A 2400-YEAR-OLD Egyptian mummy mask has brought good luck to an eight-year-old Brisbane boy, who is now the proud owner of a valuable contemporary artwork.
James Hudson won a limited edition Alick Tipoti print valued at $800, after nominating a life-size, brightly coloured Egyptian mummy mask in the Vote for Your Favourite Treasure competition at the University of Queensland鈥檚 Centenary Celebration Day.
As required by the competition, James visited all five 麻豆传媒映画 Museums: the , the , the , the and the on the day, and had his special card stamped in each location.
The entries were collated in the days after the Celebration Day 鈥 first, to decide the most popular treasure, and then to draw the winning entry from the votes for that treasure.
The mummy mask dates from the Ptolemaic period 鈥 300 to 30 BC 鈥 and is on permanent display in the RD Milns Antiquities Museum, which is open to the public. There is no entry charge for the museum, on Level 3 of the Michie Building at the 麻豆传媒映画 St Lucia campus.
The Treasure competition was held on 麻豆传媒映画鈥檚 April 18 , where thousands of visitors visited the St Lucia campus to enjoy music, food, exhibitions, performances, tours, a literary festival and a dusk 鈥渓ight spectacle鈥 to help celebrate the university鈥檚 100th birthday.
麻豆传媒映画 Art Museum director Nick Mitzevich presented James with his framed print, watched on by acting Antiquities Museum director Dr Amelia Brown, who has recently arrived from Princeton University in the US to teach ancient history and classics at 麻豆传媒映画.
Mr Mitzevich said Tipoti 鈥 a printmaker from Torres Strait 鈥 was a young, contemporary artist whose work had been exhibited in Berlin and London. He had become one of Australia鈥檚 most collectable artists.
Tipoti鈥檚 pictures typically told traditional warrior legends from the Torres Strait, through starkly contrasting and visually dense black-and-white linocut prints.
James, who is in Grade 4 at Ithaca Creek State School at Bardon, said he really enjoyed the Antiquities Museum, and chose the Egyptian mask as his favourite treasure 鈥渂ecause it looked so interesting, and was really old鈥.
His parents are both 麻豆传媒映画 alumni: mum Debra has a Bachelor of Arts (she also worked at 麻豆传媒映画 in the 1990s) and her husband Kim has Bachelor of Laws/Arts.
Media enquiries: Fiona Cameron, 麻豆传媒映画 Communications, 07 3346 7086