Dr. Farid Fadel
Egypt
Tel. 2362-5030 (Studio)/ 0128-670-5551
(Mobile)
Biography
Described
by some people as a true “Renaissance man,”
Farid Fadel was born in 1958 in Assuit, Upper
Egypt, into a family noted for both its
musicians and its doctors. He has since excelled
at medicine, art and music, taking all three
gifts very seriously.
In art, he has held 34 solo exhibitions; in
music, he has given several prominent recitals
and concerts, and in medicine, he obtained his
M.Sc. in Ophthalmology, and is presently working
as a practicing eye doctor at the Memorial
Institute of Ophthalmology, Giza.
In 1973, Dr. Fadel was awarded the Pope’s Medal
and Vatican Award in an art contest with 50,000
participants worldwide. In 1975, on the
inauguration of his fifth exhibition, the
Egyptian Parliament granted him a trip to Italy
to see Renaissance art, which had a strong
influence on his style. He has taken part in
several group shows, both in Egypt and abroad,
such as the People’s Show in Portland, Maine,
USA (1982), where he displayed fifteen
portraits. His fourteenth solo Exhibition was
held at the Egyptian Cultural Center, Mayfair,
London, 1989 and his 16th show in the University
of Toledo, Ohio, USA. In 2000, Dr. Fadel
traveled with his exhibition “On Both Sides” to
the USA where it was displayed in Ohio,
Connecticut and Washington D.C.
Some of his portraits were used as covers for
Egyptian magazines. One of his paintings was
chosen for the brochure of 1988 Nobel Prize
Winner, Naguib Mahfouz. Farid Fadel has
completed the illustrations of a Children’s
Bible with colored-plates that follow a Middle
Eastern approach to the stories of the New
Testament. The three volumes were published in
1991, 1993 and 1995 and were best sellers at the
Cairo International Book Fair. Dr. Fadel
participated in “the Call for Peace” group
exhibition during the Gulf War in 1991. He has
also participated in two benevolence exhibitions
to support the earthquake victims in 1992. For 3
successive years he has participated in the
exhibition “Physician as Artist” at Riverside
Hospital, Toledo, OH and won the Blue Ribbon
Prize in 1997. His interest in art theory
culminated in the establishment of his “AIN”
theory (Aesthetic Integrated Naturalism), which
explains his particular views on a naturalistic
approach to fine art in a post-modern context.
A manifesto was also published in 1997 during a
lecture he gave at the Toledo Museum of Art,
Ohio, entitled “Musicality in Art.” Dr. Fadel
has studied violin for 8 years with Professor
Adolph Menassa, and for the last 16 years has
studied piano. He has given piano recitals in
Egypt and the USA. He is also an accomplished
baritone-tenor soloist.
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