pharaohs. It will also feature mobs of tourists and a $27.50 entry fee, so you might want to check out:

Tutankhamun's Funeral, which is on view in the Met's Egyptian galleries until September. This show focuses largely on the objects and artifacts associated with mummification and Egyptian funeral ritual, as well as photographs and other materials from the Museum's excavation of the Valley of the Kings.

If you can't get enough Ancient Egypt, check out the Brooklyn Museum's Mummy Chamber, which includes tomb artifacts, an incredible Book of the Dead manuscript and a few actual mummies.

The Rubin Museum presents Remember that You Will Die: Death Across Cultures until early August. The exhibit showcases art works all revolving around the themes of death and the afterlife, and focuses specifically on the European Christian and Tibetan Buddhist religious traditions. The show explores the iconography of the skeleton, among other topics, and illustrates commonalities and differences between the two faiths as they approach death and dying.

The new show at the Museum of Arts and Design, Dead or Alive, features modern and contemporary art and design fashioned from organic, once-living things. Although many of the pieces are created from flora and fauna, several use decidedly creepier materials like bones and insects. (My personal favorite is Billie Grace Lynn's Mad Cow Motorcycle)


Image: Death and the Knight, Hans Holbein the Younger, 1538 (University of Kansas, Spencer Museum of Art 1994.013)

1 comment:

  1. What a great title for an exhibition 'Remember You Will Die'. Something we all tend to push into the background, but are still fascinated and drawn towards.

    ReplyDelete