RESTORATION & CONSERVATION WORK OF THE WALL PAINTINGS
IN THE ANCIENT CHURCH OF ST ANTONY THE GREAT
The Church of St Antony the Great is the oldest church in the Monastery dating back to the time of St Antony. This church is significant for two reasons: (1) it contains the greatest treasured relics of the blessed founder, St Antony the Great, which rest under the main sanctuary; (2) it contains the most exquisite and uniquely complete wall paintings dating back to the 13th century. Almost eight centuries of dirt and smoke had coloured these exquisite paintings black and made them unrecognisable, until a team of Italian conservators working for the American Research Centre in Egypt, and funded by USAID, undertook the extensive task of cleaning and restoring the wall paintings. This project was completed in 1999, and to celebrate this endeavour, a wonderful book on the Monastery and the wall paintings conservation project was compiled entitled Monastic Visions.
The wall paintings constitute by far the most complete and best-preserved iconographic program of Christian paintings to come from medieval Egypt. The paintings are of extremely high quality, both stylistically and conceptually. While rooted in the Christian tradition of Egypt, they also reveal explicit connections with Byzantine and Islamic art of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries.