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Slavery
is a Woman: "Race," Gender, and Visuality in Marie Benoist's
Portrait d'une négresse (1800)
by James Smalls |
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| Fig. 1 Marie-Guilhelmine Benoist,
Portrait d'une négresse, 1800, oil on canvas, Paris,
Musée du Louvre |
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Hanging on one wall of the Musée
du Louvre, in the company of the gargantuan machines by Jacques-Louis
David, Eugène Delacroix, Théodore Géricault, and others,
is an exquisitely crafted and modestly sized painting of a black woman.
She is shown seated, half-draped, with her right breast bared to the viewer.
She sports an intricately wrapped and crisply laundered headdress that appears
similar in fabric to the garment she gathers closely against her body just
below her breasts. She stares out at the viewer with an enigmatic expression.
Although there are no background details that indicate precisely where the
sitter is placed, certain details of her physical surroundingsnamely,
the ancien régime chair and luxurious cloth that drapes both
it and hersuggest that she is in a well-to-do domestic space. |
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Portrait d'une
négresse (fig. 1) was painted in 1800 by Marie-Guilhelmine Benoist (born
Marie-Guillemine Leroulx-Delaville) (1768-1826), a woman of aristocratic
lineage who belonged to a small elite circle of professional women painters
that included, among others, Anne Vallayer-Coster (1744-1818), Elisabeth
Vigée-Lebrun (1755-1842), Marguerite Gérard (1771-1837), Angélique
Mongez (1775-1855), and Adélaide Labille-Guiard (1749-1803).1
As had been the case with most women artists working at the time, Benoist
fit the middle and upper class ideal of "womanhood" in her conforming
to the social expectations of women to marry, raise children, and forego
a career."2 |
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Although we do not know whether or to what
extent Benoist partook in the volatile debates on slavery and gender current
during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries in France, her
painting may be seen as a voice of protest, however small, in the discourse
over human bondage. With the portrait, the artist responded to early nineteenth-century
French racialism and the less-than-desirable treatment of women by playing
upon the popular analogy of women and slaves. The portrait is interesting
not just in its aesthetic presentation and historical context, but in its
potential for new critical readings. In the following pages, I want to consider
Benoist's portrait as a work far more nuanced and layered in signification
around race, gender, and class issues than previous assessments of the work
have led us to believe.3 I would like to present a reading of
the painting based upon a consideration of its racialized and gendered subject
matter and style, as well as the gender and social class status of the artist,
the historical circumstance surrounding the work's creation, and the multi-directional
dynamics of "race" and visuality communicated through the portrait.
To this end, my approach will deviate at times from standard modes of art-historical
inquiry and venture into a critical evaluation of the painting as a constructed
image of "race" and gender. Before doing so, however, certain
biographical and historical bits of information must be revealed that inform
my unconventional interpretation of the painting. |
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Circumstances
The acknowledgement and delineation of historical circumstances have
always been critical for contextualizing treatments of race and gender
in art. The Portrait d'une négresse was painted in 1800after
the emancipation decree of 1794 in which slaves in the French colonies
were (temporarily) liberated and slavery was abolished, but before the
reinstatement of colonial slavery by Napoléon Bonaparte in 1802.
So the period in which Benoist's portrait was fashioned was one in which
the heroicized black image enjoyed considerable popularity in France.4
It has been suggested that Benoist might have executed the work as a tribute
to the 1794 emancipation, combining it with the rise of a short-lived
feminist movement in France, thereby effectively linking the issues of
slavery and the condition of women.5 Of course, all hopes for
black and female emancipation were dashed with the reinstitution of slavery
in 1802 and with the appearance of the Code Napoléon in
1804, the latter of which imposed harsh social and legal restrictions
on women and the former on black immigration into France.6 |
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Benoist's concerns with the status of women
and their link to colonial blacks evolved as a result of developments that
impacted her life, a life that reads like a suspense novel. She was born
into an established family of government administrators and politicians
from Brittany. Her father, René Leroulx-Delaville, entered the government
administration around 1764. In 1782, he was named director of Louis XVI's
saltworks and was subsequently assigned to another government post. He took
on several important positions including, in 1792, appointment as a minister
in Louis XVI's cabinet. Toward the end of his life, he was named French
consul in Rotterdam, where he died in 1798. His brother, Joseph Leroulx-Delaville,
was a member of the Assembly of Notables, Deputy of the Orient to the Estates
General, and a member of the Constituent Assembly. Benoist's husband, Pierre-Vincent
Benoist (1758-1834), a lawyer and avowed monarchist from Angers, also came
from an illustrious background. He was a member of the Constituent Assembly
and fostered close royalist connections.7 Benoist's marriage
to Pierre-Vincent in 1793 further deepened her royalist ties and eventually
