The Road to Palmyra through March 1, 2020 at the Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek in Copenhagen

The Road to Palmyra through March 1, 2020 at the Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek in Copenhagen.
Harald Ingholt, a Danish archaeologist, was on his third campaign of excavations at Palmyra, in present-day Syria, in 1928, when his team unearthed a half-length portrait of an unknown woman made between 190 and 210 CE in a tomb dubbed Qasr Abjad. The following year Ingholt presented The Beauty of Palmyra and around a dozen other sculptures to Copenhagen’s Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek. Today, the Glyptotek’s collection of Palmyrene tomb sculptures is the largest outside Syria. For the past 18 months, Cecilie Brøns, an archaeologist and director of the Glyptotek’s Tracking Colour project, which examines the use of pigments in antiquity, has led a team reconstructing how the tomb sculpture may originally have looked. Using X-ray fluorescence, the team identified paint patches, mostly red and yellow ochre, which were well ­preserved due to the sculpture having been ­underground for nearly two millennia.
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Image: Digital Reconstruction of The Beauty of Palmyra courtesy of the Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek Museum.

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