LUTOR: The priceless funeral mask of Tutankhamen has been damaged at the Cairo museum, causing curators to glue it back together with white-ish, splodgy glue.
Speaking at a packed news conference at the Egyptian museum, restoration specialist Christian Eckmann said the beard, which has been detached before from the mask and had likely loosened over the years, was accidentally knocked off last August during work on the relic’s lighting. The cause of a scratch discovered on the mask had yet to be determined.
“There will be a committee of experts consisting of conservators, archaeologists and natural scientists in order to develop a plan for re-conservation,” he said. “Up till now we found one scratch which is visible but it cannot be said now whether this scratch is an ancient one, a recent one, or a modern one which just happened right now,” he added.
On Wednesday, museum conservators speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of professional reprisals said that the beard had been hastily glued back on with epoxy, a powerful adhesive extremely difficult to remove. The 3300-year old mask remains on display, with epoxy filling a small gap between the chin and what is known as a “model beard” commonly worn by kings and gods.
Museum administrators at the news conference declined to comment on which specific type of epoxy was used. Experts say adhesives used in such repairs are chosen for their reversibility, for which epoxy is not renown, although the difficulty of its removal varies according to the type of resin used.
Antiquities Minister Mamdouh el-Damaty, present at the conference, said he was only alerted to the incident two days ago.





