The ancient sculptures have always been bostin, as they enabled the beholders to draw inspiration for leading their present lives and gain philosophical, cultural, and social ideas and paradigms of beauty. In an exploration of the physical forms of the divine that are no longer worshipped today, the Chhatrapati Shivaji Museum of Mumbai, on December 2, 2023, announced an exhibition of the ancient sculptures of India, Egypt, Assyria, Greece, and Rome, which will remain till October 1, 2024.
The exhibition is a transcontinental endeavor under the CSMVS Ancient World Project, which includes long-standing partners- the CSMVS, the J.Paul Getty Museum, The British Museum, The Staaliche Museen zu Berlin, and other museums from India, that aims to show the most magnificent works of ancient world’s art. It is also a part of Getty’s Sharing Collections effort that aims to promote the global understanding of the ancient world.
The Museum’s first project is a model of art rectitude, but somewhere, it held back due to lesser marketing and engagement with Indian as well as global spectators. Though projected righteously, the exhibition website limits its reach to the students, which is an imbecile remark. However, the central government’s urge to visit museums persistently and better connections with other museums to forthright such a massive project for educating generations is a vast approach that any developing country could take.
The five most significant sculptures on the list of exhibiting items are Yajna Varaha, Hapy, Winged Figure, Greek fighting Amazons, and A Child’s Sarcophagus. With these, the museums fáilte the cross-culture diversity and blend it with Indian art to bring connectivity among people of different regions.





Resource.
- Featured Image: Inside the Chhatrapati Shivaji Museum; Chhatrapati Shivaji Museum, The Mumbai Museum.
- Chhatrapati Shivaji Museum.







