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The Fayum Portraits

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Looking through the many alluring artifacts in the Egyptian exhibit of the National Museum Of Natural History, one will tend to not notice every single amazing piece of history. One artwork stands out from the usual Egyptian artwork society as a whole has become used to. The Fayum Portrait from 50-200 AD. It comes from the Fayum agricultural region where a mixed Egyptian and Greek population lived for about four centuries.

Fayum portraits “...are the earliest painted portraits that have survived; they were painted whilst the Gospels of the New Testament were being written” John Berger, The Shape of a Pocket (Great Britain: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC, London, 2001), chap. 6. The term actually comes from a Coptic word meaning "The land of the lake," which refers to the Lake Qarun. This lake was a project of the kings of the Twelfth Dynasty, and …show more content…

In their masterful style and method, the representations on wood boards took after the Greek painting custom of delineating the subject in a three-quarter view, with a single light source casting realistic shadows and highlights on the face. In fact, since no works of art from the Greek world have been protected, the portraits — moderated by Egypt's parched atmosphere — are the main cases of a fine art that old abstract sources put among the most noteworthy accomplishments of Greek culture. Other than style and procedure, the garments, haircuts, and gems worn by the people spoke to in the portraits show forms that were pervasive in the entire Roman Domain, most likely under strong influences from the imperial court at Rome, but also incorporating special eastern Mediterranean characteristics like profusions of curls in some of the female hairdos. None of these styles and fashions had any connection with traditional Egyptian customs. Simply put, the portraits look as if they have no links with Pharaonic

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