Nude In Western Paintings

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Nude In Western Paintings Essay, Research Paper

The

depiction of the nude female model by a male artist in oil painting has played a

significant role in the western tradition over the last 500 years. The oil

painting of the female nude is subject to the artist?s interpretation of her

form. She is affected by the artist?s desire for his model, as well as his art

and she is torn between the artist?s inability to be both lover and painter.

Hubert Damisch?s ?The Underneaths of Painting? helps the reader understand

the importance of the male painter?s imaging of the female form. By analyzing

Balzac?s Unknown Masterpiece, Damisch uncovers several tangents to the unique

relationship between artist?s and the women they create on canvas. Balzac

tells a tale of the truth behind the creative process of an artist and the way

he perceives his vision when finally completed in oil. Poussin is a young

painter who doesn?t quite understand how the concepts of desire and love will

affect the perception of his model, and lover, Gilette. He soon embarks on a

journey that takes him underneath the paint: ?Under the paint and as its

?truth?, instead and in the place of the so-called picture, the exchange

assuming its last true face: a woman for a picture and a woman for what forms

(or ought to) its subject. It is at this point in the picture where the

subterranean, archaeological presence of the woman reveals itself, that

something is given to see, something that can be spoken, that can be named,

something moreover alive, delectable, a foothold for desire; in a word,

something that looks at us unlike the inexpressible wall of paint that holds it

captive,? (Damisch 202). There are many layers of paint put on to one canvas,

but the image isn?t visible right away, she must grow through the

brushstrokes. When the last brush of paint touches the canvas, her beauty is

revealed to the eye. The artist has created his masterpiece and she can be

discussed like a real woman now; she has a name, she has the personality the

artist has given her which makes her come alive, she is so real that observers

feel the need to touch her and she looks right back. The paint from which she

came is an afterthought and because Poussin is hungry for a piece that can

accomplish all this, he chooses his work over his love. Damisch utilizes

Balzac?s tale to define the position of the artist?s heart. It is inevitable

that every painter that is dedicated to his work cannot be capable of loving

anything so much as the act of expressing one?s self through paint. He falls

in love with his creation and there can be no room for a tangible love. Here is

Damisch: ??one has to choose between being a lover and a painter. Poussin

will be assailed by doubt at the thought that another person could look at

Gilette, and look at her as only he was allowed to see her: naked. But this

doubt will soon vanish: the young man will forget his mistress, he will desire

only to be a painter, he will see his art and nothing else,? (Damisch 200).

Poussin has not fully recognized the intensity of the connection that an artist

has with his work and doesn?t realize that Gilette is what?s holding him

back. Since he shares his love with her and his work, Poussin cannot capture

true realism in the females he depicts. Although he loves her at this point and

couldn?t possibly think of letting anyone see Gilette, Poussin will discover

that to let her pose for other artists isn?t as shattering a suggestion when

he creates the nude that will lend his heart solely to the act of expression.

The artist will then transfer his feelings of obsession for Gilette to his work

and he will be able to love no other with the same intensity that he enjoys his

work. Damisch questions the role of desire in the conversion of the female model

into the artist?s Venus. He asks: ?What of the working of desire in its

relation to the desire of the other?? and then goes on to report that:

??we are amongst painters who only have eyes for painting. As far as Gilette

is concerned she has no part in their commerce: she doesn?t look at the

painting, but sees only the painters?Poussin, while drawing her, was no doubt

looking at her, but was not thinking about her?She does not say: without

desiring her. For it was his desire that she should model for him, yet a desire

which did not necessarily pass without explanation, at least for the one who

was, as it were its passing object. Gilette might have added?when it begs for

a look: ?You never look at me from the place which I see you.??it is only

in painting that such a request had meaning, and one may at one and the same

time?find a woman beautiful and desire her, at the place from where she is

looking at us, on the canvas,? (Damisch 200). The artist has desired to attain

a beautiful, inspirational model to develop his masterpiece- he doesn?t desire

the physical form of his muse. Gilette may argue that Poussin doesn?t want her

for the same reasons that she wants him, but she does not understand that this

complaint can only be made by the female nude on the canvas: the test of true

desire on the artist?s part is if he can look into his painting and he feels

the need to caress the canvas- then he has perfected his image. Poussin mistakes

the desire he has for Gilette to model for him for an emotional desire and when

she does she can see he isn?t looking on her with a lustful gaze- his eye is

clinical in nature. To comprehend the importance of the relationship among

artists and their oil paintings of the female nude, one must understand the

significance of each one of these factors. For centuries artists have tried to

master the conception of the artist and his work, but this task seems fleeting:

How can one artist represent the situation of every painter? Because this feat

is impossible, we arrive at a variety of works that all try to express the same

topic, but end up drastically different. What is true to all of the

representations of the female nude by the male painter is that she is always

subject to the desire and love of her creator.

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