Exhibition / 25 Aug 2022 - 23 Oct 2022
On the evening of 4 August 2020, a massive
stockpile of ammonium nitrate exploded at the port of Beirut.
The blast killed at least 218 people, injured 7,000 and displaced 300,000 as well as causing $15bn of damage. The immediate and lasting effects have been deeply traumatic, not just for Beirut's citizens but for all Lebanese people.
Just over 3km from the epicentre, at the
Archaeological Museum at the American University of Beirut(Opens in new window)
(AUB), a case displaying 74 glass vessels was destroyed, the shards of ancient
glass mixing with those from the case and surrounding windows, seemingly inextricable.
The story of the restoration of eight of these vessels is a powerful expression
of the grief, solidarity and recovery of the people of Lebanon. A collaboration
between the AUB and the British Museum, the journey of these shattered vessels
has seen them transported to the Museum’s world-class conservation centre and,
piece by piece, put together again.
Staff from the Archaeological Museum have
worked with British Museum conservators for three months and the eight vessels,
which are mainly Roman with a few Byzantine and Islamic examples, are now whole
again. The conservation process saw the fragments carefully and laboriously
sorted and the individual vessels sensitively and painstakingly reconstructed.
The team purposefully made the joins between the shards visible and, though
some of the missing areas were filled to support the surrounding fragments,
others were left unfilled. These visible scars and missing fragments bear
witness to the explosion and the determination of the people of Lebanon to recover.
Ranging from the first to the ninth century,
the bowls, flask, beaker, jug and cup in this display collectively speak of the
rich cultural heritage of the wider region – and they now tell new stories
through the scars they bear.
After being on display at the British Museum, the vessels will
return home to Beirut.
https://www.britishmuseum.org/exhibitions/shattered-glass-beirut
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