Tutankhamun at The O2

Tutankhamun at The O2

Does the new Tutankhamun exhibition in London live up to the hype and should you brave the queues? Jane Watkins takes a closer look

Wednesday, 28 November 2007

Jane Watkins


More than 350,000 tickets have already been sold to what Dr Zahi Hawass, secretary general of Egypt's Supreme Council of Antiquties, described as the 'longest comeback tour' in history. 'Tutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharaohs' will mark the first time any of the boy king's treasures have been seen in the UK in 35 years, but what will visitors see – and possibly more importantly, will it be what they expect?

Expectations are high due to the memories of the record-breaking 1972 exhibition, when 1.6 million visitors, myself included, were astonished by the golden treasures on display. Many eminent Egyptologists have declared that that was the defining moment for them, their life's work chosen in a moment that changed them forever. It didn't make me an Egyptologist (sadly), but it made me passionate about the culture. I don't remember many of the details, but I remember being round-eyed with wonder, much as Carter must have been on seeing the contents of the tomb (he declared 'everywhere the glint of gold'). The sheer number of artefacts and their quality was staggering.

The new exhibition seeks to put the king's brief reign into context – out of 130 exhibits 80 are from the time of his predecessors. And although this is a very laudable aim, it may not be what people are expecting. Only seven of the exhibits from 1972 have returned, and there are none of the shop-stoppers. The familiar face that adorns the posters comes from a canopic jar (which held the king's liver) – the sarcophagi that we all recognise have been deemed too fragile to travel. There is a golden coffin, but it belongs to Tutankhamun's great- grandmother Tjuya – her tomb was considered the greatest discovery until the opening of Tutankhamun's tomb some 17 years later.



Tutankhamun
The familiar face that adorns the posters comes from this canopic jar


The magnificence of Tutankhamun's funereal finery means that we assume he was more important than he was. In reality, he was quite a minor king. Indeed, his importance lies in how significant his father was. Akenaten overthrew everything about Egyptian culture – the religion (he worshipped one god), the art, the capital – and the exhibition seeks to show the radical changes made by him. And it's here that the exhibition really scores. Hopefully, it will bring that period to wider public attention.

The UK version has an extra gallery which looks at the excavation of the tomb with film footage of Carter and Carnavon. The audio commentary is excellent (even if means everyone clumps around at the same time) and is delivered by Omar Sharif (such a lovely voice). It'll keep you occupied while you wait to look at the next case. Happily, the descriptive signs for each exhibit are given both by the item and on top of the case in bigger print – handy if you can't get close.

I can't say I was impressed with the shop – all the items are almost prohibitively expensive (even a postcard is 95p) and many are just trashy, which is a shame. A DVD of the exhibition isn't exactly a snip at £35, even if it is excellent. A percentage of the proceeds from the exhibition and the shop will go to fund the establishment of museums and research/conservation in Egypt, and judging by the tone of Dr Hawass's comments, we will have to pay and pay in the future too.

But will the show have the broad appeal of the 1972 exhibition or even of the First Emperor show at the British Museum? Sadly, probably not. If you're interested in the period, there is much to delight. But if you're looking for the wow factor, you'll be disappointed.

'Tutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharaohs' is at the O2 Bubble. Tickets are times between 10am and 7pm daily and cost £15 (£20 Friday to Sunday) for adults, £7.50 (310) for children and £45 (£50) for a family ticket (two adults, two children). For more details and to book, telephone 0844 844 0003 or visit http://www.visitlondon.com/tut

Comments


Date of visit: 24 July 2008. We booked months ago, when the exhibition was first announced and what a let down this was. Heavily-hyped as the treasures return for the first time in 35 years, it had no major exhibits and the Tutankhamun artefacts were in the minority.

Overpriced and overcrowded, and the shop at the end of the exhibition was a cynical experience in tacky horrible tat.

Highly disappointing


This is a con at all levels.

Shallow textual information. Not enough artefacts, some artefacts really scraped the bottom of the barrel. After all who wants to see a damaged lump of crudely carved wood, OK is over 2000 years old but big deal.

The tomb room, had only 5 artefacts in it. There is a better exhibit that conjures up the space of the Tut tomb in Dorchester. The artefacts may be replicas, but it is brilliant.

The shop is a total ripoff. DO NOT GO, try the exhibit in Dorchester or go the British Museum


March 05 20:39

Date of visit: 4th March 2008. The Death Mask and Tutankhamun's Sarcophagus were not on display. The advertising, and the name "Tutankhamun exhibition", would lead you to believe that these items would be on display. The exhibition consisted of a large collection of Egyptian artefacts, with just a few related to King Tut. Very disappointed!


February 26 14:18

We took two of our grandchildren there as a day out - what a disappointment . And (to echo other comments) the organisers should be taken for false advertising - I am sure the small print was correct but everyone expected to see the death mask and a few other high profile bits. And as for the shop - what a disgraceful RIP-OFF, even the children recognised the extortionate pricing. And the dome itself - what an embarrassment!


January 21 21:46

I went on a day trip to London with my school to see the original exhibition.Unfortunately due to lack of time on the London day trip we never saw it at all.36 years later and I can't help but feel let down yet a second time by what was actually on display.This exhibition draws the crowds on the name of King Tutankhamun but this is really only relevant in the latter part of the tour of the galleries most of which as already mentioned elsewhere are of relatives and whilst I appreciate their historical relevance it isn't what I travelled 180 miles to see. What a wasted day.


January 13 22:16

I enjoyed the exhibition although slightly disappointed with so few King Tutt items. The organisers should be taken for false advertising. I went yesterday to the British Museum and their Egypt galleries are much better and they don't rip people off. The same DVD of the O2 exhibit is for sale in the British Museum at 12:99


January 07 10:16

We visited the O2 Dome yesterday (Sat 6th Jan 2007) to see the Tutankhamun exhibition. We were somewhat disappointed.
The artifacts on display were of course very interesting and beautiful
but the famous death mask was not there or even a copy.
The exhibition was over crowded making it difficult to view the cabinets in some sections, the display sequence and timeline patchy, the audio was limited and not available for many of the exhibits. The build up to the "burial chamber" was good and then an anti-climax. This exhibition is clearly about making money and not about culture or history.

The shop was a massive RIP-OFF and spoilt the exhibition for us. My son aged 7 wanted to buy something small (a pen, a fridge magnet etc. from the shop - a plastic biro/pen was £9.50! ). We bought nothing in disgust.

In contrast we visited The First Emperor exhibition at The British Museum a few weeks ago.IT WAS SUPERB. It was well done and although small it was excellent. We left feeling very excited about China and Chinese culture. Our 7 year old was enthralled. The shop expensive but by no means a rip-off. We spent £50 and felt good about it.


December 18 15:27

Very disappointing - not much of Tutankhamun's gold on view especially considering the comment made upon the intial discovery of "gold everywhere" - this show could be called anything but. The promoter's have misled people and missed a"golden" oportunity to display more of the fabulous pieces in exhistence. I was fortunate enough to attend the 70'2 exhibition and as far as I can recall not only was the famous death mask on view but also the two giant cats and chariot, chairs etc - in other words simply breathtaking and inspiring. Also, if you have already been mislead into buying tickets - DO NOT BUY ANYTHING IN THE SHOP AS WE DID - expect to pay double - really outrageous.


I went to see this exhibition and paid £35.00 this included the coach to and from the O2. I was really thought I was going to see all of Tutankhamun items and not just 7 items. I thought after all the people that would have gone to see this would have been disapointed to only see a few items that actullay belonged to the boy king.


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