forced her to become entangled, reluctantly, in the Revolution's politics
during its most radical phase in 1793-1794.8 Her close friendships
with known monarchists and their sympathizers eventually proved potentially
dangerous to her safety, so much so that in 1794 she and her husband were
forced into hiding.9 |
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It has been suggested that the Portrait
d'une négresse was not commissioned but was painted on the artist's
own initiative, and was modeled after a black slave brought back to France
by Benoist's brother-in-law, a civil servant and ship's purser who had returned
from the French island of Guadeloupe in 1800.10 Africans and
colonial blacks were frequently brought to Europe to work in upper class
and middle class households and often appear in paintings "as part
of a complex ritual of display of . . . the ostentatious wealth the bourgeoisie
(and upper classes) accumulated through African slave labor on Caribbean
plantations."11 During the time in which Benoist's portrait
was painted, planters were allowed to bring slaves onto the French mainland
where, legally, slavery had been forbidden since the Middle Ages. French
law dictated that once transported onto continental French soil, a slave's
status had to be legally changed to that of servant or attendant and registered
with the French authorities.12 In all likelihood, therefore,
Benoist's sitter was a slave-turned-servant who had no say in the way her
body was presented. The artist, always eager to publicize her painting skills,
enthusiastically began the task of putting on canvas the "belle couleur
noire brillante" that she found by contrasting dark flesh and white
cloth. |
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| Fig. 2 Jean-Marc Nattier, Mademoiselle
de Clermont at Her Bath Attended by Slaves, 1733, oil on canvas,
London, Wallace Collection |
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| Fig. 3 Jean-Marc Nattier, Mademoiselle
de Clermont at Her Bath Attended by Slaves (detail), 1733, oil
on canvas, London, Wallace Collection |
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Portrait d'une négresse is an anomaly
in Benoist's oeuvre. Prior to 1800, the artist produced mostly portraits
and genre scenes in pastels.13 She exhibited sentimental, moralizing
portrayals of women, children, and family life which were, generally speaking,
expected of women artists by the male-dominated art apparatus during the
period and which were very popular with the middle class. Of all the works
she exhibited between 1799 and 1804, most of which are lost to us now, Portrait
d'une négresse was most highly praised by the Salon critics.14
The painting is unusual in that it deviates from standard representations
of blacks in European art which typically show them as colorful additions
to a portrait or a scene in which a white master or mistress is the intended
primary focus. Most scholars agree that Benoist's portrait was not a study
for a larger project as is the case with most eighteenth-century works in
which a sole black appears. A recognized example of the standard representation
of blacks in European art is provided by Jean-Marc Nattier's 1733 Mademoiselle
de Clermont at Her Bath Attended by Slaves (figs. 2 and 3).15
There, black women are shown in their expected roles as servants and exoticized
complements to the white mistress. What is interesting about Portrait
d'une négresse is that unlike the standard eighteenth-century painting
in which a black appears, it does not show a white woman attended by a black
one. However, Benoist's painting does act out that scenario, as the black
woman here serves the invisible white artist as a model. While traditional
paintings of black and white women show the white woman posed as model on
a chair and attended by blacks, such as in Nattier's work, Benoist's image
reverses the situationblack woman is seated and posed as white woman
is busy attending (painting). By depicting a black woman as exotic, servant
or slave in the traditional pose and situation of white women, Benoist has
turned the Portrait d'une négresse into something of an allegory
of her own condition of subservience to patriarchy. |
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A contemporary art historian, Griselda Pollock,
has noted that in Western art black women typically represent "a space
in the text of a masculinist modernist culture in which flourishes an Orientalizing,
Africanist fantasy that circulates between artists, their models, and contemporary
art historians in the twentieth century."16 Benoist's image
is intriguing in that it disrupts our perception of portraiture as a genre
and should be read as a powerful demonstration of stylistic virtuosity used
not only to construct racial otherness in the historical moment, but to
relate that process to the assumed un-raced white and, in this case, female
rather than male, self. In the process, black woman remains a nameless "negress"
despite her individualized physiognomy. She mystifies rather than clarifies
the expected function of the portrait genre as a marker of a sitter's identity,
social class standing, and occupation. Indeed, Portrait d'une négresse
is less a portrait of a black woman and more a portrait of Benoist herself.
And in this respect, it is a typical colonialist picture in that the artist
who created it made use of the racialized Other to define and empower the
colonizing Self. That is, the portrait constitutes a visual record of white
woman's construction and affirmation of self through the racial and cultural
Other. |
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Benoist's portrait is not only self-reflexive,
but is dialogic in that it documents a desire by the artist to command both
the aesthetic and the racial in the defining moment of the modern self.
