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Alexandria’s Mosaic: Art, Creativity, and a Message

26 October 2020

Alexandria, Egypt

Bibliotheca Alexandrina Conference Center, Multipurpose Hall

The Antiquities Museum, affiliated with the Cultural Outreach Sector, organizes a forum entitled Alexandria’s Mosaic: A Message of Art and Creativity on Monday, 26 October 2020 at 10:00 am, at the Bibliotheca Alexandrina Conference Center, Multipurpose Hall. In this forum, a group of specialized experts will deliver several research papers on this art, its development over the ages, and its restoration methods. Mosaic is the art of ornamenting architectural surfaces using various materials, installed side-by-side on a layer of plaster or smooth mortar, depicting numerous themes. It has been used to decorate large and small spaces, whether floors, walls, ceilings, domes, or fountains in gardens as well.

Due to the importance of the mosaics and the strong presence of Alexandrian workshops throughout history and their great wealth of production, Greek artists found many important paintings executed in Egypt, in the homes and palaces of rulers and the wealthy. Meanwhile, the royal court was responsible for the artifacts located in or outside Alexandria. Among the most important paintings found in Alexandria are The Dog and The Wrestlers from the excavations of the Bibliotheca Alexandrina; the Kom Dikka area paintings, such as The Birds, The Tiger, The Flower, The Geometric Shapes, and others; the Abu Qir paintings, be they three dimensional or architectural; and many other unique paintings that bear the characteristics of the Alexandrian School of Mosaics that has so impacted neighboring regions due to the importance of the ancient renowned city. The Alexandrian School executed—and its name appeared on—a number of mosaic paintings outside Egypt, such as the painting of Alexandria in the city of Jerash, and the Map painting in Madaba.

 

Forum Program

 

 

contact: Dr. Galal Refai

e-mail: galal.refai@bibalex.org

Tel.: +203 4839999

Ext.: 2337

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