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DESIGN N THINGS.
Nudity
September/October. TABOO
12 plaining: “It's a standard canvas for per- of life drawing teachers tell me that the graphed 100 women’s breasts for her
formance art and body art. It is all very most popular nude models are female. project ‘Bare Reality’, which aims to ex-
controlled. If they are uncomfortable But not everyone feels the same way. plore what breasts mean to women, and
with this gesture, they should not take Roz Hardie, CEO of feminist organisation how they’re sexualised in the media.
the class.” Object, tells me that it’s important to look
The university has explained the class at gender when it comes to nudity: “There was nothing provocative about it,” she
is not mandatory and emphasised that says. “Breasts themselves aren’t inherently sex-
ual. Just because in our culture they’re seen as
students don’t actually have to remove “In a British historical tradition, nudity is associat- sexual, they’re no more sexual than a man’s
their clothes. But it is taking the students’ ed with not being powerful. It’s very common text and intent”, and though her project
broad shoulders.”
for women to be naked and men clothed. For
concerns seriously.
women, unfortunately it’s often associated with
Art sential - and where the line falls between casso painting as an example: wasn’t meant to be sexually provocative,
She explains that nudity is all about “con-
over-sexualisation, and there’s a focus on our
Whatever the outcome, it raises ques-
body parts rather than who we are.”
tions around whether nudity in art is es-
She references the record-breaking Pi-
there’s nothing wrong with erotic art:
art and pornography.
Stephen Palmer, a life drawing teacher,
in tells me that nudity isn’t always sexual: “It’s a picture of a harem. The most expensive different place between art and pornography,
“I don’t think there’s anything wrong with art be-
ing sexually appealing. Can art be sexual and
picture in the world ever is an image of wom-
is that OK? Everybody would draw the line in a
en being kept for the sexual availability of men.
“People have the idea it’s quite titillating but
but being sexual in art isn’t a bad thing.”
The idea that women exist for the sexual service
actually it’s the opposite. If they were drawing
them in skimpy underwear it might be different,
for Picasso to paint, but it’s quite telling how
But Dodsworth agrees with Roz Hardie
but there’s something un-erotic about drawing
women are often portrayed in some art in a
nude figures.” of more powerful men I wouldn’t say is wrong that even though creating erotic, nude
very sexualised way. art is not an issue in itself, it’s important to
For him, the most important element is “Today we’d probably consider [the courte- think about whether it suggests sexuality,
the context of the nudity – whether it’s the sans in the painting] to be trafficked wom- or objectification.
model getting naked or the art students en and we’d be campaigning for resources Consent plays a huge part – especially
Wto help them.”
Is It Really Necessary That themselves: “It’s the context of whether Like Palmer, she stresses the context is in the case of the art students in Cali:
they feel humiliated or whether they’re
important and that nudity ib itself is not
happy to embrace that as the concept
The Majority Of Females of the class. If they feel humiliated, I’d be a problem – it’s just the message that the “Compulsory nudity as part of a course is really
strange. That’s forcing someone to perform and
Depicted In Art Be Nude? uncomfortable with that.” artwork is giving out. express themselves according to someone else’s
rules. That’s not art for me. There’s a difference
He sees no difference between male
This is something that Laura Dodsworth
between making people undress and there’s a
and female nudity – though a number has direct experience of. She photo- difference between sexuality and objectification.”
by Richard Fisher
udity has been a part of art for centuries. It was
present in the ancient world, was a crucial part
of religious depictions, and in 2015, seems to be
Nvalued just as highly as ever.
Take Picasso’s ‘Women of Algiers’ which has just become the
most expensive painting ever sold at auction, going for $160m
(£102.6m) at Christie's in New York.
The cubist artwork shows a group of nude courtesans.
It’s not unusual to see naked women in art, of course. Indeed, the
ratio seems to be so unbalanced that one group of women has set
up an organisation Guerilla Girls to expose sexism in the art world.
Their goal is to stop objectification and divert the male gaze.
And no doubt the University of California might now be in their sights.
It has come under fire for asking students to perform naked in a can-
dlelit room, as part of the final exam for an advanced visual arts class.
The project, entitled ‘The Erotic Self’, has been criticised after the
mother of one of the students claimed her daughter was forced to
perform nude, in a room where all the other students and male profes-
sor were also naked.
“It bothers me. I'm not sending her to school for this," she told KGTV in San Diego. "To blanket
say you must be naked in order to pass my class - it makes me sick to my stomach."
The professor, Ricardo Dominguez, has been teaching the class for 11
years and said students knew what was expected from the beginning, ex- 2 Loving Lesbians embrace each other.
Interracial Lesbian couple.
| september/october