Bereich "Identifikation"
Signatur
TAA ii.16.16
Titel
Datum/Laufzeit
- 2004 (Anlage)
- c. 1927-1939 (Anlage)
Erschließungsstufe
Einzelstück
Umfang und Medium
1 digital image
Bereich "Kontext"
Name des Bestandsbildners
Biographische Angaben
British archaeologist and photographer. Born, Stamford 1879. Died, Asyut 1940. Began his photographic career in Florence with the art historian R. Cust. He was then engaged as a excavator at Thebes by Theodore Davis between 1910-14. Then from 1914 onwards he worked for the rest of his career as a photographer for the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. His task was to record many of the royal and private tombs at Thebes. Between 1922 and 1933 he was lent by the Metropolitan Museum to Lord Carnarvon and Howard Carter to make a photographic record during the excavation of the tomb of Tutankhamun.
Bestandsgeschichte
The acquisition of the negative was not recorded. Acquired at the same time as TAA ii.16.15 and TAA ii.16.17.
Abgebende Stelle
Bereich "Inhalt und innere Ordnung"
Eingrenzung und Inhalt
- Digital image.
- The original negative was made from a Lehnert & Landrock postcard, Cairo, probably late 1920s or 1930s.
- Postcard caption: 018 TUTANKHAMEN SERIES THE TUTELARY GODDESS SELKIT
- Original postcard features Burton photograph P1550.
- Statue of the goddess Selkis from Tutankhamun's canopic shrine (266), gilded wood, in Cairo, Egyptian Museum, JE 60686.
Bewertung, Vernichtung und Terminierung
The original negative was nitrate and deaccessioned.
Zuwächse
Ordnung und Klassifikation
Bedingungen des Zugriffs- und Benutzungsbereichs
Benutzungsbedingungen
Property of the Griffith Institute. No restrictions.
Reproduktionsbedingungen
Copyright Griffith Institute, University of Oxford.
In der Verzeichnungseinheit enthaltene Sprache
Schrift in den Unterlagen
Anmerkungen zu Sprache und Schrift
Physische Beschaffenheit und technische Anforderungen
Findmittel
Bereich Sachverwandte Unterlagen
Existenz und Aufbewahrungsort von Originalen
Not known.
Existenz und Aufbewahrungsort von Kopien
The Griffith Institute only has a low-resolution jpeg (600dpi) digital scan for this image, and it is not possible to rescan the original, now deaccessioned, negative.