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- AN INTRODUCTION TO THE COPTIC ART OF EGYPT
-
- By: Azer Bestavros
-
-
-
- Introduction
- ------------
- Coptic art, the distinctive Christian art of Egypt, includes works of a
- diverse character because there was no separation between ``art'' and
- ``craft'' in the early Christian era; the capital of a column or an
- illustrated manuscript were as much forms of creative expression as paintings
- and sculpture. From burial grounds, there are objects like funerary stelae,
- or tombstones, cartonnage sarcophagi and fragments of woven textiles from
- clothing in which the deceased were laid to rest. Monastic centers, churches
- and shrines provide stone and wood-carvings, metalwork, wall and
- panel-paintings, as well as a wealth of utilitarian objects like ivory combs,
- wooden seals for impressing sacred bread, pottery and glassware.
-
-
- Early sources of influence
- --------------------------
- The Coptic art -- like any other form of artistic expression -- was
- influenced by two main sources: the classical (Hellenic) world and the
- ancient Egyptian world. Objects made in Greek style, or under the direct
- influence of classical art, include stone carvings of winged victories or
- cupids bearing garlands, the vine branches of Bacchus, Aphrodite, Leda, and
- Hercules. Monuments of mixed Greek-Egyptian character are relief slabs that
- were probably used as wall decorations in churches; they frequently feature
- pilasters surmounted by stylized Corinthian capitals, sphinxes or fish -- the
- earliest symbol of Christianity. Ancient Egyptian influence is best seen in
- funerary stelae, which have survived in large number throughout Egypt. They
- are either square or rectangular in shape and are sometimes curved at the
- top, or have a triangular pediment. Many have a tiny square cavity, which
- penetrated to the back of the stele. Such cavities were common in Ancient
- Egyptian cemeteries (incense was burned in them in the belief that the spirit
- of the dead would enjoy its perfume). In the early Christian era stelae came
- from pagan and Christian burial grounds, and were usually inscribed with the
- name of the deceased, details of his/her life or titles, and the day of
- his/her death, written in the Greek language or the Coptic language (the last
- stage of the Egyptian language). The carvings on them included Greek-Egyptian
- motifs: a figure, often robed like an aristocratic Greek reclining on a bed
- and holding a drinking vessel or grapes, for example, might be flanked by the
- jackal-god Anubis and the hawk-heated Horus.
-
- The persistence of ancient Egyptian symbolism in early Christian art is
- pretty much accepted among biblical historians. It is both easy and natural
- to recognize evidence of that influence in early Christian art. For example,
- it is accepted that the ansate cross, the ``ankh'' or Hieroglyphic sign for
- the word ``life'', was intentionally adopted by early Christians. In fact,
- many relief slabs show both the ``ankh'' and the Christian ``cross''
- together, frequently flanked by the first and last letters of the Greek
- alphabet, the Alpha (A) and the Omega (W), in an early form of what was to
- become the monogram of Jesus Christ the Lord for, in Revelation 1:8, He said:
- ``I am the Alpha and the Omega, the Beginning and the End.'' Other examples
- of Egyptian symbolism in early Christian art are the Holy Spirit in the early
- church shown descending in the form of a winged bird, like the soul of the
- deceased, the "ba", in ancient Egypt; the archangel Michael weighing souls in
- the balance, which is akin to the ancient Egyptian god of wisdom, Thoth,
- weighing the heart of the deceased in the scales of justice; the portrayal of
- Christ triumphant over noxious beasts is evidently derived from that of Horus
- upon the crocodiles, as shown on the famous Metternich stele. And Saint
- George and the dragon also call to mind the god Horus depicted spearing Set,
- often portrayed as an evil serpent.
-
- In addition to the classical, Egyptian and Greek-Egyptian heritages in Coptic
- art, there are also Persian, Byzantine and Syrian influences. Egyptian
- master weavers and artists were attracted to Persia in the third century with
- the rise of the Sassanian kingdom before the founding of Constantinople. When
- they returned to Egypt, a new Persian repertory of themes like opposing
- horsemen or two facing peacocks drinking out of the same vessel, was
- introduced to Egypt. Borrowing from one culture to another is a natural
- process of cultural growth. In the fourth century, when Christianity made a
- triumphal entry into the Roman world the art forms of ascendant Byzantium
- spread to Egypt, and continued even after the Coptic Church broke away from
- the Eastern Roman Church because Egypt remained, politically, a part of the
- Roman Empire. The Copts, however, began to turn increasingly towards the Holy
- Land, the birthplace of the Lord Jesus Christ; Syrian influence on Coptic art
- became apparent in the fifth century. And, rigidity came with it. Some motifs
- that made their way to Egypt from Syria were ultimately of Persian origin,
- including animals and birds in roundels, and griffins.
