The façade of the museum
was also decorated with reproductions of huge statues of the great king to
welcome visitors and indicate that the city was welcoming the exhibition after
it achieved a resounding success in its third stop in the French capital,
Paris, where it was visited by about 817,000 visitors during the duration of
its exhibition.
The Australian people
and the city of Sydney are celebrating the arrival of King Ramses II and his
possessions, who is a guest for the first time in the city of Sydney, as the
walls of some shops and buildings are decorated with banners of the face of
King Ramses and some of his possessions.
After the end of the
press conference, at the Australia Museum in Sydney, marking the official
opening of the “Ramses and the Gold of the Pharaohs” exhibition, Dr. Mustafa
Waziri, Secretary General of the Supreme Council of Antiquities, the official
delegation from the Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities, and Ambassador Mohamed
Khalil, Consul General of Egypt in Sydney, Australia, were keen to inspect the
exhibition halls designated for the exhibition. This is to determine the latest
equipment for the exhibition halls in terms of the placement of the pieces,
their display scenario, the lighting system, and the extent to which insurance
and precautionary measures are applied and the means of safety and civil
protection to ensure the safety of the antiquities.
Dr. Mustafa Waziri expressed his admiration for the style of presentation in the exhibition halls and the method of promoting the exhibition, as the streets, shops and schools were filled with advertisements for the exhibition. He described the propaganda as important because it will encourage all residents of the city of Sydney and its visitors from inside and outside Australia to visit the exhibition, and it will also contribute to raising generations of Lovers of Egypt and its unique and ancient civilization.
During the tour, a
number of different media outlets, which were present at the museum to attend
the press conference to announce the exhibition hours before its opening, were
keen to hold a number of media meetings with the Secretary General of the
Supreme Council of Antiquities, which included dialogues and meetings with more
than 25 news agencies, newspapers, and press magazines. Australian,
international and Arab television channels.
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