Collection:
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ADJUNCT MODULE B: ITALIAN ART
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Preferred Title:
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Io Arriving at Canopus in Egypt
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Alternate Title:
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Io Received by Isis at Canopus
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Image View:
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Detail, the goddess Isis sits with her feet on a Nile crocodile, the small child Harpocrates sits next to her, a small silver situla and snake at his feet
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Creator:
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unknown (Roman (ancient) painter)
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Location:
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repository: Museo Archeologico Nazionale (Naples, Campania, Italy)
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Location Note:
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1380 Sherbrooke Street West (exhibition location)
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GPS:
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+45.4987-73.5801
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Date:
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ca. 62-79 CE (creation)
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Cultural Context:
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Roman (ancient)
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Style Period:
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Fourth Style; Greco-Roman; Imperial (Roman)
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Work Type 1:
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fresco (painting)
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Classification:
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Paintings
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Material:
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pigment on plaster
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Technique:
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fresco painting (technique)
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Subjects:
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deities; mythology (Classical); Isis cult
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Description:
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Part of the 2015 "Pompeii" exhibit which featured over 220 archaeological artifacts, most from the Naples National Archaeological Museum. The exhibit was designed to immerse viewers in settings of every day life in Pompeii, complete with state-of-the-art visual effects and soundscapes. The fresco, a rather rare subject, is present in Pompeii only in one other specimen from the Temple of Isis; this is from the House of the Duke of Aumale (VI.7.21). It is certainly derived from a Hellenistic prototype; probably of Alexandrian manufacture and dating to the third century BCE. The theme was inspired by the Ptolomeic dynasty’s need to legitimize its power through images which in some way showed, through myths such as this one, the common origins of the Egyptians and the Macedonians. (Source: Naples National Archaeological Museum [website]; http://cir.campania.beniculturali.it/museoarcheologiconazionale)
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Collection:
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Adjunct Module B: Italian Art
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Identifier:
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7A3-R-PEX-FLC-A04
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Rights:
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© Scott Gilchrist, Archivision, Inc.
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