-
- The integration of contrasting configurations -- classical, Egyptian,
- Greek-Egyptian and Persian pagan motifs, as well as Byzantine and Syrian
- Christian influence -- led to a trend in Coptic art that is difficult to
- define, because a unity of style is not possible to trace. Unfortunately,
- early collections of Christian art were made without recording details of the
- sites from which they came, making it virtually impossible to trace artistic
- development through time. There is no way to tell, for example, how long
- classical and Greek-Egyptian motifs continued after the adoption of
- Christianity as the state religion of the Roman Empire. All that can be said
- is that Coptic art is a distinctive art, and that it differed from that of
- Antioch, Constantinople and Rome.
-
-
- Evolution of Coptic Art
- -----------------------
- Efforts have been made to classify Coptic art into epochs but this is
- somewhat artificial. While every culture has phases of cultural production,
- this is visible only when seen from an historical vantage. E.R. Dodds in his
- book (Pagan and Christian in an Age of Anxiety) comments on this by saying:
- ``The practice of chopping history into convenient lengths and calling them
- "periods" or "ages" has [...] drawbacks. Strictly speaking, there are no
- periods in history, only in historians' analyses; actual history is a
- smoothly flowing continuum, a day following a day''.
-
- This is true of art in general and Coptic art in particular. Day by day,
- through the centuries of Ptolemaic rule, while the Greek culture became
- inextricable from the ancient Egyptian, a national heritage still remained.
- This apparent contradiction is best exemplified by referring to the
- literature of the Late Period, in which such syncretistic compilations as the
- Hermetic texts developed alongside a more or less consistent pattern of
- thought and behavior, as exemplified in the Instruction literature. In art,
- the diverse influences resulted in an admixture of motifs. Yet, despite this,
- distinctive ``Egyptian'' traits set Coptic art apart from any other.
-
- The influence of the different powers on the development of Coptic art can be
- clearly seen by examining the famous monasteries of Wadi ElNatroun. During
- the fourth and fifth centuries, these monasteries were affected by factional
- disputes between the Melkites and Coptic monks. The Melkites remained in
- control until the Arab conquest when the Copts took over the area again.
- Then, in the eighth century one of the monasteries was purchased and restored
- by a Syrian. There were serious Bedouin raids from the eighth to the eleventh
- centuries. An essential part of any Monastery is a large stone ``fortress'',
- where monks would hide in the event of a Bedouin raid. While ``portable''
- precious artwork was easy to hide in these fortresses, a great deal of damage
- was done to the ancient churches and buildings of the Monasteries. In these
- raids, the Bedouins would rob the monsateries of treasures and staples, often
- killing any monks who would not have made it to the fortresses, and sometime
- burning most of the churches and buildings, along with whatever artwork,
- books, and records in there.
-
- The Coptic monasteries in Wadi ElNatroun were restored in Fatimid times,
- during the eleventh and twelfth centuries, and the Fatimids themselves used
- local craftsmen, who were mostly Copts, for enlarging and embellishing the
- city of Cairo; when Copts executed designs and motifs that were acceptable to
- their Arab patrons, they did this as competently as they had, in classical
- times, produced classical themes for their Greek patrons. In each case they
- adopted some of the motifs or designs for their own use. therefore, when one
- visits the monasteries of Wadi ElNatrun, it must be borne in mind that some
- wall-paintings were produced under the instructions of Melkites monks, others
- under the instructions of Coptic monks. Also, Alexandrine, Byzantine and
- Syrian-inspired art were produced there, as well as non-figurative metalwork,
- wooden sanctuary screens, cabinets and furniture, inspired by Persian art.
-
- Craftsmanship
- -------------
- In studying the objects in the Coptic Museum of Cairo and in various Coptic
- Museums all over the world, as well as in the various monastic centers, it
- becomes clear that some sophisticated work must have been produced by highly
- talented craftsmen. At the same time, though, other work is characterized by
- folk simplicity. This can be seen in ivory work, tapestries, paintings and
- architectural decorations. There is a convincing explanation for this
- discrepancy in sophistication.
