Archaeologists
and artists working to create perfect copy of one ancient world's greatest
wonders
The eventual aim of the five-year project is to install the facsimile on a site close to the original, near Luxor.
For
now, the two first two chambers have been reproduced and gone on display at a
museum in Basel. The Scanning Seti exhibition at the Swiss city's Antikenmuseum
contains an exact copy of the pharoah's 3,300-year-old royal sarcophagus, in
rooms adorned with intricate etchings and paintings.
It was created by Factum Foundation, a specialist art company which has previously worked on a facsimile of facsimile of Tutankhamen's tomb.
It was created by Factum Foundation, a specialist art company which has previously worked on a facsimile of facsimile of Tutankhamen's tomb.
They conducted a 3D survey of the walls of the original tomb and worked from fragments removed from Seti's burial chamber in the 19th century, now displayed in museums including the Louvre in Paris, the British Museum in London, and the Pergamon Museum in Berlin.
They
also studied watercolors created by Giovanni Belzoni, a former circus strongman
who discovered the tomb in 1817 more than 3,000 years after Seti's death.
Belzoni found the tomb in immaculate condition, but years of improperly conducted excavations, looting, and tourism have since taken their toll. Mr. Lowe said facsimiles had an important role to play in the future of tourism and conversation.
Belzoni found the tomb in immaculate condition, but years of improperly conducted excavations, looting, and tourism have since taken their toll. Mr. Lowe said facsimiles had an important role to play in the future of tourism and conversation.