Syracuse University

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Elouafi to lecture on 'Napoleon's Discovery of Egypt' Feb. 19

February 16, 2009


Elaine Quick




The SUArt Galleries announces a lecture by history professor Amy Elouafi in
conjunction with the gallery's new exhibition "Napoleon on the Nile: Soldiers, Artists,
and the Rediscovery of Egypt." The lecture, "Napoleon's 'Discovery' of Egypt: Art &
Science in the French Empire and the Civilizing Mission," will be held on Thursday,
Feb. 19 at 5:30 p.m. in the Shaffer Art Building's Shemin Auditorium.


Elouafi, assistant professor of history, and women and gender studies in the Maxwell School, will discuss Napoleon's invasion of Egypt in the context of French colonialism,
looking primarily at academic and artistic representations of the East that
demonstrate a set of stereotypes collectively referred to as Orientalism. Though aware
of Egypt's Pharaonic past-and intrigued by it-these savants were scarcely
interested in the contemporary history, culture and politics of Egypt. Instead of a
project of translation, Europeans sought to make the Orient intelligible to a European
audience through cataloging, measuring, quantifying- and illustrating-what in
their eyes constituted knowledge.


The exhibition, "Napoleon on the Nile," illuminates how French military ambitions
and the quest for scientific knowledge (and political control) came to shape the West's
enduring image of Egypt, inspiring generations of painters, photographers, architects
and decorative artists. While Napoleon's military exploits ended poorly, he achieved
what was to be perhaps his greatest legacy: the publication of the multi-volume
"Description de l'Egypte," widely recognized as the single most important European
scholarly study of ancient and modern Egypt, and the focus of this exhibition.


The astonishing range and precision of the "Description" images was captured by
Napoleon's savants, a small army of scholars whose project was to systematically
explore, describe and document every aspect of the country-its ancient and modern
buildings and monuments, topography, commerce, customs and flora and fauna.
Supported by Napoleon and protected by his army, this select group of engineers,
scientists, mathematicians, naturalists and artists served the political mission of the
expedition by providing comprehensive information and skills an occupying force
needed to govern and rebuild effectively. At the same time, they advanced
Napoleon's ideological goals by rediscovering the wonders of Pharaonic Egyptian
civilization, with which Napoleon-in his dual roles of liberator/conqueror-was
happy to be associated.


The exhibition will be on display at SUArt Galleries' main campus galleries, located in
the Shaffer Art building, through March 29. It was originally organized by Dahesh
Museum of Art's Associate Curator Lisa Small and is accompanied by a richly
illustrated exhibition catalog.