In Your Face

Painting of a nameless man
oil on canvas
sold

Quite a few years ago I saw the "fayum portraits" exhibit at the Metropolitian Museum of Art and was floored by the exquisite quality of the paintings/brushwork. I spent over two hours going back and forth examining them .

I have always been fascinated with the fact that once we are gone we become nothing more than the nameless mass of humanity that once existed. Oh we may exist in a piece of film, a photograph, but we are nameless faces. In flea markets there are sometimes boxes and boxes of old photographs of all these people, of aunts, uncles, wives, husbands, children. Their existence has been reduced to nothing more than a face on an old photograph. I just find it intriguing that we can look at a vintage photograph, or a painting that is thousands of years old of someone who once lived and breathed and ate and shat.



Comments

dinahmow said…
Yes, some of those portraits are beautiful;much more lifelike than the religious icons (which always seem to grab bigger headlines!)
I am always amazed at the luminosity.
Perhaps it's to do with the raw ingredients?
Anonymous said…
Hey Jafabrit. "Nameless Man" has a Lucian Freud look about him (if you'll forgive the allusion). I've always been fascinated by ephemera, the paper detritus of human life. There’s a haunting poignancy to old photos and scrapbooks. But the subject isn’t “reduced to nothing more than a face on an old photograph.” Photos and painted images such as the Fayum mummy portraits are mankind’s creative effort to make sense of the world and exert some degree of control over it. The images, and even more so the act of their creation, provide a sense of solace and comfort, and serve to memorialize those gone. The images fill a basic human need.
MadSilence
http://madsilence.wordpress.com
Iggi Art said…
Well, i like your job... very creative, you can transmit a powerfull force, an energy... a "romantic-furious" energy. I’m from South America, my work is some dark and funny (it´s rare mixing) if you have time, please visit my gallery on...

www.iggiart.blogspot.com
jafabrit said…
iggy I visited your blog, really cool work :)

thanks genius, I loved painting this one, very loose brush strokes. And you have me pegged madsilence LOL! I love Lucien Freud and while I wasn't thinking of him when I painted this I was influenced into thinking of brush strokes and the direction they go on in regards to muscles. Yes, I like how you put it regarding memorializing those that are gone,I do feel that way when I do faces.

That is what got me dinah, despite thousands of years and being tossed around, disregarded the luminosity and freshness was stunning. Some of the work looked like it was contemporary and just done recently. I LOVED that show.
Casey Klahn said…
This one turned up on my comments, and I thought of it when I saw your nameless -

DoDoDoDo...

Couldn't resist. Now I know something about Fayum portraits that I didn't know before. Thanks!
jafabrit said…
ha! ha! Casey!
The CafePress shop is a fab idea!!
Janets Planet said…
I want to call him Peter Sellers.

Yay on the Cafepress store. Now go to Imagekind or Redbubble. :-)
Unknown said…
Love this portrait -- the eyes are mesmerizing.

Good luck with the CP store! I've had no joy from my new Zazzle store (yet), but do so-so biz at RedBubble.

Hey, even creatives have to eat!
Heather said…
Love portraits too, and I have bought boxes and boxes of those pictures, whenever I find them. I snatch them up, they inspire many of my works. I know I said I was going to take an easy approach to marketing this year too, but my auctions keep selling and all of a sudden my work is moving in lots of places...so I guess I am not going easy on it at all. Bully for art sales!
Margot Potter said…
Corinne

I love your artwork. It's so emotive and yes luminous too. We've decided on luminous for Avalon's vocabularly word costume, funny eh?

Good on you for the Cafe Press shop. Why the hell not?!

I love ephemera too, I used to make up stories about the people in the photos and tell people they were my ancestors. Instant Ancestors. Ha ha. I'm drawn more and more into using ephemera in my work and I love using the actual items or making copies and digitally manipulating them. Two very different angles.

Rock on!
Margot

Rock on,
Margot
Margot Potter said…
I guess I really wanted you to ROCK ON! HA!
I saw a great collection of fayum portraits at the National galleries in London, I also spent hours contemplating them, they were Fantastic, This is what I like about the roman Civilization when it occupied Egypt, is that they added new techniques such as these portraits over Egyptian mummies, I think its great because it was out of respect !!
Tree said…
That's a lovely portrait.
I'm with you on the marketing bit but I too would love to sell stuff at Cafe Press. I have all these ideas for t-shirts and bumper stickers LOL
Good luck!
Synchronicity said…
i have such thoughts too...i wonder if we will live on through our blogs. :>) cafe press...i think this is a good idea. there is another site...deviant art. i think you can sell your art there...i am not sure.
Love the painting. Your work, not just this piece, always makes me think.
jafabrit said…
hiay lone beader, I am pretty pleased at how the work looks at cafe press.
Jan, I think I will just stick with cafe press for now, don't want to push it :) Want to see what happens with cafe press for a few months.

nice to see you w.j. I have heard redbubble is good and mixed reviews of zazzle. sigh! Guess we just have to plod along eh!

hmbt, it's odd isn't it, you let go of something and wham it happens LOL! Great going on the sales, YAY!!!!!!!!

Margot I love how you use ephemera in your work, such a different approach which is all the more interesting to me.

Thanks tree, it was incredibly easy to set up, which fits my, can't be arsed approach to marketing this year LOL!

hum, good question merelyme, I think though our blogs will pass into obscurity just like a lot of stuff.

Thanks Nancy :)
Steppen Wolf said…
Great painting... I liked the titled too. Clear, simple, direct and effective to illustrate the case in point...
Cynthia said…
I just popped on over to your cafe press shop and was looking for a mouse pad - wahhh.

Good luck with your shop!

I spent the better part of a weekend going through piles of stuff that I have been keeping for this or that. I managed to throw away/recycle most of it - but kept a box of my daughter's stuff. My SIL, remarked - "So you kept this for her, so she can look through it and then be burdened with it for herself later in life?"
San said…
Very powerful painting, Jafabrit. I feel as though I'm staring right into the soul of this man, and he's staring back!

Your reflection on those bits and pieces of lives in boxes is quite poignant too.

Thank you.

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