The image underscores the observation that national and cultural identities
of artists who speak through and for the Other oftentimes "mark themselves
and their objects of othering in specific terms of racial, gender, and class
differences."17 The portrait goes far to highlight the co-existence
of "processes of identification and objectification, [of] mirroring
and distancing."18 In the Portrait d'une négresse
the harsh reality of the enslaved condition of this particular black woman
(and by extension, all black women) is concealed beneath a veneer of aestheticizing
and classicizing. However, for all its aesthetic allure and charm, the portrait
robs the black sitter of her identity, her voice, and her agency in order
to make a statement about the social position and power (albeit limited
in the sense of male-dominated politics of the day) of bourgeois and upper
class white women at the beginning of the nineteenth century in France. |
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| Fig. 4. Anne-Louis Girodet de Roussy-Trioson,
Portrait du Citoyen Belley, ex-représentant des colonies,
1797, oil on canvas, Versailles, Musée Nationale |
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Benoist's portrait gives credence to the
observation that "those rendered Other are sacrificed to idealization
[exoticism], excluded from the being of personhood, from social benefits,
and from political (self) representation."19 This process
is underscored by the title Benoist gave to the portrait. Although the image
depicts a specific individual, the artist has referred to her only as a
négressethe feminine counterpart of the generic racial
designation nègre (Negro).20 Benoist's prerogative
not to name is not simply a result of the black woman's race, for three
years prior to the portrait, in 1797, the history painter Anne-Louis Girodet
de Roussy-Trioson (1767-1824) produced a striking portrait of a black man
called Portrait du Citoyen Belley, ex-représentant des colonies
(fig. 4).21 In the historical and art-historical literature,
the portraits by Girodet and Benoist are often mentioned and illustrated
in relation to one another and are recognized as rare images in that they
showcase a single black figure as main focus of a work of art.22
They differ, however, in several respects. Unlike Benoist, Girodet depicts
a named individual whose biography and physical presence relate directly
to the postrevolutionary moment in which it was painted.23 Belley's
dignified yet defiant demeanor speaks directly to the historical circumstances
of slavery, abolition, and the tumultuous relationship between the races
in the French colonies. Although the exact relationship between Girodet
and Belley remains a mystery, it is probable that Girodet's purpose was
to visually construct a personage who embodies the democratic ideals of
liberty, equality, and fraternity brought forth by the French Revolution
and should be extended, in principle, to blacks. Portrait du Citoyen
Belley is, according to historian Helen Weston, a combined allegorical
and straightforward portrait containing elements of idealization and historical
"truth."24 Likewise, Benoist's portrait taps into didactic
strains of allegory while addressing historical truths regarding slavery
and the less-than-desirable condition of women. |
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Whereas Belley is clothed in a uniform that
identifies his rank and historical significance as diplomatic representative
of black political interests in the colonies, Benoist's negress is
partially nude and resigned to her assigned role as slave/servant. In contradistinction
to Girodet's politically active black model, Benoist's black woman has been
denied individuality and agency. She has been "vacated" and then
"filled in" by the artist with self-reflexive, opportunistic ideology
that speaks to both Benoist's prowess with the paintbrush and her command
over not only the black body as object, but also, by extension, over black
domestic labor.25 It is the absent and un-raced self outside
the picture frame (i.e., Benoist herself as artist), who has freely exercised
her power not to name and by doing so imagines and extends "power,
control, authority and domination over a stand-in who she attempts to ‘liberate'."26
In using the black female body as a sign of emancipation for all women,
Benoist employs an operative series of struggles rendered in binary terms
between feminine and masculine, between emotionalized aestheticism, passive
domesticity and the desire for political expediency through portraiture
as public action; between enslavement and liberty, black and white, stereotype
and sympathy. In other words, I see in this portrait the "classic"
ambiguity, struggle, and neurotic exchange of power played out between colonizer
and colonizeda state of affairs that has become an all-too-expected
feature of racial and cultural relations in the modern Western world. |
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Portrait d'une négresse as Racial
Enterprise With the expansion of slavery in the late eighteenth
century, and the simultaneous development, based on a new "scientific"
classification of human biological traits, of a hierarchy of races, did
the word race acquire its meaning.27 In the case of
Benoist's image, racial difference is determined by outward signs on the
bodynamely, skin color, hair texture, and the shape of facial features
such as eyes, nose, and lips. The most prominent racial sign is that of
a dark skin pigmentation set off against a blank background and white
fabric. Paintings such as Benoist's support the belief that the black
subject is powerless before the "fact" of race, even though
race was and remains a culturally constructed fiction in which "‘Blackness'
is a structure of racist inscription, not a color."28 |
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From the late eighteenth century until
the end of the nineteenth century, "race" in French thought was
defined and redefined in relation to those social, political, and ideological
processes that were coterminous with French social, cultural, and political
development. In late-eighteenth-century France, racial thinking as well
as racist utterances in print and images, became increasingly normalized
and naturalized. In this context, Benoist's portrait was no different from
works by other artists who assumed a relationship between physical difference
and cultural and national difference. Although Benoist's specific views
on black people are unknown, there is little doubt that she believed in
a hierarchy of classes and the races, as did everyone of the period regardless
of their political persuasion. |
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Nineteenth-century critical responses to
Benoist's painting were varied, but reveal much about the then-prevalent
attitudes towards race and gender. One reviewer, the staunch royalist Jean-Baptiste
Boutard, attacked the painting and its creator by admonishing: "Whom
can one trust in life after such horror! It is a white and pretty hand which
has created this blackness (noirceur)."29 Along these
same disparaging lines, another critic, Charles Thévenin, referred
to the subject of Benoist's portrait as "a sublime blurred tache
(stain),"30 referencing the black woman as an unclean object,
a blot devoid of noteworthy human presence. Both Boutard and Thévenin
attacked Benoist based on their belief that the artist had violated contemporary
notions of aesthetic propriety. Their judgments were informed by commonly
held racist beliefs of their time that blacks were ugly, less than human,
and unworthy as the primary subject of any noble art form.31
As was the case with most artists and critics of the period, Boutard and
Thévenin viewed blacks as biologically different and set apart culturally
and intellectually from Frenchness and whiteness. They saw only the "celebrated
beauty of the white hand of the artist in comparison with the diabolic hand
of the model."32 For such critics, as well as for some lay
observers, the negative shock of blacknessthe tache as visible
sign and symbol of ugliness and horrorwas set in contrastive association
with the virtuous attributes of white female purity and beauty. Clearly,
Benoist's portrait not only provoked the question of what subjects were
worthy of representation but, more specifically, what subjects were appropriate
for white women artists of high social standing to engage. |
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The biological determinist notion of race
and racial distinction emerged in French representation as part of the development
of France's entry into the institutional and psychological structures of
the modern world. As David Theo Goldberg has noted, definitions of race
and gender along with their attendant representational forms, emerge, develop,
and change within the institution of modernity.33 I am defining
modernity here in its Foucauldian sense as a discourse of cultural, political,
and institutional control and subjugation that is coterminous with the emergence
of Eurocentrism and European domination through imperial conquest and rule.
