In 2004 Liverpool-based artist Tabitha Moses undertook a residency at Bolton Museum and Art Gallery in Greater Manchester. Responding to the small mummy of a young girl in the museum’s Egyptology collection, Moses created a series of nine carefully wrapped and bound dolls that she had previously found in charity shops. She exhibited The Dolls in the museum display cases alongside the Egyptian artefacts already in residence "for the girl to take with her to the after-life" (Moses, 2004). This museum intervention titled The Lost and The Found, is analysed as uncanny in the Jentschian sense, for dolls are anxiety provoking; they are neither dead nor alive, yet both dead and alive simultaneously. X-ray images of The Dolls, where the pins with w...
Controversy about museums ’ possession and exhibition of human remains has usually affected those id...
Art practice in art therapy is given shape by its simultaneous involvement of artist, viewer and cur...
We often do not value moments until they become memories or we do not value memories that come from ...
Small funerary statuettes shaped as mummiform figurines are among the most common ancient Egyptian ...
Small funerary statuettes shaped as mummiform figurines are among the most common ancient Egyptian a...
Mummies are objects of wonder in museums worldwide, often made popular by films and books. Fascinate...
Recent years have seen a revival of interest in material objects in the humanities generally, and in...
This study concerns the ceramic female figurines excavated by Johns Hopkins at the Precinct of Mut i...
Created from the first to third centuries CE, Roman Egyptian mummy portraits can be found in over a ...
This intervention of several ceramic artefacts into the Egyptian Galleries at the Manchester museum ...
Collecting and displaying bodies, a practice giving once living people the anomalous status of ‘obje...
Tekijän nimi on muuttunut (ennen Roope Laukkanen, vuodesta 2021 Kataja Ekholm)The author's name ha...
The author describes two case studies of Egyptian mummies exposed on the Museum with ethical implica...
Ancient Egyptian animal mummies and votive statuettes were often wrapped in linen, concealing the co...
Angela Stienne is a third year PhD student at the School of Museum Studies researching engagements w...
Controversy about museums ’ possession and exhibition of human remains has usually affected those id...
Art practice in art therapy is given shape by its simultaneous involvement of artist, viewer and cur...
We often do not value moments until they become memories or we do not value memories that come from ...
Small funerary statuettes shaped as mummiform figurines are among the most common ancient Egyptian ...
Small funerary statuettes shaped as mummiform figurines are among the most common ancient Egyptian a...
Mummies are objects of wonder in museums worldwide, often made popular by films and books. Fascinate...
Recent years have seen a revival of interest in material objects in the humanities generally, and in...
This study concerns the ceramic female figurines excavated by Johns Hopkins at the Precinct of Mut i...
Created from the first to third centuries CE, Roman Egyptian mummy portraits can be found in over a ...
This intervention of several ceramic artefacts into the Egyptian Galleries at the Manchester museum ...
Collecting and displaying bodies, a practice giving once living people the anomalous status of ‘obje...
Tekijän nimi on muuttunut (ennen Roope Laukkanen, vuodesta 2021 Kataja Ekholm)The author's name ha...
The author describes two case studies of Egyptian mummies exposed on the Museum with ethical implica...
Ancient Egyptian animal mummies and votive statuettes were often wrapped in linen, concealing the co...
Angela Stienne is a third year PhD student at the School of Museum Studies researching engagements w...
Controversy about museums ’ possession and exhibition of human remains has usually affected those id...
Art practice in art therapy is given shape by its simultaneous involvement of artist, viewer and cur...
We often do not value moments until they become memories or we do not value memories that come from ...