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- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 4
-
-
- How do you capture the face of a man who has not been seen
- in public for the past 27 years? Ask artist Paul Davis, who
- painted this week's cover of Nelson Mandela. No new pictures
- of the African National Congress leader have been available
- since the early 1960s. Relatively few people know what he looks
- like today.
-
- Davis began with an old Mandela picture, imagining how
- decades of hard time would change him. Four years ago, TIME
- commissioned Davis to paint Mandela as a young man. We sent a
- copy to South Africa for suggestions on how he had changed.
- Johannesburg bureau chief Scott MacLeod, who wrote this week's
- cover, showed it to Mandela associates. Using their comments
- as a guide, Davis painted a portrait of an older Mandela, his
- hair flecked with gray. Then we faxed a copy of this version
- to MacLeod, who showed it to Winnie Mandela. "It was like the
- way police artists work," Davis explains. "You add to the
- picture and then ask, Is this right? Is there more of this or
- more of that?"
-
- Of the various renditions, Mrs. Mandela said the unfinished
- portrait was "the nearest likeness to today's Mandela." But she
- thought his face was too round, although Davis had caught the
- hardness in his eyes. Said she: "Years of suffering you can't
- take away. That expression he did not have before prison."
-
- So Davis created a third portrait of Mandela on a midnight
- Friday deadline. "This was unlike anything I have ever done
- before," says the artist, who also illustrated TIME's covers
- of Captain Joseph Hazelwood and Bernhard Goetz. "Usually there
- is a lot more information to work with. But the problem is
- still the basic one: How do you create a portrait faithful to
- the person?"
-
- And what of the man behind the painting? MacLeod, who
- interviewed Mandela's comrades from Britain to Africa, says,
- "I came away impressed by how this man burdened with problems
- has remained very much the head of his family. Even from
- prison, he managed to buy and wrap Christmas presents -- a box
- of chocolates for his wife and earrings for his daughter."
-
-
- -- Louis A. Weil III
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