bathtub mermaid


Biblical Portraits

I have always been fascinated with the role of women in the Judeo-Christian doctrines. The portrayal of the female throughout religious dogma is misogynistic at best; from the very beginning Eve is created from Adam’s disposable rib (whereas he himself is modeled in the image of God). She is inherently inferior, dependant on man for her very existence, and subsequently becomes the cause of mortality, of pain, and of suffering.

 

While some may say that this is irrelevant in our largely secularized, supposedly scientifically founded society that religion is merely archaic. I disagree, however. I firmly believe that religion provides a fabric, entwined in the very foundation of our society and our collective opinions. And these misogynistic sentiments have become imbued within our consciousness.

 

I have attempted to appropriate iconic biblical imagery by borrowing from historical religious works of art. While remaining true to the canonical symbolism, I have tried to subtly contemporize these photos, imbuing them with a current relevancy, while still harnessing the innate power of these icons.

 

Feminist theorist Naomi Wolf argues that in modern society, the subjugation of the female within religion has been replaced with the equally omnipotent power of the beauty standard which functions in a similar role. She compares beauty regiments to rituals of the church, basing her argument around how advertisers now assign a moral imperative to beauty (for instance sexual abstinence has been replaced with a need to abstain from a new oral pleasure; chocolate is sinful, but salvation can be found in diet products). No longer is a “good” woman a pious one suppressed by her sexual chastity, but rather the feminine value is placed solely in the arena of appearance. In an attempt to pay homage to Wolf’s ideas, and lend this canonical imagery a topical contextualization in modernity, I wanted to make these photographs aesthetically focused, almost as though they could be in fashion magazines (which I suppose could be construed as the contemporaneous master paintings of antiquity). I emphasized the beauty elements of these photographs, contrary to the naturalistic aesthetic of classical paintings. My icons wear meticulous and exaggerated make-up; St. Catherine dons green nail polish and Mother Mary wears harlot red lipstick.

 

The characters I have chosen resonate with misogyny and themes of subjugation in their pedigrees, many of which I feel are incredibly relevant to contemporary women’s issues. The wayward adulteress, the defiant wife, the pious mother and the starving saint, though antiquated, are all allegories that , in my opinion, correlate with modern perspectives of the female.

 

While predominantly I have focused on female characters within the Judeo-Christian doctrines, I did attempt to emulate some masculine icons and subsequently played upon the sexual ambiguity of religious paintings. It was my intention that this reversal of gender would further emphasize and put into question the nature of gender roles in religion and the implicit misogyny therein.

 

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Garden of Eden. Self Portrait. 2011.

Mary Magdalen. Self Portrait. 2011.

St. Catherine of Siena. Self Portrait. 2011.

Judith Slaying Holofernes. Self Portrait. 2011.

Mother Mary. Self Portrait. 2011.


Jesus. Self Portrait. 2011.

St. Agatha. Self Portrait. 2011.

Potipher's Wife. Self Portrait. 2011.

St. Rose of Lima. Self Portrait. 2011.

St. John the Baptist. Self Portrait. 2011.



Religious iconography: Biblical Portraits

I’ve often wondered if religious ideology is one of the dominant sources for misogyny. It is without question the bible is entrenched in misogynistic sentiment, adamant that women are the inferior sex and subject to flagrant subjugation. Eve is created from Adam’s disposable rib, whereas he himself is modelled after God; she is innately lesser, dependant on man for her very being. And it is her curiosity that dooms human kind to suffering, mortality, evil. In the opening chapters of Genesis it states, “To the woman he [God] said, ‘I will greatly increase your pains in childbearing; with pain you will give birth to children. Your desire will be for your husband, and he will rule over you.” -Genesis 3:16

Now, some may say that this is irrelevant, that in our largely secularized, supposedly scientifically founded society that religion is merely archaic. I disagree, however. I firmly believe that religion provides a fabric, entwined in the very foundation of our society and our collective opinions. And these misogynistic sentiments have become imbued within our consciousness.

