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TIME: Almanac 1995
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TIME Almanac 1995.iso
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1994-03-25
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<text id=90TT0350>
<title>
Feb. 05, 1990: From The Publisher
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Feb. 05, 1990 Mandela:Free At Last?
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 4
</hdr>
<body>
<p> 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.
</p>
<p> 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?"
</p>
<p> 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."
</p>
<p> 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?"
</p>
<p> 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."
</p>
<p>-- Louis A. Weil III
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>