Michael Press Profile picture
Aug 20, 2019 26 tweets 10 min read Read on X
Fascinated by this late 1850s ad for Dr. Henry Abbott's collection of Egyptian antiquities on Broadway. There's a story here, or several . . .
(Reproduced in the New York Historical Society Quarterly Bulletin, April 1920)
(First, my pointer to this ad was the catalogue for the 1995-96 exhibition "The American Discovery of Ancient Egypt" at the LA County Museum of Art)
amazon.com/American-Disco…
Henry Abbott was a British doctor living in Cairo for 2 decades (1830s-1850s) and, naturally, amassed a collection of over 1,000 antiquities.

(portrait of Abbott painted by Thomas Hicks c. 1861, after Abbott's 1859 death, in Brooklyn Museum of Art)
brooklynmuseum.org/opencollection…
After failing to sell his collection to the British Museum, Abbott brought it to New York and charged admission at the Stuyvesant Institute on Broadway. It was one of the first large Egyptian collections in the U.S.

(excerpt from Jason Thompson, Wonderful Things v. 2)
Multiple editions of a catalogue were published, based on an earlier catalogue made c. 1843 in Cairo by English artist/Egyptologist Joseph Bonomi (the Younger)
Note the drawing of the statuette (an ushabti) on the cover of the catalogue and from the ad -- as the NYHS Quarterly Bulletin article points out, this actually wasn't taken from Abbott's collection!
But in America as in London Abbott failed to find a buyer. And apparently the collection wasn't a popular attraction:
"He [Abbott] has undoubtedly been disappointed. America cares as little for Egypt as Egypt thought of America." (Harper's, June 1854)
Thompson in Wonderful Things (volume 2) reproduces some interesting comments from the visitor book to the exhibition.
"Bring a scent bottle next time."
Decades later, Walt Whitman remembered frequenting the exhibition -- "sometimes I had it all to myself" -- & commented that "the whole enterprise was a fearful disappointment, in the pay & commercial part"

("Old Actors, Singers, Shows, &c, in NY", from Good-bye My Fancy, 1891)
The collection was purchased c. 1860 by the New York Historical Society, which lent it to the Brooklyn Museum in 1937. The museum ultimately purchased the collection in 1948.
One of the things that interests me about the Abbott collection and that original ad is the network of people involved.

The Egyptian Magician Holding a Seance with Members of the European Community in Cairo [including Abbott and Bonomi], J.F. Lewis, 1846
collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O146226/t…
From an anonymous introduction to the 1850s catalogue ("by a gentleman of this city", that is, New York), we read that experts like Gardner Wilkinson and Richard Lepsius have commented on the collection and its "genuineness".

We also get a glimpse of Henry Abbott, tomb raider
The ad gives more illustrious names who have attested to the collection's "value and importance": Émile Prisse d'Avennes, Gustav Seyffarth, "Stewart Poole" (Reginald Stuart-Poole, brother of Stanley Lane-Poole and nephew of Edward William Lane) . . .
There is also a reference to Harvard classicist C. C. (Cornelius Conway) Felton's recent paper at a meeting of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, "Menander in New York" (referring to a wax tablet with a fragment of a comedy by Menander)
Note also: "Dr. Abbott, residing for many years as a physician in Egypt, had excellent opportunities for securing the most rare and precious antiquities, from the natives who discovered them"
The irony of seeing all of these scholarly attestations to the collection and its authenticity is that I'm primarily familiar with this collection for this statue of the Dynasty 18 scribe Djehuti
brooklynmuseum.org/opencollection…
I saw this statue when I reviewed the Pulitzer Arts Foundation's recent exhibition "Striking Power", organized w/the Brooklyn Museum
hyperallergic.com/511565/strikin…
Here's John D. Cooney on provenance in "A Reexamination of Some Egyptian Antiquities", Brooklyn Museum Bulletin 11, 1950
In that article, Cooney describes how the museum tested the statue in 1949 and determined that its head was actually a modern addition -- originally from another statue and recut to fit Djehuti!
This hints at the problematic ways in which Abbott formed his collection (here, from an antiquities dealer), and we see other hints in the references above . . .
We get more from Jerome Van Crowninsfield Smith ("Prof. J. V. C. Smith" in the ad), a physician -- and mayor of Boston -- who wrote an account of his early 1850s trip to Egypt.
He saw Abbott's collection in Cairo in December, 1850.
Smith spends over 10 pages quoting almost word for word the catalogue of Abbott's collection originally written by Bonomi (without credit here).
This is apparently the entry for the statue of Djehuti
Note the engraving of a mummified Apis bull -- and especially the description above of restrictions on exporting antiquities, and how Abbott tried to avoid having the bull mummy confiscated by the authorities in sending it to the U.S.
In other words, it appears that Abbott smuggled at least part of his collection out of the country, violating then-existing antiquities law.
(That law was enacted in 1835...but Smith's text is the only reference I've found to it in contemporary discussions of this collection.)
One more name from the 1850s ad draws my attention: "W. C. Prime, Esq." is William Cowper Prime, a lawyer and journalist who was popular at the time as a travel writer.
While Prime was popular at the time, to the extent he's remembered at all today it's as the butt of Mark Twain's jokes -- Twain mocked him for the constant melodrama in his travel writing.
(Here, letter to Daily Alta California, published March 1, 1868)
cdnc.ucr.edu/?a=d&d=DAC1868…
When Twain turned his letters and notes into The Innocents Abroad (1869), he changed Prime's name to "Grimes".
He suggested it might be "in better taste" . . . but it ended up robbing Prime of his chance at being immortalized!