-
- Egypt had a long tradition of master craftsmen of different trades who,
- throughout ancient history, worked under the direction of a supervisor who
- was a highly professional man: sometimes a High Priest (as in the Old
- Kingdom) or an Overseer of All the Works of the King (New Kingdom). The
- supervisor could recognize inferior workmanship, correct drawings and
- generally maintain the required standard, whatever that happened to be during
- different periods. If there were changes in the theme or style, this could
- only be brought about by the master craftsman who was empowered to execute
- the change. Naturally such a man had an experience in handling large groups
- of men. Throughout the period of Roman rule of Egypt there was a tendency for
- such master craftsmen to move around the Roman empire, gravitating towards
- the centers that could pay for their professional services. They worked in
- Alexandria and summoned by the emperors to Rome and Constantinople. There
- they sculpted classically draped forms as competently as they had the
- stylized Egyptian, and they carved languid reclining figures with no less
- devotion.
-
- Scholars are not in agreement over which works of art can be safely regarded
- as Alexandrine -- that is to say, executed by Egyptian craftsmen in
- Alexandria. Many such works, however, can be safely attributed to Egypt
- through consideration of subject matter and/or style. Examples of such works
- include a casket now in the museum in Wiesbaden that is sculpted with a
- sphinx and the allegory of Father Nile, a small box in the British Museum
- showing the squat, typically Coptic figure of Saint Mena in a niche, and
- three plaques from the side of Maximianus' throne at Ravenna Museum that have
- been attributed by art historians to Egyptian carvers. Also, when the Copts
- separated from the Eastern Church, master craftsmen who had mastered the
- technique of deeper drill carving and supervised the execution of works of
- great sophistication, ``vide'' the stucco wall decorations to be found in the
- Monastery of the Syrians at Wadi ElNatrun and the friezes from Bawit in the
- Coptic Museum of Cairo.
-
- Meanwhile, however, monasteries and churches that were built in Upper Egypt,
- especially in the fifth and sixth centuries, were adorned with carvings and
- paintings that show an expression of faith that was highly personal and
- authentic, executed by craftsmen who were not controlled by either the
- rulings of ``religious authorities'' (as was the case in ancient Egypt), or
- by a supervisor who maintained standards. There are stone and wood friezes,
- painted panels and ivory work that is crude and that depends for its appeal
- largely on qualities of design. This is especially apparent in the
- representations of the human figure, which are of strange proportion, being
- somewhat squat with large heads. Several explanations for this have been
- made. The most convincing of these explanations suggests that Coptic artists
- were producing work in reaction to the realism of ancient Egyptian and Greek
- paganism and that this, too, is the reason why early Christians did not
- encourage the production of statuary in the round. While the tendency seems,
- indeed, to have been a departure from Hellenistic Alexandrine tradition,
- towards an abstract two-dimensional style, this may not necessarily have been
- calculated. Rather, it may be an example of free artistic expression: naive,
- unsophisticated, yet forceful. It is the simplicity of Coptic Art that gives
- it its unique flavor.
-
- There are two art forms in which continuity of craftsmanship can be traced,
- namely the techniques of weaving and illustration. That is to say, Coptic
- textiles and manuscripts. While the motifs in the former, and the calligraphy
- in the latter, changed from age to age, the artistic execution of the work,
- as well as the techniques and the materials used, was of longstanding
- tradition.
-
-
- Weaving
- -------
- Weaving in the early Christian era was, as in earlier times, mainly on linen
- although there is also some evidence of silkweaving. the techniques -- the
- so-called tapestry-weave and loom weaving -- were inherited from the ancient
- Egyptians. The width of the loom used in Coptic tapestries is the same as
- that in the time of the pharaohs, and the special ``Egyptian knot'' was used
- as well. in the fourth century wool was introduced and a variant was
- loopweaving, in which the waft was not pulled tight. Silk became popular in
- the sixth century and by the eighth century full clerical tunics were woven
- in linen and silk. The weaving of some are so fine as to appear more like
- embroidery.