Naomi Wolf, one of my absolute favourite feminist theorists argues in her iconic book, The Beauty Myth, that religion has been supplanted by the repressive beauty ideal in contemporary society. She writes, “Society at large no longer places religious importance on women’s virginity or marital chastity, asks them to confess their sins or keep a kitchen that is scrupulously kosher. In the interim after the ‘good’ woman’s pedestal had been destroyed, but before she acquired access to real power and authority, she was bereft the older context in which she had been given the trappings of importance and praise” (91). Wolf draws many parallels between religious terminology and contemporary beauty industries. One in particular I found striking was the connection between food and moral judgement; chocolate is sinful, there is salvation in diet products. Whereas sex for pleasure without the intent of reproduction was seen as sinful through the religious doctrine, after the sexual revolution; it is now oral pleasure of another kind that has become the cardinal sin.

In an attempt to pay homage to Wolf’s ideas, and lend this canonical imagery a contextualization in modernity, I wanted to make these images aesthetically focused, almost as though they could be in fashion magazines (which I suppose are the contemporaneous equivalent of master paintings of the past).

These are the first round of proofs, pardon the dust on my scanner. I’m pretty excited with the prospect.

Self Portrait as St. Catherine of Siena. Polaroid Proof. 2011

Self Portrait as the Virgin. Polaroid Proof. 2011.

Self Portrait as Jesus. Polaroid Proof. 2011.



this is airborne, this is warfare: an analysis of the advertising tyranny against the female body

Since its mass inception in the mid eighteen hundreds, advertising has been inextricably bound to the reproducible image, particularly with regards to the photograph. From the invention of colour printing (Stein 155) to the development of computer-oriented post-production software (Kilborne 122), marketing has been a propellant force behind the advancement of photographic technology. However, advertising is not merely just a medium for consumerist advancement. Jean Baulldriard argues that the process of socialization can, “be measured by the exposure of media messages” (80). That is to say, the Western sense of cultural identity and social interaction is built upon the objectives of advertising and predominant media. There is no sector that asserts the notion of social manipulation through advertising as well as that of women’s media. Not only does it define and consequently transform the nature of gender roles (as seen in War-time advertisements) but also the very shape of the physical feminine body.  A historical analysis of the progressive nature of advertising provides shocking insight into the psychological power it holds over the female, and in turn, its omniscient manifestations on the physical body.

Without question the reproducible image was responsible for creating a widespread, hegemonic ideal of beauty. Feminist Naomi Wolf asserts this point in her book, The Beauty Myth, stating, “For the first time new technologies could reproduce- in fashion plates, daguerreotypes, tintypes, and rotogravures – images of how women should look” (15).  Prior to the invention of photography, the circulation of images remained relatively limited, and subsequently a universal standardized ideal of the feminine figure could not be promoted. Dr. Michael Levine and Dr. Linda Smolak comment that the seemingly benign media images superficially, “both promote and reflect body shapes, styles of clothing”, however, psychologically they, “symbolize complex themes of gender, race, class, beauty, identity, desire, success and self-control in post-industrial societies” (236).  Thus, the imagery that has come to permeate every facet of society becomes a signifier for cultural values and ideologies as dictated by the constructers of advertisements and other mass mediums.

No example is more indicative of the power of advertising influence over the dictation of the feminine role than that of the transformative advertising that arose during and after the Second World War. For the first time, women were welcomed into the male arena of physical labor under the solidarity of the war effort, and convinced to do so largely through advertising (see Fig. 1).  War Historian and gender analysist, John Costello, asserts the reliance on advertising in his book Virtue Under Fire, explaining that “massive Ministry of Labor advertising campaigns launched in 1941 persuade[d] British women to leave the clean comfort of their homes for the production battle” (164), and in America,  “the War Manpower Commission then turned to…Madison Avenue to boost its national campaign to attract first-time women workers” (181). According to estimates by the Ministry of Labor, over 80% of all single women between the ages of fourteen and forty-five joined the labor force

(Costello 157), transforming the stereotypical housewife into a denim- clad, machine-wielding heroine. However, once the war had ended, the media returned to old conventions. Former writer for the Ladies’ HomeJournal, Betty Freidan explains that the transition from workingwoman back to domesticated housewife was, “reflected in the pages of women’s magazines [and] was sharply visible in 1949 and progressive through the fifties”(92). The stark contrast between the powerful Wartime heroine to housewife is beautifully demonstrated by an advertisement for Pep Vitamins (Fig. 2), appearing only two years after the war had ended. It is testament to the exaggerated push for both patriarchy and domesticity that was widely circulated contemporaneously.

