Myrtle Broome Explained

Myrtle Florence Broome
Birth Date:22 February 1888
Birth Place:Muswell Hill, London, England
Death Place:Bushey, England
Nationality:British
Field:Epigraphy, illustrations of Egyptian villages
Training:University College London
Works:Recording the Temple of Sethos I at Abydos in Egypt

Myrtle Florence Broome (22 February 1888 – 27 January 1978) was a British Egyptologist and artist known for her illustrated work with Amice Calverley on the Temple of Set I at Abydos in Egypt and her paintings of Egyptian village life in the 1920s and 1930s.

Early life and education

Myrtle Florence Broome was born on 22 February 1888 in Muswell Hill, London, England to Eleanor Slater and Washington Herbert Broome.[1] She received her art training at a school in Bushey founded by Sir Hubert von Herkomer.[2] From 1911 to 1913 she attended University College London and obtained a Certificate in Egyptology. Her teachers were Sir Flinders Petrie and Margaret Murray.[3]

Epigraphy career in Egypt

In 1927, Broome was invited to participate in a project being conducted in Egypt by the British School of Archeology. The participants, including archeologist Olga Tufnell, copied tomb inscriptions at Qua-El-Kebi, Egypt.

In 1929, Broome returned to Egypt to work as an artist with Canadian epigrapher Amice Calverley. Calverley had been hired by the Egypt Exploration Society in 1927 to copy the wall scenes in the Temple of Seti I, at Abydos. In the winter of 1928, a visit to Abydos by Mr. and Mrs. John D. Rockefeller Jr. changed the scope of the work being done. Rockefeller was so impressed with the painted reliefs and Calverley's photography like reproductions, that he decided to finance the entire project. As a patron of the Oriental Institute at the University of Chicago, he was also responsible for the Oriental Institute joining efforts on the temple endeavor with the Egypt Exploration Society.

Calverley was appointed director of the Temple project. With the increased funds, Broome was hired as Calverley's assistant in 1929. During eight seasons at the Temple, the two women were responsible for all the paintings and replications, with the help of a small staff of artists. Besides using large photographs to record the reliefs, the artists penciled over lines and inscriptions for a completely accurate rendering.

Broome and Calverley also used watercolor paintings to provide color to the reproductions, because only black and white photography was available at the time. The result of that effort is four volumes with coloured plates published by the University of Chicago between 1933 and 1958.[4]

The artists lived together in a mudbrick house near the temple with two local servants. Broome and Calverley were actively involved in the life of the village, participating in feasts and ceremonies and often providing medical assistance to the villagers. The two women traveled together throughout Egypt, taking trains and often driving across the desert in a Jowett car they named Joey; Broome's impressions from that time are noted in letters and illustrations that were sent to her parents.

Broome retired from Egyptology in 1937 and returned to England due to her father's illness. She later painted a number of watercolours of Egyptian villages and the surrounding landscape. Over seventy of her paintings are on permanent exhibit at the Bushey Museum in Bushey, England.[5] Broome's letters and papers are at the Griffith Institute in Oxford, England.

Design and craft career in England

Broome's father, Washington Herbert Broome was a music and book publisher. He was a contemporary of William Morris, an influential designer in the British Arts and Crafts movement. W. Broome worked with Morris at the Kelmscott Press before establishing The Old Bourne Press with James Guthrie. In 1907, W. Broome built a house in Bushey that is now listed as a historically interesting building with Historic England. The Broome house "Avalon" was designed and built in the late Arts and Crafts Style. Myrtle Broome created painted panels and decorations throughout the house. She is also mentioned as being a designer and a craft worker, who designed for Liberty.[6]

Avalon is also listed as the home of Myrtle and Washington Broomes' business – "Designers and Workers in Metal and Enamel". Historic England describes the house as being "of special interest as a building created for a designer and craftsman of the Arts and Crafts movement, containing a rich variety of decorative elements of the period designed by Broome and his daughter."

Selected bibliography

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: AE. Myrtle Florence Broome. Artefacts of Excavation: British Excavations in Egypt 1880–1890. Griffin Institute. 12 April 2017.
  2. Web site: Ruffle. John. Myrtle Florence Broome. Breaking Ground: Women in Old World Archeology. Brown University. 12 April 2017.
  3. Book: Bierbrier. Morris. Who was who in Egyptology. 2012. Egyptian Exploration Society. London. 978-0-85698-207-1. 82.
  4. Web site: Lesko. Barbara. Amice Mary Calverley (1896–1959). Breaking Ground: Women in Old World Archeology1. Brown University. 12 April 2017.
  5. Web site: Myrtle Broome 1888–1978. Art UK. Bushey Museum. 14 April 2017. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20170415013308/https://artuk.org/discover/artists/broome-myrtle-18881978. 15 April 2017. dmy-all.
  6. Web site: HE. Avalon. Historic England. 13 April 2017.