Temple of Dendur’s Lost Colors Brought to Life at the Met
By JOSHUA BARONE, February 1, 2016
As depicted in popular culture, ancient Egypt is awash with the color beige. A trip to the Metropolitan Museum of Art would seem to reflect that notion: The Temple of Dendur, with its weatherworn sandstone, could fit in naturally with the earth tones of “Aida” or “The Mummy.”
But
Egyptologists know that this temple, like many others of the ancient
world, was painted with vivid colors and patterns. In “Color the
Temple,” a marriage of research and projection-mapping technology,
visitors to the Met can now glimpse what the Temple of Dendur may have
looked like in its original, polychromatic form more than 2,000 years
ago.
The Met’s MediaLab
has installed a projector that fills in the temple’s carvings with
color. Through March 19, one section of the structure’s south side is on
view: a scene of the Roman emperor Augustus, dressed as a pharaoh and
making an offering to the deities Hathor and Horus. Because the sun
would wash out the projector’s light (the gallery has floor-to-ceiling
windows), the scene is illuminated on Friday and Saturday evenings, when
the Met offers extended hours.

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