The Reclining Nude

aw_product_id: 
31163834377
merchant_image_url: 
https://cdn.waterstones.com/bookjackets/large/9781/7896/9781789620085.jpg
merchant_category: 
Books
search_price: 
27.99
book_author_name: 
Emma Wilson
book_type: 
Paperback
publisher: 
Liverpool University Press
published_date: 
19/10/2019
isbn: 
9781789620085
Merchant Product Cat path: 
Books > Art, Fashion & Photography > Art & design > Art treatments & subjects > Human figures depicted in art
specifications: 
Emma Wilson|Paperback|Liverpool University Press|19/10/2019
Merchant Product Id: 
9781789620085
Book Description: 
The figure of a woman reclining, in repose, displayed, abandoned, fallen, asleep, or dreaming, returns in the work of women filmmakers and photographers in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Filmmakers Agnes Varda and Catherine Breillat, and American photographer working in Paris, Nan Goldin, return to the paintings of Titian, Velazquez, Goya, Courbet, and others, re-imagining, and re-purposing, their images of female beauty, display, (auto)eroticism, and intimacy. This book, a sensuous evocation of these feminist works, claims a female-identified pleasure in looking. The artists explored align images of repose and sensuality with other images of horizontality and proneness, of strong emotional content, images of erotic involvement, of vulnerability, of bodily contortion, of listlessness, grief, and depression. The reclining nude is for all three artists a starting point for a reflection on the relation of film, projections, and still photography, to painting, and a sustained re-imagining of the meanings conjured through serial returns to a particular pose. This book claims that the image of the reclining nude is compelling, for female-identified artists - and for all allied in feeling and picturing femininity - in the sensitive, ethically adventurous, politically complex feminist issues it engages. The reclining nude is an image of passivity, of submission, of hedonism. It allows thought about passivity as pleasure, about depression and grief figured posturally, about indolence as a form of resistance and anarchy. Through this image, female-identified artists have claimed freedom to offer new focus on these extremes of emotion. They are re-imagining horizontality.

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