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Inji Efflatoun was an award-winning Egyptian painter as well as a political and feminist activist. In 1959, when the Nasserite regime (under Gamal Abdel Nasser) began massive detention campaigns targeting communists, intellectuals and artists were particularly affected. Efflatoun was among those arrested and became one of the first 26 women in Egypt to be political prisoners. 

During her incarceration from June 1959 to July 1963, Efflatoun painted fervently … when allowed, depending on alternating periods of permissions or bans as declared by successive directors of the institution.

Efflatoun completed at least 50 paintings in prison including a series of portraits of fellow inmates with similar framing, often cut above the chest, and an almost always frontal and hieratic representation of faces. Only the intensity of their gaze animates them, with varied expressions from the greatest distress to the iciest stare. Her very linear drawing, as well as the treatment of skin tones through the geometric juxtaposition of flat tints, shape the faces with their contrasting shades. These personal, individual representations of fellow prisoners stand out from her group scenes, in which the figures are often faceless—perhaps alluding to the dehumanization of inmates by the prison system.

This portrait presents a close-up of a middle-age woman whose gaze is directly at us. Her expression is serious, almost somber, conveying a sense of resolve and weariness. Her skin tone is rendered in muted, earthy tones of beige and light brown, with subtle shading to suggest depth and form. Her eyes are a striking, dark green, which contrasts with the overall muted palette and draws our attention. Dark eyebrows sit above her eyes and her lips are closed in a neutral line to further emphasize her serious expression. The woman's hair is dark brown and braided, partially visible beneath a grey patterned headscarf. She is wearing a coarse loose-fitting green shirt with vertical stripes.

Inji Efflatoun was an award-winning Egyptian painter as well as a political and feminist activist. In 1959, when the Nasserite regime (under Gamal Abdel Nasser) began massive detention campaigns targeting communists, intellectuals and artists were particularly affected. Efflatoun was among those arrested and became one of the first 26 women in Egypt to be political prisoners. During her incarceration from June 1959 to July 1963, Efflatoun painted fervently … when allowed, depending on alternating periods of permissions or bans as declared by successive directors of the institution. Efflatoun completed at least 50 paintings in prison including a series of portraits of fellow inmates with similar framing, often cut above the chest, and an almost always frontal and hieratic representation of faces. Only the intensity of their gaze animates them, with varied expressions from the greatest distress to the iciest stare. Her very linear drawing, as well as the treatment of skin tones through the geometric juxtaposition of flat tints, shape the faces with their contrasting shades. These personal, individual representations of fellow prisoners stand out from her group scenes, in which the figures are often faceless—perhaps alluding to the dehumanization of inmates by the prison system. This portrait presents a close-up of a middle-age woman whose gaze is directly at us. Her expression is serious, almost somber, conveying a sense of resolve and weariness. Her skin tone is rendered in muted, earthy tones of beige and light brown, with subtle shading to suggest depth and form. Her eyes are a striking, dark green, which contrasts with the overall muted palette and draws our attention. Dark eyebrows sit above her eyes and her lips are closed in a neutral line to further emphasize her serious expression. The woman's hair is dark brown and braided, partially visible beneath a grey patterned headscarf. She is wearing a coarse loose-fitting green shirt with vertical stripes.

“Portrait of a Prisoner” by Inji Efflatoun (Egyptian) - Oil on canvas / 1959 - Arab Museum of Modern Art (Doha, Qatar) #WomenInArt #art #WomanArtist #artText #WomensArt #InjiEfflatoun #Efflatoun #EgyptianArt #FemaleArtist #MATHAF #WomenArtists #PortraitofaWoman #EgyptianArtist #ArabMuseumofModernArt

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