The late 1960s saw a sudden shift in the beauty canon- which had previously valued curvaceousness as an appealing female sexual characteristic- as waif-like models like Twiggy began to dominate the world of fashion (Bordo 102).  Foucauldian Feminist, Dr. Susan Bordo, asserts that the, “emergence of such rigid and highly moralized restrictions on female appetite and eating are, arguably, part of a 19th century cultural ideological counter-offensive against the new woman and her challenge to prevailing gender arrangement and their constraints on women” (115-116). Empirical data from psychological studies have supported this notion, as studies by Levine and Smolak have demonstrated that, “historical changes in direct and indirect media messages about the importance of slenderness in the definition of ideal femininity during the 20th century reveal a strong positive correlation between periods of message intensification following women’s political activism (eg., during the 1920s and in the 1970s and 1980s) and an increased incidence in eating disorders” (238).

It is easily concluded that the introduction of a widespread contemporary zeitgeist for thinness is not accidental, but a calculated strategy to control the female body, and in turn, her mind. It is estimated that over the past thirty years the weight of the average model has plummeted from 8% thinner than the average female to a staggering 23% (Kilborne 129). In seeming contradiction, rates of obesity in North America have sky rocketed (Garner DM et al 47), creating an ever-increasing discrepancy between the weight that is idealized and that which is common. However, though opposing, the two are not mutually exclusive. Media theorist, Jean Kilborne explains stating that the diet and so-called “junk food” industries, “depend on each

other … in order to be profitable, both these industries require that people be hooked on unhealthy and mostly unsatisfying food; high in fat and sugar. In addition, the diet industry depends upon a rigid cultural mandate for women to be thin” (122). Weight Watchers, one of North America’s leadingweight-loss firms, for instance, often depicts decadent food, devoid of nutritional value, filled with calories and fat, and glaringly in contradiction to their apparent doctrine (see Fig. 3).   The subsequent internal struggle that arises from these opposing forces creates a perpetual cycle between weight gain and weight loss; creating the ideal consumer who buys the highly processed food, and then pays in an attempt to lose the weight (Kilborne 123). One need only look at the burgeoning diet industry, which has more than tripled in recent years (Kilborne 123) to see evidence of the desperation of the modern woman to control her body. Consequently, fat becomes not merely about weight, shape or size, but is considered deviant, abnormal and becomes deeply imbued with morality. Further, it incubates an environment for self-hatred and body-dissatisfaction in the individual body.

It is semantic knowledge that images featured in advertising and magazines in contemporaneity are highly mediated and manipulated in post-production, through digital programs such as Photoshop in which the body can be completely transformed and perfected. However, it is not the production we experience, but rather the final result: the image itself. Bordo comments that the spectator is “unable to cast a shadow of doubt over the dazzling, compelling, authoritative images”(104), she continues that it, “is the created image that has the hold on our most vibrant, immediate sense of what is, what matters, of what we must pursue for ourselves”(104). Jean Baudrillard explains the notion that contrary to representation, which, “stems from the principle of the sign and the real” (6), simulations (that is, mediated imagery), “stem from the utopia … from the radical negation of the sign as a value, from the sign as the revision, and [become the] death sentence of every reference” (6).  As a result, the mediated, constructed image is, “artificially resurrected under the auspices of the real” (Baudrillard 8), and deceptively experienced as an objective reality.  The perception of the simulation as reality has startling physical repercussions, for as Baudrillard explains, the manipulated medium subsequently, “transforms the real” (82), creating a dangerous index for the individual body to strive to attain (see Fig. 4). The contemporary standard for body shape is a veritable fun-house mirror; there is little semblance to reality left in the exaggerated images the media bombards us with on a daily basis. Jean Kilborne draws correlations between the manipulated images depicted in the media and “resulting eating problems, which range from bulimia to compulsive overeating to simply being obsessed with controlling one’s appetite” (135). Prior to the nineteen-seventies, eating disorders were virtually unheard of, however, today have reached epidemic proportions (Bordo 168).  Certainly there are biological predispositions and genetic characteristics that influence the development of eating disorders (Levine and Smolak 248), however, the sociocultural factors such as the current media climate and its narrow range of representation play a pivotal role.

