Theo Brooks’s exhibit, Masking Rituals, displays explorations into ancient Cypriot cultural rituals, investigating the uses and creation of artefacts found in Cyprus from around 2000BC. The artefacts tell the stories of cult ritual gatherings in ancient Cyprus and their importance in Cypriot history. The activities that took place in these cult rituals are intriguing. They were often performed in multi-purpose spaces, which included metal forging and oxen sacrifice. These rituals were believed to pay tribute to the ‘Ingot God’ or ‘Horned God’. A lot of the rituals involved masking ceremonies, where participants would wear ceramic and bucranium masks, which allowed them to take on a persona to either be an intermediary with the god, or to be spiritually closer to them. These contemporary reflections are reinventions of the masks used and decorative elements from rhyton vessels and other libation objects. The works aims to promote Cypriot arts and culture.