by Michael Balaroutsos architect
" Missing link in the chain of ancient paintings, portraits of Fayum came to light late last century, putting a big problem in a small circle of scholars and collectors bent on n with interest, but manage to explain what was behind strange persons with tightly sealed lips and fiery eyes. The portraits, which give a realistic way sometimes women, sometimes men, sometimes children, kept their secret, and somehow distanced from the public. It took another hundred years to become known in the world, but even now, to have gained full understanding. This may be a role that is played for funeral portraits, namely that the principle destination was the future life: were to accompany the dead in another unknown world. If now we add that this is a well known type of painting that puzzled even the experts as to where to incorporate, we understand why the Fayum funeral portraits are still wrapped in a veil of mystery. For a century, museums were undecided whether to integrate them into the Egyptian, or Coptic to Greek and Roman collections, and all they did was to present it as a kind of curious, always on the sidelines when one and when the other of these collections ."
YOUNG ATHLETE" Missing link in the chain of ancient paintings, portraits of Fayum came to light late last century, putting a big problem in a small circle of scholars and collectors bent on n with interest, but manage to explain what was behind strange persons with tightly sealed lips and fiery eyes. The portraits, which give a realistic way sometimes women, sometimes men, sometimes children, kept their secret, and somehow distanced from the public. It took another hundred years to become known in the world, but even now, to have gained full understanding. This may be a role that is played for funeral portraits, namely that the principle destination was the future life: were to accompany the dead in another unknown world. If now we add that this is a well known type of painting that puzzled even the experts as to where to incorporate, we understand why the Fayum funeral portraits are still wrapped in a veil of mystery. For a century, museums were undecided whether to integrate them into the Egyptian, or Coptic to Greek and Roman collections, and all they did was to present it as a kind of curious, always on the sidelines when one and when the other of these collections ."
History
The term Fayum portraits meant the body of portraits painted by the 1st to the 3rd century by followers of the late Hellenistic tradition of the Alexandrian School and survived into modern times. The portraits discovered and first reported by the Italian traveler (Pietro Della Valle) in 1615. These funeral portraits, destined for burial use, took their name from the Fayum oasis, which were first discovered, 85 km south of Cairo.
The archaeological excavations carried out by British and French missions in the early 19th century revealed several portraits, but to spur the interest of connoisseurs of art. In 1887, residents of the area near al-Roumpagiat discovered and excavated mummification bodies with portraits of the head position. The specific works purchased by Theodor Graf (1840-1903), an Austrian businessman and presented in various European cities and New York.
A large proportion of the total corpus, however, came to the fore thanks to the English archaeologist William Flinders Petrie (Sir William Flinders Petrie), who in January 1900 seeking to enter the pyramid Hawar Fayum oasis in Egypt, identified the Roman necropolis of Arsinoe known from Herodotus as Crocodiles city , center of worship of the god Sobek.
The technique
Perfectly preserved because of the dry desert climate of Egypt, the Fayum portraits are painted either with the encaustic technique or the technique of tempera. These techniques come from the ancient painting tradition that continued in early Christian encaustic icons of the Monastery of Saint Catherine in Sinai.
The encaustic technique is characterized by the melted wax with the help of the "torrid" brush or "kestra" stretched on wood or cloth to be painted. The wax is spread evenly on the surface and painting on the artist performing the play he wanted. The work in many cases depending on the financial standing of the deceased used gold leaf, which is attributed to the decorative wreaths and jewelry.
Their look is familiar to you because you know these images from Byzantine icons. It is a look of a personal farewell, they look at your eyes directly but simultaneously also through you far away.
The Fayum Portraits: Greek and Roman painting style, encaustic (εγκαυστική) (from enkaio “to burn-in” ) on wood, part of the Egyptian culture (funeral portraits). They show the faces of the inhabitants of ancient Egypt at a period influenced by Greeks and Romans. The Fayum portraits are the best preserved paintings of Antiquity. Some of these produced by Greeks who worked in Egypt, part of the Greek population that settled in cities like Alexandria, when Egypt was ruled by Greek kings after the peaceful conquest of Egypt by Alexander the Great. The portraits, many from Fayum, are from a period when Romans followed the Greeks as rulers and their influence is shown (for example Roman fashion). Examples were found in various Necropolis: in Memphis (Saqqara), Philadelphia (Er-Rubayat and ‘Kerke’), Arsinoe (Hawara), Antinoopolis, Panopolis (Akhmim), Marina (el-Alamein), Thebes and Ankyronpolis (el-Hiba) and other places.
The artists
The painting of the Egyptians have a specific style.
It depicts the person in two dimensions and be deprived of the depth of the background.
Unlike the painting of the ancient Greeks who had discovered the concept of three dimensions long before the 7-8 century BC .
Therefore the Fayum is not Egyptian but Greek art.
The area of Alexandria, since the Pharaoh Ptolemy Greek (appointed by Alexander the Great), was inhabited by huge numbers of Greek immigrants.
Therefore what he paints the Fayum and was not Egyptian, was Greeks.