The effects of advertising on the female are blatantly demonstrated through its historical incarnations and the subsequent transformation of contemporaneous gender roles. The emergence of a hegemonic mandate for slenderness has created warfare against the feminine body. With technological advancements, simulations have helped create a dangerous, unattainable standard for weight and shape; breeding body-contempt in the individual and consequently assisting in the creation of a cultural environment in which fatal eating disorders- ranging from obesity to Anorexia Nervosa- can flourish.

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Works Cited

Baudrillard, Jean. Simulacra and Simulation. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1994.

Bordo, Susan. Unbearable Weight. Berkley, California: University of California Press, 1995.

Costello, John. Virtue Under Fire: How World War II Changed Our Social and Sexual Attitudes. New York: Fromm International Publishing Corporation, 1987.

Friedan, Betty. The Feminine Mystique. New York: W.W. Norton & Co., 1997.

Garner DM, Garfinkel P, Schwartz D, Thompson M. Cultural expectations of thinness in women. Psychological Reports, 1980.  484–491.

Kilborne, Jean. Can’t Buy My Love. New York: Touchstone, 1999.

Levine, Michael P. and Linda Smolak. “Media as a Context of Disordered Eating,” The Developmental Psychopathology of Eating Disorders: Implications for Research, Prevention and Treatment. New Jersey: Lawrence Eribaumm and Associates, 1996. 235- 257.

Stein, Sally. “The Graphic Ordering of Desire: Modernization of a Middle Class Housewife, 1914-1939,” The Contest of Meaning: Critical Histories of Photography, Ed. Richard Bolton Boston: Massacheusits Institute of Technology, 1992. 141-162.

Wolf, Naomi. The Beauty Myth. Toronto: Random House Canada, 1990.



From the Venus of Willendorf to Twiggy: A Breif History of the Western Hegemonic Female Ideal

It isn’t difficult to see that the ideal feminine beauty is entirely a construct of culture, and as such, constantly wavering. Theres no such clearer way of proving this assertion than through the study of visual culture, for the objectified  female  seems to be in contention with only religion as far as subject matter goes. A Professor of mine once remarked that “the history of art rested upon the back of the reclining female nude”.

Venus of Willendorf. c. 22,000 BCE

It is commonly known that within the spectrum of history the  so-called feminine ideal has predominantly been voluptuous; fat meant fertility, it alluded to wealth and health. And so, the objectification of the female body began with the Venus of Willendorf, obese by contemporary definition. Faceless. Voiceless. Pardon my colloquialism, but a pre-historic effigy of a “piece of ass”.

Well throughout the Renaissance and into the 17th century, the ideal of the female remained full-figured.

Peter Paul Rubens. Leda and The Swan. 1599.

Glorified by Finnish painter Peter Paul Rubens, the “Rubenesque” body type remained idolized through the Baroque era until, that is, the invention of the corset. Suddenly, women were restrained in the name of aesthetics. Their ribs realigned or broken, their bodies disfigured, tortured and contorted in the name of fashion, and so the fixation on thinness began.

Corseting reached it’s pinnacle in Victorian times when an incredibly tiny waist and exaggerated hips (a flagrant sign of fertility) became the hegemonic ideal with regards to the female body. It is interesting that this time period also saw the beginnings of female mental disorders such as hysteria and anorexic. Not only was the docile woman physically suppressed and constrained, but they were also locked in solitude in dark rooms in the name of insanity.

