Sun queen The bust is said to portray the wife of the Sun King  Akhenaten, with whom she is believed to have ruled Egypt between 1353  and 1336BC.Henri Stierlin has said the stunning work that will later  this year be the showpiece of the city's reborn Neues Museum was created  by an artist commissioned by Ludwig Borchardt, the German archaeologist  credited with digging Nefertiti out of the sands of the ancient  settlement of Amarna, 90 miles south of Cairo, in 19 In his book, Le  Buste de Nefertiti – une Imposture de l'Egyptologie?But Stierlin has  argued that while it is possible to carbon date the pigments, 
which  appear to be ancient Egyptian, it is impossible to accurately date the  bust because it is made of stone covered in plaster.A beautiful woman  and a putative scandal," he said.She is to hold court over a long  gallery in the north cupola, where she will be set on a specially  constructed pedestal.He kept it in his living room for the next 11 years  before handing it over to a Berlin museum, since when it has been one  of the city's main tourist attractions.You cannot describe it with  words.It is thought to have been uncovered in the desert by the  archaeologist Ludwig Borchardt in 19 During the years, Luftwaffe chief  Hermann Goering planned to give it back to Egypt, but Adolf said the  bust would have pride of place in a museum for Germania,
 the expanded  Berlin that was due to be the capital of his Thousand Year Reich.The  statue was famously admired by Adolf , who referred to it as "a unique  masterpiece, an ornament, a true treasure".A visitor photographs the  Nefertiti bust on display at Berlin’s Kulturforum in 20 Photograph:  Michael Kappeler/AFP/Getty Images Her elegant and chiselled features  held proud and high on a swanlike neck, she has been smiling serenely  for 3,400 years.Public and political enthusiasm about the find at the  time gave the artefact its "own dynamic" and led to Borchardt ensuring  it was kept out of the public gaze until 1924, the authors have  argued.
Berlin author and historian Edrogan Ercivan has added his weight  to the row with his book Missing Link in Archaeology, published last  week, in which he has also called Nefertiti a fake, modelled by an  artist on Borchardt's statuesque wife.The Bust of Nefertiti – an  Egyptology Fraud?In October, the bust is due to be moved back into the  Neues Museum, which has been reconstructed from its war-torn remains by  British architect David Chipperfield, and where Nefertiti was last on  display 70 years ago.You must see it.At least that has long been the  popular and scientific belief that draws half a million tourists to see  her in Berlin every year.
Other aspects of the find, which he has claimed  support his theory, are the facts that the bust has no left eye, which  the ancient Egyptians would have considered a sign of disrespect towards  their much-loved queen, and that the first scientific reports on the  discovery were not written up for 11 years.The tests uncovered a hidden  face carved into the statue's limestone core.That always sells.He wrote:  "Suddenly we had in our hands the most alive Egyptian artwork.Nefertiti  means "beautiful woman has arrived".
He said the claims could easily be dismissed because of the detailed computer tomography and material analyses that had been carried out on Nefertiti.But Dietrich Wildung, the director of Berlin's Egyptian Museum, where Nefertiti is currently housed, has fiercely dismissed the allegations as an attempt to exploit the bust's popularity.Recent radiological tests carried out on the statue by Berlin's Charite hospital supposedly proved that the bust is indeed more than 3,000 years old.Over the decades Germany has rejected repeated requests from Egypt for her return.According to a Swiss art historian,
He said the claims could easily be dismissed because of the detailed computer tomography and material analyses that had been carried out on Nefertiti.But Dietrich Wildung, the director of Berlin's Egyptian Museum, where Nefertiti is currently housed, has fiercely dismissed the allegations as an attempt to exploit the bust's popularity.Recent radiological tests carried out on the statue by Berlin's Charite hospital supposedly proved that the bust is indeed more than 3,000 years old.Over the decades Germany has rejected repeated requests from Egypt for her return.According to a Swiss art historian,
 the bust is less than 100  years old.But now doubt has been thrown on the authenticity of the  painted limestone and plaster bust of the 18th dynasty Egyptian queen  Nefertiti by two authors who claim she is a fake.Stierlin has claimed  that the bust was created to test ancient pigments.Borchardt's diary  entries remain the main written account of the find.But after it was  admired by a Prussian prince, Johann Georg, who was beguiled by  Nefertiti's beauty, Borchardt, said Stierlin, "didn't have the nerve to  make his guest look stupid" and pretended it was genuine. 
 

 
No comments:
Post a Comment