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Michael Press

Michael Press Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @MichaelDPress

Aug 11, 2021
The headline for this was originally "Why did the Museum of the Bible have to return 17,000 ancient artifacts?", but then the Post discovered that 1000s were actually returned by Cornell & changed it
(The url and the Twitter card reflect the original)
washingtonpost.com/politics/2021/…
Current headline:
It feels like the scandals of the last few years were a great opening for a better discussion of provenance & its importance, but I suspect many -- certainly the Washington Post -- would rather use it to mock evangelicals.
washingtonpost.com/opinions/2021/…
Read 4 tweets
Jul 8, 2021
The strangeness of this article is perfectly symbolized by what looks like a fashion photoshoot featuring a BM curators with props.
telegraph.co.uk/art/architectu…
h/t @PortantIssues
It's good that the article does not continue Simpson's insistence that looting in the Middle East mostly stopped after 2003-04.
I'm guessing the £30 million here is just a typo (as this has been repeatedly reported to be around £3 million)?
Read 8 tweets
Jul 5, 2021
How does Shaked/Ford/Bhayro's 2013 publication of the Schøyen Collection Aramaic incantation bowls deal with provenance? This is an interesting case, worth looking at a bit.

From the EBSCOhost ebook, it would seem the word "provenance" doesn't occur in the book . . .
But in fact this appears to be a case of poorly-done OCR, as the word does occur.
We find it on (at least) one page of the text, though here it refers to ancient provenience, not to modern findspot or collection history.
Read 15 tweets
Jun 28, 2021
Amazing that this is the full provenance statement for a Palmyrene funerary relief in a reputable academic journal in 2014 -- around the height of the Syrian Civil War. Image
To be fair, that's not quite it: in the footnote, the author thanks the gallery for permission to publish and for providing photos. Image
Also to be fair, it's better than this article from the same journal in the following year, where all we learn of the collection history of seven Palmyrene reliefs is that they're in "a private collection in Lebanon" Image
Read 5 tweets
Apr 10, 2021
This is a really interesting review by Moses Finley of several books on archaeology, published in 1966.
Thanks @EirikWelo
nybooks.com/articles/1966/…
Among those under review is Leo Deuel's Testaments of Time (1965), which started my interest in the review.
Much of the review is concerned with how archaeology is presented to the public.
Finley recognizes that, for all their flaws, 19th-century archaeologist-explorers had this down.
Read 10 tweets
Apr 9, 2021
Has anyone heard of the book Testaments of Time by Leo Deuel? It's a popular account of manuscript hunting, first published in 1965. @EvaMroczek @LivLied
It's a broad survey of the material, what you might expect for 1965: starts with Renaissance humanists, and moves on to chapters on Tischendorf, the Cairo Geniza, Oxyrhynchus, the Dead Sea Scrolls, but also a range of other things . . .
It also includes what you imagine might have been standard attitudes in the 1960s, cheering on manuscript hunters like Tischendorf who "outwit" the "negligent but perversely possessive" and "half-literate" monks
Read 15 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(