When women won the vote, the post-suffragette ideal changed yet again. The roaring twenties saw the idolization of the boyish figure, perhaps mimicking masculinity (while still maintaing a certain subjugation with youthfulness). Streamline, with very little discrepancy between hip to waist ratio, the thin ideal continued to be perpetuated until wartimes which saw a resurgence of

Marilyn Monroe, who wore a size 14

voluptuousness, perhaps in contrast to the devastation that had just occured. Concurrent with the baby boom, icons like Marilyn Monroe and Jayne Mansfield sexualized and popularized the fertile fleshy female within mainstream culture.

But that was shortlived. The sixties brought Twiggy, a waif of a girl, whose measurements (32-23-32) by today’s standards would be anorectic. And as women advanced in the workplace, the focus on their bodies continued to be propagated. The seventies brought icons like Jane Fonda, who not only compulsively excercised, but threw up off camera to maintain her svelte image. The diet and exercise industries boomed, and women became more and more fixated with their bodies. Interestingly, this is also the era that Anorexia Nervosa came under prolific media scrutiny, predominantly on account of the death of Karen Carpenter.

Kate Moss. 1991.

The nineteen nineties brought visionary Calvin Klein’s heroin chic, and suddenly eating disorders became idealized within the fashion industry. Models became far thinner than the general population creating a vast discrepancy between what was idealized and what was attainable for the individual. Technological advancements like Photoshop, increased this impossible, fictional standard and exasperated the “average” woman even further. And,  concurrent with this trend came the rise of instance plastic surgery: if one is not born perfect, one can attain it through money. The American dream at its finest.

Today, the diet industries account for $40 billion dollars of the grosse domestic income. It is commonly understood that images in the media are heavily doctored, but still, more than 65% of American women have reported disordered eating behaviors (Science Daily, 2008). According to Naomi Wolf in her book The Beauty Myth, as many as one in five girls on American college campuses suffer from either Anorexia or Bulimia. Just as woman progresses and participates in formalized education, she is curtailed into obsessing over her weight. One might say it  almost seems strategic.

It’s contradictory to me in a time when calorically high foods are in abundance and the predominant population is, in fact, overweight, that the ideal continues to shrink. Perhaps it shows the shift from survival to leisure. No longer is beauty about health, but control.

I once read a study on the island of Fiji. When introduced to American television in 1995, their incidence of bulimia rose abruptly from 3% to 15%, a staggering five percent within the course of a year. Dieting had been virtually unheard of on the island, who tended more towards a fuller-framed woman, however, after the introduction of shows like 90210, this number rose to an inordinate 62% (Dimensions Magazine, 1998).If this doesn’t definitively assert the power which the media holds in determining the hegemonic ideal, then I don’t know what does.




a lesson in exposing yourself in front of lenses and mirrors

I’ve been thinking a lot of self-portraits as of late.

Nemesister. 2009.

Despite their prevalence within my body of work, I am not particularly fond of them. Being an insecure person, I have a hard time grappling with the role in front of the lens. It seems when shroud in artifice I feel a fraud, and when they take on an auto-biographical stance; I feel far too vulnerable. Perhaps that vulnerability is on account of the intrinsic intensity when author becomes object and bares all to see.

Loveletter - Filmstrip. 2010.

Jaques Lacan, a French psychoanalyst and philosophical theorist, believed the most fundamental stage of development was when one identified their own image in the mirror. Placing identity into a realm of superficiality, lending a tangibility- an external symbol-to a concept far more complex and encompassing: the ego. I suppose Lacan felt that in the mirror was where the culturally- perceived duality of soul and body connected.  I’ve always felt the self portrait to function on this level : a visual projection of identity – an exploration of the self whether fact or fiction.

The notion of artificial identity is a fascinating one. In the digital age of social networking, it seems as though a self-determined projection has become blurred with the “real” corporeal being. From Photoshop to flattering “Myspace angles”; it seems more and more the manipulated and constructed ego is replacing any notion of a “real” and unchanging self.

