Atlas of Egyptian Art

by Prisse d’Avennes
Introduction by Maarten Raven
Notes by Olaf Kaper
Hardcover| 174 pages | 159 illustrations | 30×32 cm | English
2008 | ISBN 9775864070

One of the most beautiful works on ancient Egyptian art by one of its early explorers, Prisse d’Avennes’ monumental work, first published in Paris over a ten-year period between 1868 and 1878, includes the only surviving record of many lost artifacts. 

“None of Prisse’s contemporaries had the skill or endurance to bring such an endeavor to such a brilliant end. He was far ahead of his time in his awareness of the vulnerability of the monuments and the need to protect them and to record them. His were the first reliable drawings of Egyptian architecture and ornaments and the first plans and sections of constructions newly excavated. He returned to Paris (in 1860) with a rich harvest of 300 drawings, 400 meters of squeezes, and 150 photographs.” — Maarten J. Raven, Curator of the Egyptian Department, the Rijksmuseum van Oudheden, Leiden.