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Abu Simbel, Sculptures at the Entrance of Spéos de Phré

Photographer
Maxime Du Camp, French, 1822–1894
Date
1853
Material
Salt print
Classification
Photographs
Current Location
Not on view
Dimensions
image: 8 1/2 × 6 5/8 in. (21.6 × 16.8 cm)
mount: 14 7/8 × 11 3/4 in. (37.8 × 29.9 cm)
Credit Line
Museum Shop Fund
Rights
Contact Us
Object Number
27:1995
NOTES
The setting of this image is the ancient temple complex of Abu Simbel, cut into solid rock cliffs north of the present-day Egyptian and Sudanese border. Rather than trying to take in its enormity, Maxime Du Camp directed his camera to the figure of the Egyptian sun god Amun, carved in relief directly above the main doorway. This frontal view yields a documentary clarity, and Du Camp’s assistant stood at the lower left to provide a sense of scale. The temple was in disrepair and forgotten by the 6th century, then rediscovered, largely buried under sand, in the early 19th century. Trained initially as a journalist, Du Camp kept extensive diaries of his adventures to supplement his images. He also traveled with the French writer Gustave Flaubert, and elements of their time together provided inspiration for fictional stories Flaubert published.