In fact, the concept of race is one of the central inventions of
the modern world, a point that makes it all the more remarkable that most
past and contemporary histories of early nineteenth-century French art avoid
altogether the issue of race. Perhaps this is so as not to spoil the central
place of French art in traditional accounts of Western modernism and not
to destabilize the central position of French revolutionary ideology in
modern political discourse. Whatever the reasons, race has always
been an ambiguous concept in the annals of modern French history and thought.
The concept came about as the result of French involvement in the institution
of slavery, abolition, and in the advent of scientific enterprise used to
rationalize the enslavement of black Africans. It is difficult to measure,
however, the degree to which French perceptions and rationalizations of
racial difference within the scientific community impacted points of view
about racial difference in the artistic community. Nevertheless, Benoist's
portrait demonstrates to what extent gender, race, and class, were significant
to the articulation of the artist's subjectivity in the historical moment
of French entry into the modern world. With Portrait d'une négresse,
we are forced to question race, gender, and class as defining aspects of
the collective body politic in the building of French nationhood in which
women and blacks were to be included in the abstract ideals of liberté,
égalité, and fraternité.34
The portrait underscores the perception that race is a paradoxical
component of French entry into the modern world in that "as modernity
commits itself progressively to idealized principles of liberty, equality,
and fraternity, as it increasingly insists upon the moral irrelevance of
race, there is a multiplication of racial identities and the sets of exclusions
they prompt and rationalize, enable and sustain. Race is (nominally) irrelevant,
but all is race."35 |
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Portrait d'une négresse as Gendered
Enterprise Although the Portrait d'une négresse served Benoist
as a bold proclamation of the artist's own class standing, gender status,
racial/cultural designation, and social aspirations, it is far from a
"clear-sightedly objective" exercise.36 The kind
and quality of Benoist's engagement with the racial Other was, among other
things, determined by gender-specific restrictions on women's activities
in art and politics, and based on race and class assumptions about black
women at the beginning of the nineteenth century. |
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In an 1806 issue of the conservative paper
Journal des débats, Boutard noted of Benoist that she had
confined herself to portraiture, which, according to him and his contemporaries,
was the genre most suitable for female artists.37 Painting in
the eighteenth century was practiced by women exclusively of the privileged
class, and was largely viewed as an amateur pursuit. Serious painting, that
is to say, history painting, was considered a masculine enterprise reserved
for men. The goal of history painting was "to teach, to lead, to instill
virtue, and to capture gloire."38 Although, in general,
women were indeed pressured into pursuing the so-called lesser genres of
still life, floral, animal pieces, domestic genre painting, and portraiture,
it has been duly noted that they were not summarily prevented from attempting
history painting.39 These genres were considered as more feminized
because their only function was to give pleasure to the viewer, and the
willingness to please easily was considered part of women's weakness.40 |
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Benoist's characteristic subjectsintimate
portraits of women and childrenare indicative of the role assigned
to women artists within the French academic system at the beginning of the
nineteenth century. The number of women allowed to enter into the French
Academy was limited and the attempt to exclude them altogether was led by
the institution's director, the Comte d'Angiviller, who believed that "too
many women would dilute the proportion of history painters" and thus
threaten not only the academy's manliness, but also damage its historical
legacy of fostering French national and cultural superiority in art.41
Even as women insisted on equal entry into the academy, they continued,
categorically, to be denied access to the life classes necessary to produce
history paintings. With few exceptions, they were generally denied government
patronage and were forbidden from competing for the coveted Prix de Rome.
In short, at the time Portrait d'une négresse was produced, painting
for women was considered as a "pursuit of gentility, not genius."42 |
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Benoist's first works, exhibited at the
annual Exposition de la Jeunesse, from 1784 through 1788, were mostly
pastel portraits employing the soft rococo modelling technique favored by
her mentor, Elisabeth-Louise Vigée-Lebrun. Vigée-Lebrun, who
saw herself as an important role model for Benoist, was confident that the
latter's career would be as bright as her own.43 In 1786, Benoist
was one of three female students accepted for art instruction into the studio
of Jacques-Louis David (1748-1825) while Vigée-Lebrun's studio was
being renovated. Benoist's admittance was made possible by both Vigée-Lebrun's
recommendation and by her family's close political and administrative ties
with the government. That is, she was able to receive as much instruction
as she did because of the social status of the male members of her family,
and as little as she did because of her gender. |
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For Benoist and many others, David was the
godlike figurehead of sober, serious neoclassical values in art. He was
also a staunch supporter of the artistic training of women and encouraged
his female students to attempt the study and practice of history painting.44
Although David took in women for art instruction, he assured the academy's
administration that the sexes would be strictly segregated and that the
women he took in would be refused access to the male nude.45
It was while in David's studio that Benoist adopted his severe, moralizing
neoclassical style, clearly revealed in her Innocence Between Virtue
and Vice and the Farewell of Psyche, both exhibited in the Salon
of 1791 at David's encouragement. In that same year, David urged Benoist
to also exhibit in the Exposition de la Jeunesse her history painting
titled Clarissa Harlowe at the Archers. The main protagonists of
all these works were women. Due to family and social pressures, however,
by 1795 Benoist had ceased painting classical subjects and devoted herself
to the "feminine pursuits" of portraiture and sentimental genre
scenes. Notwithstanding Vigée-Lebrun's strong mentoring, Benoist's
single year in David's studio was the most influential on her work. From
1791, her paintings incorporated stylistic traits associated with neoclassicism
such as simplified backgrounds, a minimal use of props and clothing, a sculptural
approach to modeling the figure, direct lighting, stronger coloration and
tonal contrasts. There is no doubt that for Portrait d'une négresse,
Benoist was greatly influenced by David in terms of both style and composition.
