The artistic achievements of Africa in the Middle Ages have long been overshadowed by those of the Byzantine Empire. This show at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York aims to redress the balance, revealing the role that African kingdoms played in the cultural and economic life of Byzantium and in the Mediterranean more widely, through paintings, sculpture, manuscripts and pottery (19 November–3 March 2024). Some 200 artworks dating from the Roman to early modern periods go on show, including complex polychrome Tunisian mosaics (late 2nd century CE) on loan from the Louvre Museum in Paris and the Carthage National Museum in Tunisia, as well as medieval Ethiopian artworks such as the gilded Marian Triptych (mid-late 15th century), on loan from the National Museum of African Art in Washington, D.C. Find out more on the Met’s website.
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