What's happening
PropertyConfigurator.configure(String) loads and reads a file from the file-system. Your property file is in the project directory, which would be the "current working directory" when you run from eclipse.
Once you've packaged everything up into a jar, and deployed it - only class files and "resources" are placed into the jar. Resources are non-java files that are under your source tree.
After you've copied the jar file to another machine, the properties file is no longer around.
Solutions
Since your properties file isn't a resource, you'll need to move it separately: place a copy of it on the file system (so it can be edited, updated, etc), in your current working directory of your target host/runtime environment.
Consider placing it in some common area of the file system: for example in /tmp/log4j.properties or ~/.myproject/log4j.properties.
Your code will have to be adjusted to look for it, accordingly.
Alternative
Copy the properties file into the root of the source tree (/src, be default). It should then be packaged in the jar. Load the data in the jar file as a resource: PropertyConfigurator.configure(getClass().getResourceAsStream()).
In this case, you can't simply edit the file to adjust your logging preferences.
Many times logic will be written to determine if a properties file is on the file system, and if not then load a default from the jar via this mechanism.