-
- Coptic textiles, which developed into one of the finest of all Coptic arts,
- included wall hangings, blankets and curtains in addition to garment
- trimmings. The motifs show great diversity and include classical and
- Greek-Egyptian themes: lively cupids, dancing girls riding marine monsters,
- or birds and animals woven into foliage. Fish and grapes were popular
- Christian motifs as well as biblical scenes such as the Virgin on a donkey
- holding the Child Jesus in front of her. After Constantinople became the
- capital of the empire, the weavers' repertoire was increased and enriched
- with Byzantine and Persian themes. All the textiles show a great sense of
- liveliness in the stylized figures, and there was an eager market throughout
- the Roman world in late antiquity, especially for trimings for clerical
- robes; the most commonly woven were tunics of undyed linen onto which
- decorative woven bands were worked. In the tenth century, after the Arab
- conquest, Copts wove textiles for Muslim patrons and the Arab ``Kufie''
- script was introduced into their own designs, especially after Arabic started
- to replace the Coptic language one century later.
-
-
- Illustration
- ------------
- Coptic manuscripts fall into five main groups: in Greek, Greek and Coptic, in
- Coptic, Coptic and Arabic and, finally in Arabic and transliterated Coptic.
- The art of illustrating texts dates to pharaonic times when prayers and
- liturgies were written on papyrus paper with reed pens and deposited in the
- tomb of the deceased. The mortuary texts were traced in black outline with
- catchwords written in red. They were illustrated with figures of Egyptian
- deities and protective symbols. These vignettes were frequently painted in
- bright colors with border designs at the top and bottom.
-
- In the Christian era, religious writings were also written on papyrus paper
- and parchment. The texts were written in black, with red used for titles and
- the beginnings of the chapters. Many were decorated with designs in bright
- colors including figures of Martyrs, Saints, Apostles, and Angels, as well as
- birds, animals, foliage and geometrical designs. A medieval Arab writer, Omar
- Tussun, wrote about a group of copyists at the Monastery of Saint Makar in
- Wadi ElNatroun, who were capable of drawing Coptic letters in the form of
- birds and figures. This is still an art form in Egypt, and Arabic
- caligraphers still use the reed pen -- an art that they inherited from their
- Coptic ancestors. Copts started to translate their religious literature into
- Arabic late in the twelfth century and decorated the opening page with lavish
- pictures and with border designs. It was not until the nineteenth century
- that Coptic texts transliterated using Arabic started to appear.
-
-
- Portraits
- ---------
- No other early Christian movement has such an abundance of paintings of
- persons who received honour in their own country. Egypt's martyrs, saints,
- patriarchs, hermits and ascetics, some of whom were honoured throughout
- Christian world, received special distinction in Egypt. Their heroic deeds,
- sufferings or miracles were worded in songs and pictured on the walls of
- ancient temples that were converted to chapels or churches.
-
- The human figures, whether in paintings, carvings or tapestries, are in
- frontal position with serene faces and a depth of idealized expression. The
- outlined, almond-shaped eyes are strongly reminiscent of the painted wooden
- panels from Bawit and the Fayoum, dating back to the first and second
- centuries, which were placed over the head of the deceased and bound into the
- mummy wrappings. These panels themselves resemble ``cartonnage'' sacrophagi
- of the late pharaonic period. In fact, the Fayoum portraits, with the full
- face and large obsessive eyes -- a feature of Roman medallions and much early
- Christian art -- are now regarded by art historians as the prototypes for the
- Byzantine icons.
-
- The Lord Jesus Christ was usually shown enthroned, surrounded by triumphant
- Saints and Angels, or blessing a figure beside Him. He was always depicted as
- King, never the suffering servant. Egypt was a land where leadership was
- idealized and kingship, both on earth and in the afterlife, was something the
- people understood. A triumphant Jesus -- reborn, benevolent and righteous --
- is one of the most significant and continuous characteristics of Coptic art.
- Another is that Egyptians did not delight in painting scenes of torture,
- death, or sinners in hell; in the few exceptions where a holy figure is
- painted undergoing torture, it is implied rather than graphically depicted.
- This is in tune with ancient Egyptian artistic tradition which, in the words
- of Cyril Aldred (in his book Egyptian Art in the Days of the Pharaohs, Thames
- and Hudson, 1980) ``magnify only the heroic and beneficent qualities of
- divinities and kings, and not the horrific power of tyrants and demons''.
