Gallery Preview: Ancient: Egyptian

Gallery Preview: Ancient: Egyptian

Before your visit to VMFA, introduce your students to the galleries. Let them explore the space and imagine what they can find there!

Grade Level:
Adult, College, Grades 3-5, Grades 6-8, Grades 9-12
Collection:
Ancient Art
Culture/Region:
Egypt
Activity Type:
Distance Learning, Gallery Preview

Gallery Preview: Ancient: Egyptian

Take a Look Inside

VMFA’s collection of ancient Mediterranean art is one of the largest on the East Coast, spanning more than 5,000 years of human history, from Pre-Dynastic Egypt in the 4th millennium BC through the fall of the Byzantine Empire in AD 1453.

Click on the image for a virtual view of VMFA’s Ancient Egyptian Art Galleries. Here you can get an idea of the kinds of objects on display in the museum. When you come to the museum you will be visiting this gallery exploring just a few of these objects.

As you take a look around consider:

  • What kinds of objects do you see?
  • How are they displayed?
  • If you could visit in person, what might you be interested in looking at first?
  • Do any of these objects remind you of topics you are studying? How?

A Closer Look: Is This Stuff Real?

Yes! The objects displayed in these galleries are real examples of art made during Ancient Egypt’s 3,000-year history. By caring for and studying these objects in museums like VMFA, we are able to connect with people from thousands of years ago, consider how they understood the world around them, and explore how they visually shared stories and ideas with one another.

Fortunately, you don’t have to be a scholar or an art specialist to take a closer look and begin exploring. All you need is a little bit of time and some curiosity!

Why don’t you give it a try!

Look closely at this object for at least 30 seconds and answer these simple questions:

  • What do you see?
  • What do you think about that?
  • What does it make you wonder?

Share your ideas with others.

Next, click on the image to find out more about this object.

Take another look at it. What other aspects spark your curiosity? What other ideas do you have?