The Egyptologists’ Guide to the Grand Egyptian Museum

After more than a decade of anticipation, the Grand Egyptian Museum (GEM), the largest museum devoted to a single civilization, has fully opened its exhibitions, including the long-awaited King Tutankhamun halls.

Originally announced in 2002, the idea for the museum dates back to the 1990s, when Egypt began envisioning a new institution in Giza to relieve the strain on the aging Egyptian Museum in downtown Cairo. Construction began in 2005, but the path to completion faced setbacks from political upheavals, economic instability, and the logistical complexities of moving tens of thousands of fragile artifacts from across the country—and from abroad. The museum opened its doors in stages over the years: limited exhibitions, preview tours, and select events, including a visit from the British Royal Philharmonic.

The museum was officially inaugurated on November 1, in a ceremony attended by world leaders, with public access beginning on November 4—the 103rd anniversary of the discovery of Tutankhamun’s tomb. Twice the size of the Louvre, the vast complex is expected to draw between 13,000 and 15,000 visitors daily, according to Egypt’s Minister of Tourism & Antiquities Sherif Fathy.

Home to more than 100,000 artifacts, including several repatriated works never before shown in Egypt, the museum spans 7,000 years of history. Its 12 main galleries unfold chronologically, tracing the evolution of ancient Egyptian civilization from the Prehistoric and Early Dynastic eras through the Old, Middle, and New Kingdoms, the Late Period, and the Greek and Roman Era. The journey culminates with the artifacts of the Tutankhamun galleries, displayed as a complete collection for the first time since the discovery of his tomb in 1922.

For those wondering where to begin, ARTnews asked three experts—Zahi Hawass, Egypt’s former Minister of Antiquities and one of the world’s leading Egyptologists; Curtis Ryan, a documentarian and Egyptologist; and Hassan Elzawy, an archaeologist, Egyptologist, and former cataloguer at the Grand Egyptian Museum—to each select five objects as starting points for one’s journey through GEM.

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