Afghanistan

Hidden Treasures from the National Museum, Kabul

When
Event has passed (Fri Oct 24, 2008 - Sun Jan 25, 2009)
Cost
$12
Tags
Museums, Cultural Museums, Fine Arts Museums
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Description

A traveling exhibition of extraordinary archaeological treasures from the National Museum of Afghanistan, Kabul, this exhibition will explore the rich cultural heritage of ancient Afghanistan from the Bronze Age (2500 BCE) through the rise of trade along the Silk Road in the first century CE. Strategically located on the commercial routes between China and India in the East and Europe in the West, Afghanistan was at the crossroads of civilizations in Central Asia.

Among the nearly 230 works on view will be artifacts dating back more than 4,000 years, as well as gold objects from the famed Bactrian hoard, a 2,000-year-old treasure cache discovered in 1978 but hidden from view until 2003.

The objects are from collections belonging to the National Museum of Afghanistan, Kabul. The gold objects from graves excavated at the northern site of Tillya Tepe were long thought to have been stolen or destroyed during the years of conflict in the region. In August 2003, Afghan president Hamid Karzai surprised the world when he announced these treasured gold artifacts had been located intact in the presidential palace bank vault in Kabul, more than 25 years after they had vanished from public view.

Said Tayeb Jawad, Afghanistan's ambassador to the United States, states: "Afghanistan's centrality in the Silk Road created a rich mosaic of cultures and civilizations. Although this mosaic was shattered by war and terror, both the spirit of the Afghan people and our cultural heritage survived. These priceless artifacts are a testament to the Afghan people and to the heroism of the brave and selfless Afghans who preserved and protected them.

The exhibition will travel to the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (February 22-May 17, 2009) and then to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (June 23-September 20, 2009).

Click here to visit the exhibition's special website by the National Geographic Society.

Click here to visit the exhibition's special website by the National Gallery of Art.

Schedule

Asian Art Museum
200 Larkin St
San Francisco, CA
Event has passed

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Location

  1. Asian Art Museum
    200 Larkin St, San Francisco, CA