This feels like a new start, so I might as well introduce myself properly! I’m an Egyptologist & I curate the ancient Mediterranean collections at National Museums Scotland in Edinburgh. My research interests are varied: ancient Egyptian society and inequality, esp. in the Middle Kingdom; historiography of Egyptology, museum collecting and display, esp. in the context of empire & colonial legacies; and re-contextualising ancient Egypt & Nubian collections in museum displays & schools resources.
I wanted to be an Egyptologist from the age of 6, when I read about Tutankhamun at school & went home to tell my parents that’s what I would be when I grew up! They indulged my interest in museums & Egypt, from dressing up as Tut for Halloween to taking me to my 1st conference aged 11! During my undergraduate degree at the University of Toronto, my fate was sealed when I first read ancient Egyptian literature in translation- to hear voices speak from across millennia was utterly captivating!
I did my doctorate at the University of Oxford on representations of social hierarchy in the art & literature of Middle Kingdom Egypt (c2055-1650 BC). I studied decorated tomb chapels, like this one at Beni Hassan, & participated in excavations at sites like Kom Firin, a Ramesside town & temple. I worked as a trainee curator at the British Museum on the UK touring exhibition ‘Pharaoh: King of Egypt’ & at the Great North Museum: Hancock in Newcastle before I was appointed at NMS.
I led the redevelopment of our ‘Ancient Egypt Rediscovered’ gallery which opened at the National Museum of Scotland in 2019, and curated the 2017 exhibition ‘The Tomb’, about a Theban tomb that was used and reused for over a thousand years until it was sealed intact with an early Roman family burial in 9 BC, which later became the first Egyptian tomb to be systematically excavated in 1857.