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1350 El Prado
San Diego, California 92101
Admission: $6 for adults; $3 for children 6 to 17; children
under 6, free ; $5 for seniors. Open year round; closed Christmas, New
Year's Day, and Thanksgiving.
The Museum of Man is found in Balboa Park near the west entrance off
of 6th Avenue, located in the historic California Building -look for
the soaring Spanish bell tower.
Phone: 619 239 2001
Fax: 619 239 2749
The San Diego Museum of Man possesses a permanent collection of
Egyptian antiquities called "Life and Death on the Nile",
which is housed in a separate area of the museum which leads to a
children's hall of discovery.
 With the exception of a
single borrowed mummy and case, the majority of the objects are small,
acquired from private collections and by donor gifts. These are not
particularly dazzling pieces, but collectively they provide a very
pleasant way to spend thirty or forty minutes examining bits and
pieces of ancient Egypt. A turquoise and lime-green tile from Amarna,
a decorated shrine box, ushabtis, and a number of faience amulets are
a few of the objects on display. Several small bronzes are in the last
case before entering the Children's Discovery Center with its
"Time Travel to Ancient Egypt" program where lucky young
ones get to make their own scarabs, play with Egyptian-themed rubber
stamps, wear a nemyss headdress, and put together a large
three-dimensional pyramid puzzle. (It's an excellent idea to bring
along a child so that you may also play with these things yourself
without attracting too much attention!)
At the entrance, there are a few cases of exhibit-related items for
sale. The adjacent gift shop offers several shelves of Egyptian books
for both adults and children, including some harder-to-find scholarly
titles. They also offer various inexpensive Egyptian gewgaws including
jewelry, greeting cards, bookmarks, scarabs, and statuettes.
A Short Tour of San Diego Egyptomania:
San Diego went
through a post-Tut "Egyptomania" period which resulted in
the erection of several Egyptianized buildings in the 1920s and early
30s. A few of these are conveniently located near Balboa Park where
the Museum resides. To see them, exit the park area by taking Park
Avenue going north from Balboa Park. On the right (East) side of
the 3800 block, look for the Nile Apartments building with its
brightly painted Pharaonic heads combined with Alexandria-style
arches.

Across the street is an Egyptian-themed bungalow court with winged
solar disks, a wounded architectural victim of near-destruction by a
sledgehammering landlord followed by an incomplete restoration.
Originally, the stubby rounded columns framing the coutryard were also
adorned with detailed images of
the Egyptian gods and goddesses. Continue on to see the now-closed
Park Theater near the corner of Park and University, built in the
shape of a huge pylon gate, again with the winged solar disk adorning
it. Finally, continue on Park to Adams Avenue, where the two-story
building housing The Lancers bar has a mildly Egyptianized coved roof.
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