Ivory 2010

Historically, portraiture remained relatively subjective, as the sitter’s likeness was captured by a third party and thus, imbued with the artist’s  inherent biases and perception. However, with the rise and subsequent ease of consumer technology, the reproducible image has escalated to extremes never before anticipated. And suddenly, the photographer can become the subject simultaneously. Not that self-portraits are some novel concept, no, for centuries artists have been compelled to record their own image, determine the appearance of their own immortality. But, now it’s passed from savant to amateur, and everyone from children to the elderly are able to decide the person they present themselves to be.

To my knowledge, the first person to bridge the gap between self-portraiture and photography was Hannah

Hannah Maynard. Self-Portrait. 1893.

Maynard (1834-1918), a photographer who resided in BC and took astounding multiple exposures of herself.

The rise of post-modernism saw a concurrent rise in self portraiture in photography; the likes of Cindy Sherman and Duane Michals exploring the relationship between identity and appearance, by using their own bodies to explore projections and representations. Sherman takes on a variety of different characters within her body of work utilizing wigs and make-up to draw a connection between image and ego, and the superficial nature therein. She demonstrates that identity is not only dependent upon appearance, but that identity is as shallow and artificial as that.

Francesca Woodman. Untitled. 1980.

Francessca Woodman, on the other hand, created highly personal images, and went so far as to document her own demise, a series of haunting autobiographical self portraits that detail her fall into the depths of mental illness. At both ends of the spectrum, from fact to fiction, it seems that self-portraiture has become a fundamental way in which the artist comes to terms with their own ego.



teenage girls in vintage lingerie and morbid victorian curiosities
August 14, 2010, 5:02 pm
Filed under: History, Theory | Tags: , , , , , , ,

shooting here monday, i honestly can’t wait

There is something about Victorian culture I’ve always found myself drawn to. Aside from the fantastic aesthetic; their luxurious fabric, debaucheries lifestyles and the increasing discrepency between the rich and the poor, there is something striking about the era. Perhaps its the fact that really, this was the beginning of the society we find ourselves in today. With feudalism abolished, capitalism and the industrial era on the brink of inception, and science first being explored, perhaps I see a glimmer of our own history in this period. From phrenology to taxidermy, it seems the foundation of science was not built upon empirical fact, but rather, aesthetics. Muybridge’s photographs are a prime example of this, slaving over his work, compulsively inventing contraptions in order to allude accuracy. But, in the end, they were altered. They did not present one indisputable truth, but rather a fiction of what Muybridge percieved as reality, how the horse should look in motion.

Eadweard Muybridge Animal Locomotion 1878

Or, another example of this false science; the phenomenon of hysteria, a condition no longer even recognized by the medical institution. It affected females exclusively, and described a plethora of symptoms- all quite neurotic in nature – from panic attacks, lack of libido to general nervousness. Common treatment of this ailment was to keep the girl in complete isolation; locked away from the world. Or, in worst case scenerio, shock treatment and lobotomies.  A medical excuse to further subjegate women further, women who were beginning to gain curiosity, very convenient if you ask me.

Image of a woman suffering hysteria under hypnosis. 1910

Anorexia first made its first appearance in Victorian medical literature, a phenomenon initially considered religious in nature after such biblical features as St. Catherine of Sienna, who would purge with a stick in order to gain transcendence. With the rise and dissemination of printed media during this time, stories of “fasting girls” gained vast public recognition, which only perpetuated the need of a scientific explanation.

The term Anorexia Nervosa was coined in 1873, by Sir William Gull and was believed to be closely connected to hysteria. The treatment program created by Gull remains relatively unaltered today, wherein women were forcefed (often by tube) within an institution until her weight was recovered. Although there is more extensive knowledge of blood sugar levels, refeeding syndrome and fancy gadgets to monitor therein, effectually the principals are the same. And, with a marginal 60% recovery rate, to me it begs the question, why haven’t these treatments been questioned?

But, that’s another tirade in and of itself.




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