Modern technology has revealed the faces of four people embalmed 2,000 years ago.
A group of New York scientists combined CT scans and the artwork of a crime artist to create sketches of the faces of those embalmed. Then, the scientists compared the new sketches to the portraits that were stored next to the mummies. In two of the four cases, the matches were nearly exact.
The artist, who knew only the age and gender of the deceased, took seven days to produce each sketch. The sketches of the two mummies from the British Museum matched their portraits almost exactly. The other two mummies, one from the Glyptotek Museum in Copenhagen and the other from New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art, didn't fare so well in the portrait-matching department. Still, they weren't far away.
The art historians involved will be happy to have some evidence that portrait production was more about realism in the 1st Century A.D.
The relative success of the sketching suggests more uses for modern technology.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment