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The Nude in French Art and Culture, 1870–1910
This book examines the place of the nude - in art and print - in nineteenth-century French culture.
Heather Dawkins (Author)
9780521807555, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 11 February 2002
244 pages, 60 b/w illus.
25.4 x 17.8 x 1.4 cm, 0.64 kg
'An erudite, insightful account … a fascinating, revealing examination of an exciting time in art.' Antiques Magazine
Dawkins examines the forces that made the nude a contentious image in the early Third Republic. Analyzing the evolving relationship between the fine-art nude, print culture and censorship, Heather Dawkins explores how artists, art critics, politicians, bureaucrats, lawyers, and judges evaluated the nude. She shows how spectatorship of the nude was refracted through the ideals of art, femininity, republican liberty, and public decency. An art form made for and by men, the nude was rarely the subject of serious engagement on the part of women. A few, nevertheless, attempted to take up the issues and challenges of the nude. Dawkins investigates in detail how these women reshaped the genre of the nude and its spectatorship in order for it to accommodate their own experience and subjectivity.
Introduction
1. Decency in dispute: viewing the nude
2. Modelling another view: posing for the nude
3. Improper appreciation: women and the fine art of the nude
4. A defiant imagination: Marie de Montifaud, censorship, and the nude
Epilogue.
Subject Areas: Gender studies, gender groups [JFSJ], History of art & design styles: c 1800 to c 1900 [ACV]