The museum is at Malet Place, near
Gower Street and the University College London science library. Admission is free. The museum has an exhibitions and events programme for adults and families. There is a Friends of the Petrie Museum charity that supports the museum.
Organisation and collections The museum's entrance gallery was renovated in 2019 and reopened to the public in 2020. It provides an insight into the history of the museum, its collections, and notable figures, including Petrie, Amelia Edwards,
Ali Suefi, and Violette Lafleur. The entrance also contains a small gift shop. The museum is split into three galleries. The main gallery (housed above the old stables) contains many of the museum's small domestic artefacts, mummy portraits and cases, and the Inscriptions Aisle. The Inscriptions Aisle displays tablets, including
Pyramid Texts, written in
hieroglyphics,
hieratic,
Greek, and
Arabic, and organised according to material type. Another gallery (the pottery gallery) contains many cabinets of pottery, clothing, jewellery, and
shabti figures, arranged chronologically. The entire collection has been digitised and the catalogue can be browsed and consulted online.
Significant holdings head of a king. Thought by Petrie to be
Narmer, based on the similarity to the head of Narmer on the
Narmer Palette. According to Trope,
Quirke & Lacovara, the suggestion that it is Narmer is "unlikely". Alternatively, they suggest the Fourth Dynasty king
Khufu.
Stevenson also identifies it as Khufu. Charron identifies it as a king of the Thinite Period, but does not believe it can be assigned to any particular king. Wilkinson describes it as "probably Second Dynasty". The museum contains over 80,000 objects and the
Tarkhan dress from the fourth millennium BC, the world's oldest known woven garment . The collection also includes material from the
Ptolemaic,
Roman and
Islamic periods. This includes Britain's largest collection of Roman period
mummy portraits. There is a substantial archive held in the museum, including excavation records, correspondence and photographs relating to excavations led by Flinders Petrie. There are additionally documents relating to the distribution of finds from fieldwork to museums worldwide between 1887 and 1949. ==List of curators==