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The Human Body Section 1 - Photography “Portrait of Miss N.” by Gertrude Käsebier 190

The Human Body Section 1 - Photography

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The Human Body Section 1 - Photography. “Portrait of Miss N.” by Gertrude Käsebier 1903. Eadweard Muybridge Descending stairs and turning around 1884-85 What painting does this sequence remind you of?. Marcel Duchamp Nude Descending a Staircase, No. 2 1912. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Human Body  Section 1 - Photography

The Human Body Section 1 - Photography

“Portrait of Miss N.” by Gertrude Käsebier 1903

Page 2: The Human Body  Section 1 - Photography

Eadweard MuybridgeDescending stairs and turning around

1884-85

What painting does this sequence remind you of?

Page 3: The Human Body  Section 1 - Photography

Marcel Duchamp Nude Descending a Staircase, No. 2 1912

Page 4: The Human Body  Section 1 - Photography

E. J. BellocqUntitledc. 1912

Page 5: The Human Body  Section 1 - Photography

The painter Georgia O’Keefe, photographed by her husband Alfred Stieglitz in 1919

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Alfred StieglitzHands and Thimble - Georgia O'Keeffe1920

Page 7: The Human Body  Section 1 - Photography

Edward WestonNude1925

Edward WestonNude1925

Page 8: The Human Body  Section 1 - Photography

Edward WestonNude1936

Page 9: The Human Body  Section 1 - Photography

Bill BrandtEast Sussex Coast1957

Page 10: The Human Body  Section 1 - Photography

Robert MapplethorpeAjitto (Seated Nude) 1981

Robert MapplethorpeKen Moody 1983

Page 11: The Human Body  Section 1 - Photography

The Human Body Section 2 – the monumental figure

The figure as a symbol of the state

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Michelangelo David 1504 Carrara marble 517 cm

This was intended as a symbol of the independent city of Florence, and stood outside the Palazzo Vecchio.

You need to know the Biblical story to understand the artwork as a political symbol.

The sculpture is more universally seen as a symbol of male beauty.

Page 13: The Human Body  Section 1 - Photography

The 20th Century was a time of competing ideologies and the Spanish Civil War was the start of the conflict that became the Second World War. The Government forces were supported by liberal, Socialist and Communist groups, whilst the Nationalists were supported by conservatives, Catholics and the Spanish Army. Hitler and Mussolini sent forces to aid the Nationalists and Stalin and the various Communist parties around the world aided the Nationalists. At the Paris World Fair Picasso’s painting Guernica was the main display in the Spanish pavilion, whilst the (Nazi) German government and the (Communist) Soviet government represented their cultures with massive figures.

Page 14: The Human Body  Section 1 - Photography

Vera Mukhina, Factory Worker and Collective Farm Girl, 1937

Here two figures striding forward together symbolise the Soviet state.

Page 15: The Human Body  Section 1 - Photography

Josep Thorak, Comradeship, 1937 Heinrich Knirr Adolf Hitler, the leader of the Third Reich and Renewer of German Art

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Marc Quinn “Alison Lapper Pregnant”Installed in Trafalgar Square, London 2005.

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Max Dupain Sunbaker, 1937.

Tom ROBERTS - Shearing the Rams 1890

Australian symbols

In Shearing the Rams Tom Roberts was creating a symbol of Australia, with people all working together in harmony towards a common cause. This painting was a part of the campaign for an independent, federated Australia.It should be noted that even at this time most Australians lived in the capital cities, on the coast, and that it was painted around the time of an acrimonious strike in the shearing industry.

Max Dupain, in the 1930s, creates a different Australian symbol – the fit, healthy young man on the beach, working on his tan. An image of health, beauty and strength, notwithstanding the fact that the man in the picture.

Page 18: The Human Body  Section 1 - Photography

The Human Body Section 3 – the reclining figure

The Etruscans were the predecessors of the Romans in central Italy. These sculptures display scenes of social intimacy and comfort. It is contemporary with the art of the ancient Greeks – 5th and 6th Centuries BC. Unlike the Greek sculptures that survive these are portraits of ordinary people in social interaction. They were a part of the subject’s sarcophagus.

Page 19: The Human Body  Section 1 - Photography

Titian -Venus of Urbino -1538The erotic reclining female nude does not figure greatly in either Greek or Roman art, though Roman erotic art was very raunchy.This figure is refined and dignified, to reflect the tastes of the wealthy owner. This image has influenced many artists over the centuries.

Page 20: The Human Body  Section 1 - Photography

Francois Boucher Blonde Odalisque (Portrait of Louise O’Murphy) 1752Boucher’s approach to the subject is more directly erotic, with the image scattered with obvious signs and symbols. The painting was presented to the French King Louis XV, who then acquired the girl. In this way the painting served as a form of advertising.

Page 21: The Human Body  Section 1 - Photography

Edouard Manet – Olympia – 1863

Page 22: The Human Body  Section 1 - Photography

Maya culture (Mexico) – Chac Mool figureThe chac mool figure appears in many Mayan temples. He reclines with a platter on his midriff, with his head turned impassively away. It was at the centre of the human sacrifice, with the victims heart placed upon the platter.

The Chac Mool was appropriated by the English sculptor Henry Moore as a source image for many of his own reclining figures.

Page 23: The Human Body  Section 1 - Photography

Henry Moore – Reclining Figures

Reclining figure – Arch Leg 1969-70

Large Four-Part Reclining figure –1972-3

Large Reclining figure 1984 Reclining figure 1982

Page 24: The Human Body  Section 1 - Photography

Alberto Giacometti Woman with Her Throat Cut (Femme égorgée), 1932 (cast 1940). Bronze, 23.2 x 89 cm

Page 25: The Human Body  Section 1 - Photography

The Human Body Section 4 – Performance

Yves Klein coating a model with paint during a

performance

Yves Klein, French, 1928-1962 Untitled Anthropometry (ANT

100), 1960 French artist Yves Klein was a pioneer of performance art, using models as “human paintbrushes”. These were

very formal events in front of an invited audience, accompanied by

music.Visit the website

http://www.yvesklein.org/ for more information.

Page 26: The Human Body  Section 1 - Photography

STELARC Third Hand

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Photographer: F.ParrImage courtesy of Sherman

Galleries

Mike Parr’s performance “Malevich (A Political Arm) performance for as long as possible”

“For thirty hours between the third and fourth of May 2002, a man sat in a gallery with his only arm nailed to the wall.”