Later on the Roman Empire, was introduced some Latin Artists who learned painting from the Greek teachers
The Galerie
The term Fayum portraits meant the body of portraits painted by the 1st to the 3rd century by followers of the late Hellenistic tradition of the Alexandrian School and survived into modern times. The portraits discovered and first reported by the Italian traveler (Pietro Della Valle) in 1615. These funeral portraits, destined for burial use, took their name from the Fayum oasis, which were first discovered, 85 km south of Cairo.
The archaeological excavations carried out by British and French missions in the early 19th century revealed several portraits, but to spur the interest of connoisseurs of art. In 1887, residents of the area near al-Roumpagiat discovered and excavated mummification bodies with portraits of the head position. The specific works purchased by Theodor Graf (1840-1903), an Austrian businessman and presented in various European cities and New York.
A large proportion of the total corpus, however, came to the fore thanks to the English archaeologist William Flinders Petrie (Sir William Flinders Petrie), who in January 1900 seeking to enter the pyramid Hawar Fayum oasis in Egypt, identified the Roman necropolis of Arsinoe known from Herodotus as Crocodiles city , center of worship of the god Sobek.
The technique
Perfectly preserved because of the dry desert climate of Egypt, the Fayum portraits are painted either with the encaustic technique or the technique of tempera. These techniques come from the ancient painting tradition that continued in early Christian encaustic icons of the Monastery of Saint Catherine in Sinai.
The encaustic technique is characterized by the melted wax with the help of the "torrid" brush or "kestra" stretched on wood or cloth to be painted. The wax is spread evenly on the surface and painting on the artist performing the play he wanted. The work in many cases depending on the financial standing of the deceased used gold leaf, which is attributed to the decorative wreaths and jewelry.
Their look is familiar to you because you know these images from Byzantine icons. It is a look of a personal farewell, they look at your eyes directly but simultaneously also through you far away.
The Fayum Portraits: Greek and Roman painting style, encaustic (εγκαυστική) (from enkaio “to burn-in” ) on wood, part of the Egyptian culture (funeral portraits). They show the faces of the inhabitants of ancient Egypt at a period influenced by Greeks and Romans. The Fayum portraits are the best preserved paintings of Antiquity. Some of these produced by Greeks who worked in Egypt, part of the Greek population that settled in cities like Alexandria, when Egypt was ruled by Greek kings after the peaceful conquest of Egypt by Alexander the Great. The portraits, many from Fayum, are from a period when Romans followed the Greeks as rulers and their influence is shown (for example Roman fashion). Examples were found in various Necropolis: in Memphis (Saqqara), Philadelphia (Er-Rubayat and ‘Kerke’), Arsinoe (Hawara), Antinoopolis, Panopolis (Akhmim), Marina (el-Alamein), Thebes and Ankyronpolis (el-Hiba) and other places.
The artists
The painting of the Egyptians have a specific style.
It depicts the person in two dimensions and be deprived of the depth of the background.
Unlike the painting of the ancient Greeks who had discovered the concept of three dimensions long before the 7-8 century BC .
Therefore the Fayum is not Egyptian but Greek art.
The area of Alexandria, since the Pharaoh Ptolemy Greek (appointed by Alexander the Great), was inhabited by huge numbers of Greek immigrants.
Therefore what he paints the Fayum and was not Egyptian, was Greeks.
Later on the Roman Empire, was introduced some Latin Artists who learned painting from the Greek teachers
The Galerie
The Artemidorus mummy with scenes from Egyptian religion (Anubis or Anpu) at the bed of the dead with his sisters Isis andNephthys, Horus and Thoth around an emblem of Osiris. The soul of the dead in the form of a bird). Elements of Egyptian Religion in the Roman period with Greek text (Artemidorus farewell) |
Eutyhes Among these portraits there is a young boy with a Greek name, Eutyhes . His name probably is derived from eu and tyhe which means good and luck or lucky and in modern Greek also happy. But he was probably not so lucky and died very young probably around 50-100 AD. Due to the influence of the Greeks in Egypt for around 300 years and later the Romans many persons shown have Greek names and wear Roman clothes but their religion is Egyptian. |
Portrait of a young man from Hawar Museum, Petrie, University College London (UC 19610). Dimensions 0,395 x0, 27x0 ,003-4 m. The second excavation of Petrie, 1911.Period of Hadrian, 117 to 138.
This magnificent portrait is the second discovered by Petrie in Hawar. The freshness of the skin, as assigned by the artist gives the viewer the feeling that the girl has not ever seen the sun. The figure is depicted the dignity, seriousness, melancholy and spirituality. This major finding will certainly affect Petrie in the evaluation of the entire excavation and convinced him that while in these graves were not gems or gold, has a maximum value for the culture to save the great Greek tradition of portraiture.
WOMAN
The portraits depict women Hawar first and second century AD.
