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A day that changed the world at the Museum of Cycladic Art in Athens

Marble statuette of a horseman, 2nd century BC. [Paris Tavitian/Museum of Cycladic Art]

ATHENS –

Some 240 antiquities and historical items from 27 museums in Greece and abroad and four private collections comprise the new exhibition on the 338 BC Battle of Chaeronea, which opened at the Museum of Cycladic Art (MCA) in Athens on December 14.

According to the museum, the exhibition highlights the importance of the Battle of Chaeronea as marking the transition from the Classical to the Hellenistic period, an era “in which Greek civilization was dominant for centuries and laid the foundations of what we call the Western world.”

“The theme is the battle that opposed the Macedonian army of Philip II against that of the allied Greek cities of southern Greece – and in particular the Sacred Band of Thebes and the army of Athens – a conflict that for the first time brought the 18-year-old Alexander to the front line of history: Alexander who was soon to conquer the world with his great campaigns in Asia,” the museum notes.

The exhibition was presented at a press conference on Wednesday by the MCA’s antiquity curators Panagiotis Iossif (professor, University of Radboud, Holland) and Ioannis Fappas (assistant professor, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki).

Photo: Paris Tavitian/Museum of Cycladic Art

Several of the objects are on public view for the first time, with archaeological evidence originating in excavations of the Polyandrion of the Thebans and the Tumulus of the Macedonians, both sites of multiple burials. 

Exhibition highlights include the tomb of the warrior from Igoumenitsa wearing battle gear, the historical Macedonian shield inscribed with the name of King Alexander, golden staters (coins) issued by Philip, Alexander, and his successors, and the bones of the Sacred Band of Thebes soldiers.

Andy Warhol’s 1981 “Alexander the Great” portrait from MOMus-Museum of Contemporary Art, one version of his iconic work that was commissioned by Greek collector Alexandros Iolas, is also on show.

“Chaeronea, 2 August 338 BC: A day that changed the world” further honors the work of Greece’s early archaeologists at the end of the 19th century and the start of the 20th, including reports of their excavations and includes information on how the modern Greek state handled the battle and its monuments in its narrative, and how the newspapers of those times saw it. 

The exhibition is divided into nine units. The last, “The Battle of Chaeronea today” examined how the battle can be reconstructed for younger generations that might not be familiar with museums. It includes a diorama of the battle with Playmobil figurines especially made by collectors for the show.

“We examine the event itself and what follows, we see what this famed Hellenistic world that opens up after the battle of Chaeronea is, and we experience its consequences to this day. All the gold that the Western world used up to 1492 is the gold that Alexander brought in his campaign. In other words, objects that had very long-term consequences and that we are still experiencing today,” Iossif said.

“The exhibition is unique because the objects are unique. If the specific objects did not exist, the exhibition could not have happened,” added Fappas.

MCA President and CEO Sandra Marinopoulos said that the Museum wanted to provide a platform to new archaeologists, who can bring new thinking, creativity, and enthusiasm.

She also announced that in April 2024 the museum would host the first museum exhibition in Greece of 100 photographs by Cindy Sherman, whose work continues to inspire and influence modern art today. The show will be part of the Museum’s contemporary art program. [ANA – MPA]