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A Close Encounter with the University of Melbourne's Classics and Archaeology Collection

  • University of Melbourne, Parkville Campus Grattan Street Parkville Vic 3010 Australia (map)

Get up close with ancient Greek and Roman objects from the University of Melbourne’s Classics and Archaeology collection! For ages 8-18.

This two-hour activity consists of two parts: first, a visit to the current Ancient Lives: Insights from the Classics and Archaeology Collection exhibition at the Old Quad (the University of Melbourne), with short introductory talks by the exhibition curators Dr Caroline Tully and Dr Tamara Lewit, both Honorary Fellows at the University of Melbourne. This exhibition combines two presentations: Amor et Mors: Vessels for the Beautiful Body in Life and Death and White, Tawny, Blood-red, Black: Wine in the Greek and Roman Worlds and presents about 100 objects from the University of Melbourne Classics and Archaeology Collection. Second, participants will visit the Object Based Laboratories to get up close with the University’s teaching collection of ancient artefacts.

  • 10–11am: Visit to the Ancient Lives Exhibition with exhibition curators Dr Caroline Tully and Dr Tamara Lewit

  • 11am–12pm: Visit to the Melbourne Antiquities Collection in the Object Based Laboratories with Dr Caroline Tully

Important event information:

  • This is a free event. Bookings are required due to strict capacity requirements.

  • This tour is for students aged 8–18. To book for the adult session, please see here.

  • Adults accompanying their children can attend the 'Ancient Lives' exhibition portion of the student tour, but will not be able to enter the Object Based Laboratories due to space restrictions.

  • Tour meeting point: on the day, please meet promptly at the clock tower on the University of Melbourne's Parkville campus. (Your booking confirmation email will include a map!)

About the presenters:

  • Dr Tamara Lewit, curator of White, Tawny, Blood-red, Black: Wine in the Greek and Roman Worlds within the exhibition Ancient Lives, is an honorary fellow in the School of Historical and Philosophical Studies, the University of Melbourne, and a fellow of the Society of Antiquaries, London. She specializes in the archaeology of wine in the Roman world and her chapter ‘Innovation in wine-making technologies: the role of local artisans and farmers’ will appear in Vine-growing and winemaking in the Roman world (ed. D. Van Limbergen, E. Dodd and M. S. Busana, 2024). You can read more about her research on her website Tamara’s Secrets and in ‘Pressing Matters in the Roman World’ (Pursuit 2018). She was also researcher for two children’s novels set in the Roman Empire, The Boy Who Stepped Through Time and A Message Through Time, by her sister Anna Ciddor.

  • Dr Caroline Tully is a lecturer in the Centre for Ancient Cultures at Monash University and an exhibition curator at the State Library of Victoria. Her research interests include the reception of ancient Egyptian, Greek, and Roman art and architecture within Neoclassical and Egyptian Revival styles, particularly funerary monuments, and she also specialises in Bronze Age Aegean and Eastern Mediterranean art and religion. For sixteen years Caroline was a professional tapestry weaver at the Australian Tapestry Workshop, and she maintains an interest in archaeological textiles, particularly the garments of Minoan Crete. See her publications on the University of Melbourne website.

Part of a program to celebrate National Archaeology Week, co-presented by The University of Melbourne, Hellenic Museum and CO.AS.IT. Museo Italiano. Visit the program hub to explore other free events.

When: 10am-12pm Saturday 25 May 2024

Where: University of Melbourne, Parkville Campus, Grattan Street, Parkville, Victoria

For more information and registration: https://www.hellenic.org.au/event-details/archaeology-week-tour-students

Image: Installation view Ancient Lives, Old Quad, 2023. Courtesy of Museums and Collections Department, The University of Melbourne. Photo: Christian Capurro.

Earlier Event: May 25
Discover Archaeology Week
Later Event: May 25
Heritage Harvest Weekend