-
-
- Paintings
- ---------
- It is fitting to conclude this list of artforms with Coptic paintings, which
- is true art as against what we today call the crafts. The wall paintings
- reveal an unsophisticated, almost crude style, and a refined, highly
- developed one. The former may have emerged in the early years of Christianity
- when ancient temples were converted into churches. Pharaonic reliefs were
- covered with layers of plaster and Christian themes were painted on the
- stucco base. These wall-paintings survive ``in situ'' in some places in Egypt
- including Bagawat in the Kharga Oasis, Saint Simeon's Monastery at Aswan, in
- the temple of Luxor, the White Monastery at Sohag, the Monastery of Saint
- Makar in Wadi ElNatroun, and the sanctuary of the Ethiopian Saint Takla
- Hemanout in the Church of AlMoallaka in Old Cairo. Early wall-paintings that
- have been transfered to the Coptic Museum include niches from the Monasteries
- of Bawit and Sakkara. the Copts loved bright, clear color and were extremely
- talented in mixing different dyes and powdered rock, often using the white of
- an egg to combine them.
-
- Icons, or images of sacred personalities painted on wooden panels, that are
- themselves regarded as sacred, were a later development. When it was realized
- that the war on paganism launched by the emperor Theodosius had not stopped
- pious people from sanctifying holy relics, the church authorized the painting
- of religious themes that would aid the faithful in an understanding of
- Christianity, especially scenes depicting the Nativity, the Virgin and Child,
- the apostles and the lives of the saints. According to the Arab historian
- AlMakrizi, the Pope Cyril I hung icons in all the churches of Alexandria in
- the year 420 A.D. and then decreed that they should be hung in the other
- churches of Egypt as well.
-
- In the earliest development of icon painting the artists worked directly on
- the wooden panel but later they began to cover the surface with a soft layer
- of gypsum onto which lines could be chiseled to control the flow of liquid
- gold. There is indication that more than one artist was involved in the
- production of a single work but the face was painted by the master. Such
- division of labor resulted in greater production, but it also brought an end
- to any personal expression of piety such as had characterized the wall
- paintings. When Egypt turned increasingly towards Syria and Palestine after
- the schism in the fifth century, her saints and martyrs began to take on the
- stiff, majestic look of Syrian art. There began to be an expression of
- spirituality rather than naivety on the faces of the subjects, more elegance
- in the drawing of the figures, more use of gold backgrounds and richly
- adorned clerical garments.
-
- Painters were not, at first, constrained by a rigid code. They were free to
- experiment with their themes. Consequently, there is a variety of
- interpretations in the treatment of a single subject that is quite striking.
- By the fifth and sixth centuries the angel Gabriel, for example, was
- sometimes painted with a sword, another time with a cross, and on occasion,
- with a trumpet; he either wore a flowing robe or was clad in richly
- embroidered vestments. Such variations are especially notable in scenes of
- the Annunciation and the Nativity, which are seldom rendered twice with the
- same details.
-
- Paintings produced in Egypt under Byzantine rule did not resemble the opulent
- frescoes and mosaics of the eastern Roman Empire, which was state-sponsored
- art between 550 A.D. and the conquest of the Turks in the fifteenth century.
- Saint Catherine's Monastery in Sinai, however, a stronghold of the Melkite
- faction, was rebuilt in the Golden Age of Justinian and adorned with some of
- the finest Byzantine icons to be found in the world. Some were painted on
- site, and others were imported from the provinces of the empire and from
- Constantinople itself.
-
- Few centuries after the Arab conquest of Egypt in the seventh century
- paintings became successively less ``Coptic'' in character. This became even
- more apparent in the thirteenth century when the art of copying panels and
- miniatures started and Anba Gabriel produced exquisite and brilliantly
- adorned work. He set a standard for copyists. Little original work was
- produced. By the senventeenth and eighteenth centuries painters like John
- ElNassikh, Baghdady Abu ElSaad, and John the Armenian -- who are among the
- greatest painters of icons in Egypt -- turned to Syrian and Byzantine models
- for inspiration. Finally, Anastasy, a Greek artist, was commissioned by the
- Copts to paint many of the icons that today hang in the churches of Old
- Cairo.
-
- Coptic Art History
- ------------------
- The study of Coptic art and architecture was for too long a sadly neglected
- field. One of the reasons for this is that early archaeologists showed no
- interest in Christian antiquities. They focussed their attention on Ancient
- Egypt. For example, it is astonishing to us today to note that Champollion,
- the French scholar who deciphered Hieroglyphics from the famous Rosetta
- Stone, carried out excavations at Medinet Habu on the Theban necropolis,
- discovered a fine fifth century church there and did not even mention it in
- his official report. In places where ancient Egyptian temples had been
- converted into churches and the walls plastered and painted with Christian
- themes, these were removed as just so much debris obscuring the ancient
- Egyptian reliefs below. No effort was made to photograph the wall-paintings
- before removal, or record any architectural features. Vital evidence was
- consequently lost from numerous temples including Deir el Bahri, Medinet Habu
- and Karnak temples at Luxor, and those of Dendera and Edfu.