It has been observed that Benoist's portrait is in fact "a negative
image of the pale Mme. Trudaine" depicted by David sometime in the
late eighteenth century.46 The works are similar in terms of
minimal background detail, seated position, facial expression, and gathered
hands around the abdomen.47 |
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Portrait d'une négresse constitutes
the most publicly recognized example of Benoist's continued foray into the
masculinist enterprise of neoclassicism. In Portrait d'une négresse,
the black body is put forth as a "foreign element" within an upper
class cultural and domestic space. The image is built upon notions of the
female body as vulnerable, nurturing, part of the cult of domesticity and
interiority. However, this space of "feminization" and interiority,
created for the most part by the juxtaposition of skin and cloth, is presented
to us in the "masculinized" visual language of neoclassicism.
The gendered nature of the painting's style has been underscored by the
comments of several past and contemporary observers. Male critics of the
period asserted condescendingly that Benoist's brand of neoclassicism was
laced with the "feminine" traits of delicacy and sensuality assigned
to the rococo and to its practitioners. Even the choice of words used by
one contemporary female observer to characterize the portrait speaks to
the continued "problem" of gender in the work's production. The
work, she notes, combines "the graceful fluidity and coloristic harmonies
learned from Vigée-Lebrun with the three dimensional modelling and
firm contour taught . . . by David."48 |
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Believing at the time in the prerogative
and superiority of men and masculinity in all creative endeavors, many past
male observers doubted the authenticity of Portrait d'une négresse
and were convinced that David himself had painted it or "at least directly
assisted in [its] execution."49 Joseph-Etienne Esménard
noted of Benoist's portrait that "its finish and purity of drawing"
brought to mind the school of David.50 In his 1801 Lettre
sur la situation des Beaux-Arts en France, the Swedish critic Bruun
Neergaard noted, "Madame Leroulx-Delaville has given us the Portrait
d'une négresse. It is easy to see, from the purity of the drawing, that
she is a student of David."51 These and other observers
judged Benoist's portrait strictly in relation to David's stylistic influence
and neglected to see Benoist's contribution in terms of the work's potentially
radical subject matter. By viewing Benoist's portrait only in terms of Davidian
neoclassicism and the gendering of style, I believe these critics affirmed
and praised the masculinist aspect of the painting while silencing or disavowing
the work's potentially subversive feminist appeal. |
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Interestingly, whereas gender difference has been uniformly
constituted in neoclassicism's masculine valence, racial distinction has
not. As a heroic style indicative of high culture and the founding of democratic
nationhood, neoclassicism must necessarily bar racial difference from its
semiotic systems of operation. In this respect, Benoist's portrait is unique
in its exploitation of racial difference expressed within the visual language
of neoclassicism. The portrait is also unusual in the sense that, among
other things, a black female subject rendered in the neoclassical style
is used to voice the more "authentic" masculine traits of morality
and virtue. Because the characteristics of virtue, rationalism, and virile
masculinity were major components of neoclassicism and the classical culture
it promoted, the style itself is often associated with masculinity and is
typically set in opposition to the "feminine" rococo style that
preceded it.52 In addition, many professional women artists were
perceived by male observers and by other women at the time as taking on
"male" attributes in presenting themselves as independent professional
artists.53 For example, commenting on Benoist's temporary move
to David's studio and the influence it had on her and other women artists,
one male observer noted that "the merit of women and their valiant
participation in the arts is one of the distinctive features of these times
. . . Benoist [and Angélique Mongez] have no fear of entering as
initiates into the more virile [my italics] practices of David's
studio."54 Another observer stated of Benoist that "it
was necessary [for her] to be manly to be able to stand the discipline of
David's teaching" and her Portrait d'une négresse was "painted
with a wholly masculine discipline and does not possess any of the feminine
graces."55 By engaging in a masculinist mode of artistic
production through a "virile" style, and by alluding to volatile
subjects that demanded public actionslavery and women's rightsBenoist's
Portrait d'une négresse becomes an inherently political and gendered
painting. I contend that it was the correlation and conflict between masculine
and feminine, between emotionalism and heroic action in neoclassical painting
that perhaps attracted Benoist to employ the ennobling and classicizing
language of the style to a black woman. In other words, in her Portrait
d'une négresse, Benoist attempted to exploit for political expediency
the stylistic and gendered dualisms within neoclassicismmale versus
female, hard versus soft, stoicism versus emotionalism, master/mistress
versus slave/servant. |
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Benoist's portrait negotiates between public and private,
male and female, familiar and anonymous, erotic and intellectual, via an
image that conveys political and social import through its gendered and
racial aspects. Benoist challenged the restrictions on women artists of
her day by linking the "feminine" genre of an intimate portrait
with politically charged subject matter (slavery and abolition), the intellectual
consideration and visualization of which were emblematically reserved for
men.56 Throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the
slavery and abolition debate remained at the core of determining and designating
who was and who was not a member of the French nation. |
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Feminisms Although one might argue that there
was no single coherent feminist agenda in 1800, nor is it necessarily
the case that every painting of a woman by a woman is about women's rights,
I want to consider Benoist's portrait as both a work of consensus-building
and "feminist" protest. Until 1789, the push for women's rights
had been spearheaded by a few female and male agitators. During the Revolution,
a minority of women, especially in Paris, became politically visible and
vocal. A new kind of feminism developed after 1789 which was characterized
by less rhetoric and more action, especially among its working class supporters.57
Previously voiced vague statements advocating equality evolved into specific
demands by women for educational, economic, and legal and political rights.
But by 1800, pro-slavery and reactionary political forces recovered ground
lost in the Revolution. It is quite possible that Benoist's portrait may
have been a reaction against the Jacobin outlawing of the women's clubs
and its revocation of the right of speech for women in public meetings.
Undoubtedly, Benoist must have sympathized with the frustration, anger,
and fear of many female political activists whose activities were curtailed
with the Reign of Terror and who witnessed the execution of several women
of disparate political tendenciesfrom Marie Antoinette to Olympe
de Gouges. |
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In its thematic strategies, Benoist's portrait closely
relates to early nineteenth-century feminism and the writings of women authors
such as Olympe de Gouges, Germaine de Staël, and Claire de Duras. As
was the case with the literary works of these women, Benoist's portrait
visualizes, through a black presence, the themes and issues of concern about,
namely, class distinction among women, women's status as the "slaves"
of men in patriarchal society, and women's abilities to act subversively
within that societal structure. The works of all three writers stressed,
in varying degrees and intensities, differences of race (African and European),
gender (male and female), and social class (slave/servant and bourgeois).58 |
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Prior to Napoleon's elimination of women's rights and
curtailment of abolition, one of the crucial events in the development of
a feminist movement in France had actually occurred in England with the
1792 publication of A Vindication of the Rights of Woman by Mary
Wollstonecraft (1759-1797).59 This tract was published to popular
acclaim throughout Europe. It appeared one year after a similar but less
well-known tract on the topic of women, Déclaration des droits
de la femme (Declaration of the Rights of Woman), by Olympe de
Gouges. Both works championed women's political rights and education, and
linked women's struggles directly to colonial slavery.60 As well,
both de Gouges and Wollstonecraft did not hesitate to use the term slave
(esclave) when discussing the social position of women in society. |
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Wollstonecraft wrote her book to counter Jean-Jacques
Rousseau's ideas on the separate educational needs of women and the cultivation
of their "natural" female sensibilities. In her quest for sexual
egalitarianism, however, Wollstonecraft conceded the inevitability of male
superiority and admitted "a woman's weakness" in trying to argue
that when women were free, they would be in a "better" position
to serve their husbands.61 |
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Although less so with the works of Wollstonecraft, most
scholars make a ready association in the writings of Olympe de Gouges between
feminism, abolitionist propaganda and "strategies of self-fashioning"
that take into account self-awareness of her limitations as a woman writer
and the methods she employed to circumvent patriarchal dominance in the
literary domain.62 |
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Although de Gouges and Wollstonecraft were important
figures in the early French feminist movement, they were not the dominant
voices on the subject of women's rights; that role was held by men. Several
major eighteenth-century philosophes, including Montesquieu, Voltaire,
Rousseau, Brissot de Warville, Condorcet, and Diderot, had something to
say on the subject of women's rights in conjunction with the issue of
slavery. Rhetorical engagementbe it verbal or visual in debates
around slavery and abolition, particularly after the successful slave
uprisings on Saint-Domingue (Haiti) in 1791 and before the reinstitution
of slavery in the French colonies in 1802, would have been deemed part
of revolutionary political discourse and, therefore, reserved primarily
for men to engage. With the help of men such as Condorcet, who publicly
acknowledged himself as an ami des femmes as well as an ami
des noirs, women protested actively for their political and social
rights. Condorcet was encouraged by his friend Brissot, founder of the
French abolitionist group, the Amis des Noirs, to agitate for the democratic
rights of women. In his 1790 essay "Sur l'admission des femmes au
droit de cité (On the Admission of Women to Civil Rights),
Condorcet spoke out against prejudice and injustice against women and,
in the same breath, compared female emancipation to that of black Africans.63
Although ultimately unsuccessful in ameliorating the situation for women
and black slaves, both Condorcet and Brissot emphasized the link between
the two causes. Other writers, too, specifically related the condition
and rights of women to those of slaves. For example, in 1792, the French
humanitarian writer Jean-Baptiste Aubert du Bayet called women "the
victims of their fathers' despotism and of their husbands' perfidy"
and warned that French law could not maintain women in a state of slavery.64
Pierre Guyomar, a philosophe of considerable reputation, linked
sexual and racial discrimination in his 1793 Partisan de l'Egalité
politique entre les individus:
I submit that one half of the individuals in a society have not the
right to deprive that other half of its inalienable right to express
its own desires. Let us free ourselves at once of the prejudice of sex
just as we did of the prejudice against the color of the negro.65
Feminists of the periodboth male and femaleused arguments
of defense that closely paralleled those used by the Amis des Noirs. One
such argument was that women were human beings who shared in the natural
rights of man. Another was that women, like blacks, once freed could fight
for France and contribute socially and economically in the name of patriots.
Some of these arguments resulted in an ironic backlash. In order to assert
that women were just as patriotic as men, feminists often "conceded
in affirming their biological role as childbearers and as the mothers
of all citizens."66 |
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I think it is an easy matter to trace the parallels
between the politicizing tactics of race and gender used in literary and
abolitonist debates and Benoist's Portrait d'une négresse. Some of
the "strategies of self-fashioning" employed by Olympe de Gouges
appear to reverberate with Benoist's portrait. I conclude this to be the
case even though there is no hard evidence to support the claim that Benoist
either personally knew Olympe de Gouges or read any of her writings. Notwithstanding,
it has been confirmed that in 1789-90, Olympe de Gouges publicly associated
herself with the Marquis de Condorcet and the Société des
Amis des Noirs.67 For Olympe de Gouges, "black slaves
had become less her cause than her muse, compelling her to write . . ."68
Even though de Gouges's dedication and sincerity around the cause of manumission
may have been genuine, it has been pointed out that she did not hesitate
to use the abolition and feminist debates "to foster a more prominent
public identity as a self-styled femme de lettres."69
It is clear to me that Benoist's actions are in line with those of Olympe
de Gouges in that she, too, took advantage of the then-popular link between
feminist causes and abolitionist propaganda. Like de Gouges, Benoist might
have viewed abolitionism and feminism "not as a coherent ideology so
much as an available social identity"70 with which one could
fashion oneself publicly as a credible professional artist. However, even
though Benoist's painting may have challenged stereotypical expectations
of women's social and artistic talents, the artist also met certain male
expectations regarding roles assigned to women. To make a statement about
women's role in society that could elicit a supportive response from a male
spectator, Benoist employed neoclassicism, a "masculine" style,
and exploited black women, a popular subject matter, with potential appeal
to exotic and erotic male fantasies. |
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"Race" and the (Al)lure of Allegory
Black woman's transplantation from the colonies into the artist's studio
easily allowed for the "negress's" transformation into useful
symbolizationfrom the colonial/imperial to the feminist/erotic.
Benoist understood the relation between misogyny at home and the exploitation
of colonial slaves abroad. Her subject matter carries serious political
and moral implications. Taking into account the artist's indoctrination
into the idea of painting as a socializing act for women in her position,
Benoist foregrounded a discursive posture in relation to gender and slavery
that was simultaneously less and more eroticized in order to appeal to
a heterosexual male audience through which her standing as a professional
painter was determined. Her portrait provokes an ethnographic and erotically
objectifying subtextthe dynamics of which operate under a veil of
allegory, classicizing, and aestheticizing. |
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Indeed, an important and pervasive strategy employed
in most late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century French illustrations
about slavery, abolition, and colonial trade was allegory. Allegory is a
part of "semiology which approaches paintings and prints as a system
of signs and not perception."71 It is pictorial rhetoric
used as a substitute for abstract discourse. Benoist's portrait belongs
to this discourse of semiology in that it functions as allegorical symbol
and emblem intersecting with such lofty ideas as "Liberty," "Revolution,"
"Republic," and "France"ideas that contain and
carry their own respective symbols and complex relations. In France, allegorical
prints with abolitionist messages were typically incorporated into books
as illustrations for colonialist, political, or scientific tracts. These
were seen by educated elites and were not distributed to a broad audience.72
Thus, a major drawback to the use of allegory in gauging the practical relevance
of a black presence in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries
in France was that its accessibility was restricted to intellectual circles
who, in turn, tended to limit outrage against slavery to cerebral debates
about the rights of French (male) citizens alone. Between 1794 and 1802,
black men and black women became visual signifiers for philosophical rumination
over the abstract ideals of liberté, égalité, fraternité,
rather than as primary catalysts to direct public action. There is, however,
a benefit to allegory in relation to the black presence in general and to
Benoist's portrait in particular, for as symbolic or metaphorical narrative,
allegory sometimes can and often does operate to contest and disrupt the
narrative assumptions of colonialism. |
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| Fig. 5 Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux,
Afrique, or Why Be Born a Slave?, ca. 1868-1870, terracotta,
Douai, Musée de la Chartreuse |
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| Fig. 6 Eugène Delaplanche,
Africa, 1878, bronze, Paris, Musée d'Orsay |
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There is typically a sexualizing or eroticizing aspect
to allegory as well, specifically when the bodies of women are used. Benoist's
portrait constitutes a foray into the use of woman as sexual/erotic subject
matter that became, historically, visual and literary territory exploited
by men. Basically, Benoist's black servant has been brought before the viewer
with two seemingly contradictory objectives: to present a sensual and possibly
erotic object of possession and to call for sympathetic action to improve
women's lot in life. One complicating element in linking the allegorical
to the erotic is the sitter's bared breast. Benoist has emphasized the black
woman's breast by strategic placement of the sitter's left hand across her
abdomen. In visual representation, the exposed breast has multiple meanings.
On the one hand, it traditionally signals women's expected roles as mothers
and was an emblem of womanhood, sensuality, nurture, emotional warmth, intimacy,
and domesticity.73 On the other hand, the exposed breast develops
historically into a symbol of political liberty.74 Whatever the
meaning of the breast, it is the potential for reading an erotic sensuality
into the portrait that adds a curious dimension to a work produced by a
woman artist with anti-slavery and feminist desires. Benoist's image is
one of the earliest of several works later produced throughout the nineteenth
century to symbolically link the exposed breast to the discourses of slavery
and emancipation. For example, the sexual and allegorical function of the
exposed breast of black women was also manifested in Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux's
sculptural bust Afrique, or Why Be Born a Slave? of 1870 (fig.
