Photographer’s Note
Roman gods (Jupiter & Mars)
Statues from the Capitol of Dougga in the Bardo Museum.
Dougga or Thugga (Arabic: دقة) is a Roman ruin in northern Tunisia located on a 65 hectare site. UNESCO qualified Dougga as a World Heritage Site in 1997. The site, which lies in the middle of the countryside, has been protected from the encroachment of modern urbanisation, in contrast, for example, to Carthage, which has been pillaged and rebuilt on numerous occasions.
Bardo Museum
This is the oldest and the most important of Tunisian museums. Over a century ago, it was established in the premises of a Beylical palace, for the most part built in the mid XIXth century, and which has retained all the features of a princely residence. It underwent several refurbishments to adapt to the expanding collections and to the ever-increasing flows of visitors, but today it is undergoing a huge restructuring plan to improve its visibility and legibility.
Thousands of objects originating from excavations carried out all over the country during the XIXth and XXth centuries are on display. These are divided into departments between fifty or so rooms and galleries, illustrating the various stages of Tunisia’s history, from prehistory to the middle of the last century, which in chronological order are prehistory, the Punic-Libyic period, the Roman and early Christian periods, with the Vandal and Byzantine eras, and finally, the Islamic period running to contemporary times.
Thanks to its collection of mosaics, the Bardo museum has gained an international reputation for the richest, the most varied and the most refined collection. Amongst the finest pieces it holds are the representation of Virgil surrounded by muses, or the pavement of Dionysos giving Ikarios the gift of the vine, or another celebrating the triumph of Neptune, to mention only a few of the key exhibits. But these are not the museum’s only assets.
Amongst the Bardo’s major exhibits is the “hermaion”, an altar dating to the Mousterian period (-40 000 years ) considered as one of the very earliest forms of human spiritual expression: a conical shaped pile 75cm high and 1.50 m wide , composed of more than 4000 pieces of flint, bones and limestone balls.
From the Punic period there is a superb solid gold armour belonging to a Campanian warrior, jewellery, the stele of a priest carrying a child for sacrifice as well as many refined funerary furnishings originating from various Mediterranean countries belonging to the Museum’s Greek and Egyptian collection.
The Greek collection was providentially enriched by underwater excavations carried out during the 40’s off the town of Mahdia, in the wreak of a ship that sank during a storm around the first century and that was carrying furniture and architectural elements for a Hellenistic era patrician dwelling. Amongst the masterpieces retrieved from the seabed is a superb 1,20m high bronze Agon.
The Roman period has provided the Bardo with most of its collections: mosaics, of course, but also statues, pottery, jewellery, coins, religious objects, utilitarian objects etc.
The Islamic department, housed in an Arab-Islamic setting, encloses objects from various periods, manuscripts, jewellery, carved stone and wood, utilitarian objects. Two small rooms, around an elegant patio, enclose objects that once belonged to the reigning family and a third room contains Jewish religious objects. (Source: planetware & tunisguide & wikipedia)
Critiques | Translate
JanD
(14953) 2009-10-24 1:25
Howdy Budapestman!
Wonderful heads, amazings sculptures, very nice background. Superb light and colors. Ideal sharp. Very interesting note.
Regards.
ChrisJ
(70357) 2009-10-24 1:34
Hi George
Superb shadow & textural detail with a wonderful diffused light. Nice overlapping of the 2 ancient sculptures. Perhaps a slight boost in contrast? I'd also 'fill' the top left corner, with red. Excellent dof & framing. Tfs!
bakes888
(18257) 2009-10-24 1:58
Hi George.
Nice capture, well composed with the two statues in profile. Excellent handling of light and colours. Nice work and thanks for sharing.
Have a good weekend, Paul.
vasilpro
(9058) 2009-10-24 2:58
Hello George,
Very nice shot with a very well chosen POV, very good focus and contrast with the background.
I wish you a nice week end, Vasilis.
snunney
(35118) 2009-10-24 3:05
Hello George,
A good close-up on these age old works of art. The red backdrop helps showcase the golden toned heads to best advantage. Good clarity, to bring out the detail to full effect.
Royaldevon
(5938) 2009-10-24 3:08
Hello George,
It's not easy to photograph inside museums! Did you have trouble trying to use your tripod? I was banned from using my monopod in museums Trier!
You have captured the fine details of the sculpture and the textures very precisely.
I like how you have overlapped the two faces adding perspective and depth. The plain red, b/g is both colourful and unobtrusive.
Have a good w/e, my friend,
Bev :-)
ymrk
(8929) 2009-10-24 8:30
The only color of the background is runnig up to photo interest.You had looked a succesful ubiety.Have a nice week end George.
Yağmur
jlbrthnn
(38433) 2009-10-24 12:52
Hello George,
Superb pathetic image of these Gods reduced to the row of memories. The composition is skilfully built. Excellent realization. Cheer.
Have a good evening
Cordially
Joël
francio64
(11378) 2009-10-24 13:25
Ciao George,
bellissimo close up su queste due sculture il cui colore giallo sabbia, contrasta perfettamente con il rosso del muro che fa anche da ottimo sfondo.
Complimenti!
Francesco
jurek1951
(26020) 2009-10-24 23:30
Hi George,
Well captured.
Great POV. Sharpness is
superb. Lovely colours.
regards.
Georg
Photo Information
-
Copyright: George Rumpler (Budapestman)
(42382) - Genre: Lieux
- Medium: Couleur
- Date Taken: 2009-07-09
- Categories: Oeuvres d'art
- Camera: Pentax K10D
- Exposition: f/6.7, 1/125 secondes
- More Photo Info: view
- Versions: version originale
- Thème(s): Discovery of Tunis [view contributor(s)]
- Date Submitted: 2009-10-24 1:23








