ADORNED

AFTERLIFE

 

Welcome to the site page for this research project.

To the right is a link to a full an illustrated justification PDF. 

The Appendices links to copies of other important documentation.


The Adorned Afterlife network was established by Bottomley in 2015 with a University of Edinburgh’s Challenge Investment Award. Bottomley brought together a network of international researchers from Design, Archaeology, Forensic Anthropology, History and Museology to examine hidden objects of adornment and share discourse and analysis through high-quality speculative multidisciplinary research. (see Appendix 1 and the Adorned Afterlife website, ‘’Network’ / Biographies’)

 

Museums contain many intangible artefacts from our past that relate to the body as adornment. These objects may be represented in paintings and carvings, or literally buried in sarcophaguses or beneath layers of funereal wrappings.  The interdisciplinary nature of the network enabled the examination of these items through each others specialist expert lens, leading to the insight that although we saw the same item, we used different terms and language to describe it’s attributed use and meaning.  Collectively we speculated on their purpose (why were they made), significance (both then and now) and how they were made (and by whom).

 

The methodology followed practice-based research, comparing craft makers primary knowledge with curators secondary and tertiary sources via filmed interviews and presentations through each other’s lens of enquiry, to “learn by active experience and reflection on that experience” ( Gray & Malins, 2004).  (See Appendix 1 and the Adorned Afterlife website, ‘Network’/ ‘interviews’ buttons)

 

The network’s 2016 symposium co-ordinated by the researcher explored existing precedents and new technologies for the non-invasive examining of artefacts and paintings in museums by computerised tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanning.  A focus was the funereal adornments, carefully sited personal objects, placed beneath the wrapped and sealed bandages of Rhind Mummy at the Granton archives, the National Museum of Scotland. 

 

The findings of the research were further presented in the paper ‘The Quick and the Dead: the Changing Meaning and Significance of Jewellery Beyond the Grave’ (Bottomley) at the Canadian Craft Biennale (2017) (See Appendix 2) and subsequently published as a ‘Visual-Textual Paper’in the Journal for Jewellery Research (2018). (See Appendix 3)

 

 

 

Click image above for full practice output incuding methodology