Alexxa Gotthardt
While
ancient Egyptian mummy portraits have long been objects of curiosity, only a
minimal amount of scholarship exists about them. Many questions have lingered
since they were uncovered by archeologists around the Egyptian city of Fayum in
the late 1800s. Who painted them? What pigments and substrates did the artists
use, and where were these materials procured? Were the paintings made during
the subject’s life or after death?
In
2003, the conservator Marie Svoboda made it her mission to unravel these mysteries.
She’d recently joined the ranks of the Getty Museum in Los Angeles, and while
the institution’s collection was rich and sprawling, a small group of 16 works
caught her attention. The detailed, wide-eyed faces in these paintings, known
as mummy portraits, date back to 100–250 C.E. Each of them had originally been
affixed to a mummy, shrouding the face of the dead.
Svoboda
knew that an examination of these portraits would reveal important information
about a group of artworks considered precursors to the Western painting
tradition. (As far as scholars can tell, the mummy portraits are the first
paintings that depict lifelike, highly individualized subjects and demonstrate
a fusion of funerary and artistic traditions between the Greco-Roman and
Classical worlds.) Svoboda also hoped that the answers to the many open
questions surrounding the works would uncover facets of early Egyptian culture,
especially in relation to the empire’s trade, economic, and social structure,
whose details are still hazy.
But
there are approximately 1,000 extant mummy portraits scattered across the
globe, and for accurate answers, Svoboda needed information beyond what the
Getty’s 16 works could provide. So Svoboda conceived of an international,
multi-institution research project to cull data from a wider corpus of
portraits and begin to untangle these questions. She named it APPEAR, or
Ancient Panel Paintings: Examination, Analysis, and Research. Since its
official inception in 2013, 41 institutions have come on board to bring together
information on around 285 paintings, almost a third of all known mummy
portraits. Mysteries have begun to be solved, too, though many more have also
been unearthed.
Before
Svoboda founded APPEAR, mummy portraits had faced myriad scholarship hurdles.
When excavations of Egyptian burial grounds and the subsequent trade of
artifacts reached full throttle, in the late 1800s, the portraits were often
ripped from the mummies they decorated. “You don’t get the full context,”
Marsha Hill, curator of Egyptian art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art,
explained to Artsy. “You’re playing with a very small deck when it comes to
actual portraits paired with actual mummies.”
What’s
more, the mummy paintings existed in scholarship limbo, falling somewhere
between classifications of Roman and Egyptian art. They’d been made in a time
of great cultural melding in Egypt, during the Roman occupation, and represent
both Egyptian funerary traditions (mummification) and the Romans’ burgeoning
experimentation with portraiture and painting techniques like encaustic—a
painting method that entails melting beeswax and then adding colored pigments
to it. “When they entered collections in the 19th century, mummy portraits were
viewed more as curiosities because no one really knew what to make of them,”
Svoboda told Artsy. “They weren’t completely Egyptian and they weren’t
completely Classical—they were both.”
APPEAR
is addressing these challenges by bringing together an array of scholars,
curators, scientists, and conservators to research a large group of mummy
portraits (a handful of which are still attached to their original mummies or
bits of shroud). To aggregate and easily compare information about these works,
participating institutions upload details on each painting’s size, materials,
inscriptions, tool marks, panel shape, decorative details, and more to a single
database.
The
project kicked off at a key moment in conservation innovation, when new
technologies allowing for less invasive analysis emerged. Ultraviolet
illumination, infrared reflectography, radiography, and other imaging methods
let conservators scan and characterize materials without having to extract
samples from the delicate works. “Before, you had to take a very large sample to
identify the pigment or wood, and with these precious objects, you can’t really
do that; most institutions won’t allow it,” explained Svoboda. “So these
developments have been enormous in advancing the understanding of [the
portraits].”
As
museums continue to populate the APPEAR database with new research, Svoboda and
her collaborators have begun to draw conclusions. Several point to the
formalization of artistic workshops during the 1st and 3rd centuries C.E., when
most mummy portraits were created. For instance, the skilled application of
tempera and encaustic paint—sometimes both on a single panel—indicates a
transference of technique from one artist to another in a studio setting. Some
scholars also hypothesize that varying panel shapes and sizes (some have
rounded corners, while others are diagonal; some are thick, others thin) may
denote the methods of a particular workshop or region.
Stylistic
likenesses between portraits have also become clearer as data coalesces.
Svoboda was especially excited to find that a mummy portrait housed in the
Norton Simon Museum, just across town from the Getty, bears a striking
resemblance to one in the latter’s collection. Similarities between the Norton
Simon’s Portrait of a Man and the Getty’s Mummy Portrait of a Bearded Man
include delicate brushstrokes used to render each subject’s curly hair, and how
the folds of each man’s robes were modeled. “Now, we’re trying to see if this
could have been painted by the same artist, and if not the same artist, maybe
the same workshop,” Svoboda said. “We were laughing at how these were painted
2,000 years ago in Egypt and they end up in another country 30 miles apart from
each other. What story can we tell about that?”
Tests
exploring the material makeup of the portraits have been especially fruitful in
helping identify the artists’ processes. Caroline Cartwright, a wood anatomist
involved in APPEAR, identified that 75 percent of the panels she studied were
painted on linden wood, which wasn’t native to Egypt. Mummy painters, it seems,
imported the material all the way from Northern Europe. A manufactured red
pigment identified in the works was traced to southern Spain—an additional nod
to the Egyptian empire’s far-flung trade. Likewise, the pervasive use of indigo
across the paintings potentially indicates that the deep-blue pigment was mass
produced. Some conservators even noticed small fibers embedded in the dye,
which suggests that it was recycled from Egypt’s textile industry.
An
in-depth comparison of the materials used across the portraits has also
unearthed details about their subjects and class structure in Egypt. Substances
like gold leaf and encaustic would have been more expensive and required
artisans of greater skill, so they were likely used for depictions of wealthier
denizens, while more affordable tempera paint might have been employed for
those with fewer means. “Just to have a mummy portrait painted meant that you
were of high social status,” said Svoboda. “But within that, we also see
portraits painted on local wood or recycled wood, or maybe they’re not painted
as well or they’re using inferior materials. So there is an economic range
within that social status.”
Svoboda
and the APPEAR team are also becoming clearer on a question that has dogged
them for some time: Were the portraits painted during the subjects’ lifetimes
or after their deaths? In large part, they depict young people; most look to be
in their twenties, thirties, and forties. Their large, exaggerated eyes suggest
an effort by artists to capture someone very much alive rather than recently
deceased. Yet CT scans used for studying mummies’ interiors reveal that the
ages of the deceased mostly match the ages of the corresponding portraits.
These findings “also support the census of that time, where they describe that
most people died young,” Svoboda explained, “because the lifespan was typically
cut short due to infection or childbirth.”
While
APPEAR has begun to offer answers to some of the mysteries surrounding Egyptian
mummy portraits, the organization is also cracking open new questions. Svoboda
hopes that when they reach what she describes as a “peak of data,” the APPEAR
project will be able to solve unknowns such as whether men and women were
painted using different methods or certain types of pigment, or whether
parallels in materials and techniques across various portraits can help
identify workshops and ancient artists. As the project embarks on its sixth
year, it seems there’s still much to discover. As Svoboda noted, “the more we
look, the more we want to know.”
https://www.artsy.net/article/artsy-editorial-unraveling-mysteries-ancient-egypts-spellbinding-mummy-portraits?utm_medium=email&utm_source=16528202-newsletter-editorial-daily-04-09-19&utm_campaign=editorial&utm_content=st-V
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