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Sacred Adornment: Jewelry as Belief in Ancient Egypt


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CURRENTLY THIS EXHIBITION IS ONLY ACCESSIBLE THROUGH OUR “DISCOVER GLENCAIRN” TOUR. CLICK HERE TO PLAN YOUR VISIT. YOU ARE ALSO INVITED TO SEE OUR ONLINE EXHIBIT AT GOOGLE ARTS & CULTURE.

Saturday, February 29, 2020 ­– Sunday, November 8, 2020
Tuesday, January 19, 2021 - Sunday, October 31, 2021

Sacred Adornment: Jewelry as Belief in Ancient Egypt, a stunning new exhibition at Glencairn Museum, explores how jewelry in the Museum’s collection was used by the ancient Egyptians to adorn, to protect, and to express devotion to the divine. By examining the materials and symbols present in these ornaments, we can come away with a deeper understanding of the complex ideas that guided the artists, as well as the hopes and beliefs of those who wore this jewelry in ancient times. 

When Raymond Pitcairn purchased the ancient jewelry now in the Glencairn’s collection during the 1920s and 1930s, he intended for it to be worn by Mildred, his wife. It was later also worn by their daughters and granddaughters. Raymond designed dresses and gowns for Mildred to wear on special occasions, and it was not uncommon for elements of ancient jewelry to be incorporated into the dresses’ embellishments. One of these dresses will be on exhibit at Glencairn during the Sacred Adornment exhibition.

Dr. Jennifer Houser Wegner, guest curator of Sacred Adornment, is an associate curator in the Egyptian Section at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. Wegner has carried out fieldwork in Egypt since 1990, working at the sites of Giza, Bersheh and Abydos. She recently coauthored a book on the 13-ton red granite sphinx of Ramses II at the Penn Museum in Philadelphia, and was involved in the move of this sphinx to its new location in the entrance hall at the Penn Museum.

Read more about the exhibition in an essay by Wegner written for Glencairn Museum News.

Earlier Event: November 29
World Nativities