-
- The first person to realize the value of the Coptic art and make an effort to
- preserve it was the French scholar Gaston Maspero. In 1881, in his capacity
- as director of the Egyptian Antiquities Service (now Antiquities
- Organization) he set aside one of the halls of the Museum of Antiquities,
- then in the suburb of Boulac, for the first collection of Coptic art. He
- encouraged Egyptologists to undertake serious excavation, resulting in the
- preservation of the remains of the Monastery of Saint Apollo in Bawit, about
- 10 miles south-west of Assiut in Middle Egypt, and the Monastery of Saint
- Jeremias on the Sakkara plateau. Several scholars published descriptions of
- Coptic churches, carvings and crafts.
-
- In 1910 the Coptic Museum was founded and in 1937 a new wing was added. The
- exhibits, which represent the richest collection of Coptic art in the world,
- have been separated according to media: stonework, woodwork, metalwork, ivory
- carvings, tapestries, pottery, glassware and manuscripts. It is extremely
- difficult to visualize them in context when one visits the museum. For
- example, patriarchal chairs in woodwork in the old wing are separated from
- patriarchal crowns and ecclesiastical vestments that are in the new. Wooden
- doors of ancient churches and monasteries are separated from their metal
- bolts and keys. Similar themes in different mediums, like the portrayal of
- the Virgin and Child, or the use of vine as a decorative motif in stone
- carvings, wooden panels and tapestries, cannot be compared. And wide
- variations in style that developed in different localities cannot be
- observed. Compounding the problem is the fact that the objects span fifteen
- hundred years, from the fourth to the nineteenth centuries!
-
- Nor do the monastic centers and old churches of Egypt facilitate an
- understanding of artistic development because of the continuous stages of
- construction and renovation of the churches. This is mainly attributed to the
- fact that these sites are still used heavily by Copts for religious functions
- as a result of a 20-year Governmental policy of not granting Copts permits to
- build new churches or Coptic centers. Today, within the limited resources
- ]available to them, Coptic Christians are trying their best to preserve their
- treasures. A good example is the Monastery of Anba Makar in Wadi ElNatroun,
- which (unlike other poorly and unprofessionally restored monasteries) was
- miraculously dug out of the sand of the Western Desert! Thanks to the efforts
- and hardwork of its monks, the monastery of Anba Makar still possesses the
- largest doom in Egypt, built completely using self-supporting woven small red
- bricks.
-
-
- Restoration of Coptic Heritage
- ------------------------------
- Only a decade ago, French and Dutch archaeologists were among the few foreign
- experts who began restoring and preserving Coptic monuments. Before this, in
- view of the inaction and limited resources of Governmental agencies, Coptic
- monks alone used to fix haphazardly crumbling parts of their churches and
- monasteries. Many medieval Coptic churches are still in a miserable state of
- repair. Their facades are crumbling to dust and richly decorated walls inside
- have been damaged by incense-burning rituals over the centuries that required
- closed doors and windows. In addition, vacant monasteries have often been
- inhabited by nomads, shepherds and their herds.
-
- Several international organizations have recently extended a helping hand to
- the Copts in order to self-preserve and record their heritage. For example,
- in August of 1991, the Dutch Ministry of Education has proposed a program
- whereby Dutch scholars will train Coptic monks in such fields as art history,
- scientific methods of preservation and care of Coptic monuments, usage of
- index systems and collecting data. In the summer of 1990, a group of three
- Coptic monks spent six months last year in the Netherlands for training in
- the history of Christian art and its preservation, and traveled to other
- European countries where they became acquainted with different Christian
- congregations.
-
- There are many efforts to record and learn about Coptic art. In the
- Cairo-based Institute of Coptic Studies, for example, students learn about
- Coptic Icons by painting their own reproductions using authentic dyes mixed
- with special oils and egg white. Even outside Egypt, in the United States,
- two Coptic artists in residence in the Church of St. Mary and St. Mena in
- Rhode Island, produce dozens of Coptic icons to embellish Churches and homes
- of Emigrant Copts.
-
- Much more work remains to be done to save an integral part of Egypt's
- history, culture, and art. This can be only done through a concerted effort
- by the Egyptian people with the help of national and international agencies.
- The first step is, perhaps, a better education, understanding, and
- appreciation of Coptic art among the public.
-
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