Thursday, November 29, 2012
Tuesday, November 13, 2012
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The purpose of this blog is to convey ideas about the freedom to Just Be.
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Wednesday, November 7, 2012
Tuesday, November 6, 2012
On Growing Up Between Genders
http://www.newhavenreview.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/NHR-10-Burt.pdf
LInk to an essay by Stephen Burt
"... According to the philosopher Marya Schechtman, our sense of continuous selfhood in time, of agency, of something to call 'I,' depends on an approximate congruence between the stories I can tell about myself and the stories that other people can tell about me..." - Stephen Burt, On Growing Up Between Genders:
"... According to the philosopher Marya Schechtman, our sense of continuous selfhood in time, of agency, of something to call 'I,' depends on an approximate congruence between the stories I can tell about myself and the stories that other people can tell about me..." - Stephen Burt, On Growing Up Between Genders:
Monday, November 5, 2012
Dress and Fitting In
A note pencilled by Virginia Woolf on her manuscript of the story "The New Dress"
Add your images, ideas, links, etc to this blog by clicking here.
The purpose of this blog is to convey ideas about the freedom to Just Be.
By clicking the link above, you can e-mail helpful information, resources, images, etc, that you would like to contribute.
The purpose of this blog is to convey ideas about the freedom to Just Be.
By clicking the link above, you can e-mail helpful information, resources, images, etc, that you would like to contribute.
Sunday, November 4, 2012
Olympia By Everyone
Olympia by Everyone
Olympia by Everyone
“Chicano Man as Manet's Olympia” Photograph by Claire Bain with Alfred Hernandez.
With his painting “Olympia,” Édouard Manet broke with the tradition of the reclining female nude as object, and all the trappings which depict women in subordinate, subservient, male-pleasing roles. While Alfred Hernandez was making “My Name is Alejandro!” Claire Bain was working on a photo/film series of variations on “Olympia” and the politics of representation. This photograph mirrors the themes that Hernandez was exploring, and bends the lines and rules of class and race as well as gender. Here we have a nude brown man waited on by a white servant, and like Manet's Olympia, he confronts the viewer with eye contact. Eye contact or the diverting of eyes is a subtle but large part of maintaining class, race, and gender roles.
Manet's "Olympia" |
I used an app called PhotoChop on this iPhone pic to put two of me into the picture. I find the sagging cheek quite becoming, don't you? |
Cricket's pink-haired gal as Olympia, me as the servant. Cracked is the word that comes to my mind! ha ha ha! |
Your Participation is Requested! Join the fun: I am staging the Olympia painting, and invite people to pose as characters in the painting. I then photograph or film the participants.
Please contact me at: {artistabain at yahoo dot com}, 415-789-7299 if you would like to participate. You can act as any of the characters: Olympia the courtesan (prostitute), the Servant (whose name I wish I knew), and the Black Cat. This is a collaboration with you, so I am interested in your ideas of roles, meaning, etc. For example, one person wants to be the cat; another wants to put body tape on her chest to re-shape herself to look more like Olympia. I am interested in your ideas.
If you don't want to pose nude, I have several body suits available to wear, and props are available for you to use to adjust your gender, if you like. I have a costume for the Servant available, or you may have an idea for other costumes. Through the magic of trick photography, you can even play all the roles in the painting.
Keep in mind that the original painting has layers of significance and meaning: the model was herself a painter named Victorine Meurant. I am searching for images of her paintings; she showed in the Paris Salon, too. She modeled for several of Manet's paintings, including the scandalous "Picnic in the Grass/Dejuener sur l'Herbe." The painting is full of race, class, and gender issues that can resonate in the 21st century just as well as they did in the late 1800s when Manet presented the painting.Of course, meaning is in the eye of the beholder, so people have many interpretations. of art. I look forward to seeing what you come up with. No need to over-think it: whatever you feel like is fine.
I hope you will participate! If you cannot come to the studio, you can send me photos of yourself in any of the roles, and I can trick them into the scene. Here are studies of the poses for you to refer to:
Note that the necks of Olympia and the Servant are both almost vertical, as is the axis of the cat.
The axis of Olympia's torso leans to the left, while the Servant's leans to the right.
Neither pose is very easy to imitate, as is often the case with paintings of figures.
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A general overview--about the painting and the uproar it caused:
https://www.mtholyoke.edu/courses/rschwart/hist255-s01/courtesans/Manet-olympia.htm
A paper on Olympia. I love that the page about the author has her interests ranging from Jimi Hendrix to sports.
About the Servant:
Please excuse the use of "Girl" in this page. I am including it as a source of relevant information.
Victorine Meurent, the model who was also a painter.
Getting closer to honor due
All kinds of stuff, true or not
About the Cat: An artist's blog.
Take-offs of this painting are almost a genre--see some examples by others