These women with jet-black hair and neat hairstyles, all have white skin, suggesting that they are not exposed to the sun. White and pink women's skin sample was noble birth and high social status. They wear all the colors (cyclamen, etc.) and ornaments (emeralds, amethysts, pearls) who say the economic situation of women but simultaneously a delight and joy of life. The girls were one could have the answer to the streets of any Mediterranean city even today. Their faces exude femininity and fragility seem to tell stories of love, maternal affection and human suffering
WOMAN
The portrait that heralds the Byzantine exemplary technique. The relationship between models and sarcoma is so perfect and works so well, that gives the viewer the illusion of perfect third dimension.
YOUNG WOMAN
WOMAN
The damage suffered by the region of the eye of the girl was probably caused, already in antiquity, from excessive heat.
WITH GILDED MAN PLASTER
The man of portrait so with green eyes and sad face, has been around hair arched frame (indicative signal origin from Hawar) from gold leaf embossed on plaster. This element could be interpreted as a precursor to Halo. No longer just radiates the face of the god Apollo or the Sun, but also of ordinary the dead people in the crocodiles city .
NEW MAN
Persons from Arsinoe are persons concerned. In these we see not only our friends and our neighbors, but mostly ourselves. Our face in the crowd on the market at the festival. Or at athletic events?
WOMAN
PORTRAIT OF ARTEMIDOROS
The Artemidorus The young man age nineteen or twenty years who died from head injury can be considered one of the first "when compared (both pagan and Christian), art. The misspelled Greek inscription in gold letters, writes Artemidorus `spirited (= Artemidorus, courage!). The gold cross in the plaster portrait may mean that some of his relatives had taken the initiative to add the Christian faith in the pantheon of gods who believed the family. The mummy of Artemidoros found by Petrie in a mass grave, together with the well embalmed body of a beautiful girl of Thermytharin, and a more mature man who was also called Artemidorus.
WOMAN WITH A WREATH OF GOLD LEAF
Dimensions 0,44 x0, 20x0, 005 meters from the first excavation of Petrie, 1888.
Antonine period (mid or late), 161 -192 AD
The portrait comes from the necropolis of Philadelphia. Characterized by the timeless elegance and intensity of the gaze, leads our thoughts and emotions in worlds unknown, lost in splendor and stories that can never be touched. This type of woman will be Mary in the hands of the artists will get more orders from Christians.
OFFICER |
ELDERLY WOMAN |
Today we know more than 1,000 portraits of Fayum, which are scattered in museums and private collections. It is the largest corpus of painting that came to our days of antiquity. Most of the portraits come from the Fayum region, a department of ancient Egypt, covering a wide and fertile valley some 60 kilometers south of Cairo on the west bank of the Nile. Since ancient times the area of Fayoum was called the "garden of Egypt" for its rich vegetation. It was a rich valley which seemed like an oasis in the vast silence of the desert. In the center of the valley resembles a natural lake basin was Moirida, which resembled the sea when the summer was overflowing and the Nile waters flooded the area. When the water withdrew, the people who lived in the highest points of valley cultivated the fertile land. The cities were built on the edge of the hills that surround the Fayum and nearby people used to bury their dead. Very old, in the 19th century BC, Pharaoh Amenemchat III built the pyramid of the Hawar of Fayoum and opened channels to try to control the flow of water to protect the valley from floods. But it seems that his efforts did not succeed and the place was forgotten.
The second boom came in the Fayum Hellenistic period, when in Alexandria was king Ptolemy II
the Philadelphus. The Philadelphus then gave the Fayum the name of his wife and sister Arsinoe and named the city he built there in Philadelphia. The valley is still fertile and now close to the Egyptians lived harmoniously Greeks, Syrians, Romans, Jews and Nouvians. It was a multiethnic society, open to different practices from other places and other tribes. The ranks of wealthy landowners and merchants lived on the edge of the "basin" of the Fayum and the Egyptians occupied the land. Like the rest of Egypt, over the years people spoke Greek. But were still worship the Egyptian gods and keep the old religious traditions. The Fayum seen in this boom period, which continued in the first three centuries of Roman occupation. Eventually, the taxes imposed by the Romans affected mainly the wealthy landowners, who slowly left the area, which then all filled by sand winds bringing the desert. So the valley of the Fayum forgotten once again and with its inhabitants, their works and their habits
What to say, watching these masterpieces, which were 2000 years ago.
Forerunners of modern painting, these artists are unknown, marked and singled out the styles in a unique way.
Distinguished all the techniques of Byzantine art and all styles of portraiture from the Renaissance onwards.
The diffusion of light in persons (the hardest part of painting art) and unparalleled craftsmanship of emphasis in Depth, pleasantly surprised.
The faces of the portraits are undoubtedly the elite families of Greek and Roman landlords and merchants and others who could afford comfort to ensure the immortality of the display of their form in the mummy. So the common element in most of these projects is the unique quality of art which he more than race, morphological or cultural barriers.
It is confirmation of the continuity of art from the Hellenistic school of Alexandria in the early Byzantine iconography. It is the missing link in the chain of painting now thought behind these strange forms with fiery eyes and lips tightly sealed. It is, finally, the fleeting and elusive shadows emerging from the Egyptian desert and have time to see the last glimpses of decreasing Alexandria and the first buzz of the upcoming Christianity. It's difficult transition from paganism to Christianity and is beautiful.
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