Gatley, les Egyptiens noyés dans la mer rouge, relief

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Gatley, les Egyptiens noyés dans la mer rouge, relief

Creator

James Anderson

British Photographer · 1813–1877

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James Anderson was born Isaac Atkinson in Blencarn, Cumberland, England and studied painting in Paris as William Nugent Dunbar. In 1838 he moved to Rome and began to produce sculpture as James Anderson, which remained his professional name. Eleven years later he took up photography, opening a studio in Rome in 1853. Anderson specialized in reproductions of works of art, publishing frequent catalog

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Date
1859
Medium
Albumen silver print
Culture
British
Department
Photographs
Institution
Getty Museum

Photograph of a relief known as "The Overthrow of Pharaoh in the Red Sea" by Alfred Gatley. The relief depicts the biblical scene of the Pharaoh's army drowning in the Red Sea during their pursuit of the Israelites. Multiple male and animal figures can be seen, including a male figure wearing a "Pschent" or the double crown of later Egyptian pharaohs. Gatley's name is inscribed on the lower right corner of the image.

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