5), as well as in Eugène Delaplanche's busty 1878 allegorical statue
Africa (fig. 6).75 As with Benoist's portrait, these later
works were produced during an era of intense French colonial expansion and
the use of science (ethnography and anthropology) to rationalize the pacification
and sexualization of the racial Other. Indeed, Benoist's portrait could
be classified as a piece of ethnographic artthat is, as a category
of science, depicting people as specimens and suppressing "subjectivity
and narrative with taxonomy as the organizing principle" of visual
inquiry.76 The painting employs ethnographic conventionsnamely,
the juxtaposing of sensual flesh and cloththat supported "plantocratic
ideas about race and gender."77 |
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| Fig. 7 Elisabeth Vigée-Lebrun,
Peace Bringing Back Abundance, ca. 1798, oil on canvas, Paris,
Musée du Louvre |
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It is difficult to know exactly how erotic the exposed
breast would have appeared to Parisian audiences in 1800. Certainly the
presence of the bared breast would have been scandalous had it not been
intended to be read in allegorical or symbolic terms. Indeed, Benoist had
access to several allegorical models of the exposed breast, the most noteworthy
being Portrait of Mme. D'Aguesseau (ca. 1770; Bucharest Art Museum,
Romania) and Peace Bringing Back Abundance (ca. 1798) (fig. 7), both
produced by Benoist's mentor, Vigée-Lebrun. With the latter work,
the bared breast, symbolizing the idea of plenty, is read as part of a relatively
unproblematic allegory when associated with white women.78 |
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The precise origins of the exposed breast as a symbol
of liberty in France are not known, but are probably rooted in the classical
myth of the Amazona mythology created by men and centered on war,
sex, ethnography, politics, and rites of passage.79 An image
of the bare-breasted Amazon in classical works of art connoted a reversal
of sex roles, for Amazons were participants in the outdoor world, the body
politic. They reputedly severed their right breasts to "prevent their
interference with hunting, fighting, and javelin throwing."80
Retaining her left breast for breast-feeding, an Amazon was able both to
preserve her mark of womanhood and to participate in public action associated
with men. Benoist's use of the exposed breast within the historical moment
of postrevolutionary feminism and slavery, references the inside/outside,
domestic/public, female/male dynamics so rigidly codified within French
patriarchal society and neoclassicismthe intermachinations of which
Benoist attempted to critique through her Portrait d'une négresse. |
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On yet another level, the exposed breast of Benoist's
black sitter serves to reinforce the then-popular association of black slave
women's hypersexuality with their origins in hot climates. This relationship
was popularized especially in travelogues and in works of contemporary fiction.81
Although it was customary for black women in the colonies to go barebreasted
due to the heat, Benoist's portrait is no slice of colonial life. The black
woman has been taken out of her native context, removed from familial ties
and familiar surroundings. She has been deracinated, dislocated, de- and
re-historicized; consciously displayed by a French artist in a Paris studio.
Isolated from her original geographical and genealogical contexts, the black
woman has come to represent whatever is projected onto her by the artist,
her contemporaries, and by present-day viewers. The black figure is denied
personhood and becomes only a sign of what Gayatri Spivak has referred to
as the "vagueness of the negress' geography"a constructed
entity likened to "la superbe Afrique."82 Her
presentation "functions as interpellation . . . [a] calling up of subjects
into an essentially bourgeois and collective psychic space."83 |
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Complementing the black woman's bared breast is yet
another object of visual allurethat of dark flesh. Art historian Gen
Doy has pointed out that the exposed upper body could have been merely Benoist's
means of demonstrating her skill at painting fleshan opportunity that
was disallowed to most women artists during the period due to restricted
access to the nude.84 Also, we might well keep in mind that Benoist
painted the portrait for public display and visual perusal by a primarily
all-male public and critical audience. The exposure of so much dark flesh
in a manner potentially received as erotic, may have shocked or even horrified
some viewers (such as Boutard and Thévenin). |
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Griselda Pollock has put a different spin on the display
of flesh within the historical context of slavery and has suggested that
Benoist's painting visually references the slave auction block, "where
naked men and women were exposed to the calculating gazes of their would-be
owners, who checked their teeth, felt their muscles and fondled their genitals
to make sure of a good buy."85 This mode of exploitation
was "supported by the punitive practices of stripping, beating and
otherwise violating black bodies in public as signs of white power and ownership."86
Although Benoist's black woman does not appear to have been physically abused,
the psychological damage resulting from her vulnerable situation is, I believe,
readable through her facial expression and body language. |
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Pollock also notes that the sitter's hand is placed
near her genitals, drawing attention to that area and visually alluding
to the Venus Pudica typology in which the gesture to cover the breasts
and genitalia have the adverse effect of drawing increased attention to
them.87 Notwithstanding such exploitation and psychological violation
of the body, it has been suggested that the gathering gesture of the left-hand
across the figure's lap might well signal resistance on the black woman's
partguarding against further exposure and full possession by the viewer's
gaze. If this is indeed what is happening, then the black woman's gesture
of protection may well be the only agency, albeit subtle, she is accorded. |
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In addition to the exposure of breast and flesh as
visual indices of meaning, there is another allegorical element in Benoist's
painting that needs examinationthe headdress and its symbolic references
to the Phrygian cap of liberty, the African-style headwrap, and to black
women's labor. |
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"Badge of Enslavement," "Helmet of Courage"
The black woman's headwrap and partial nudity are signs that mark her
as different from white womanhood. As well, they constitute visible markers
of white woman's command over black woman's labor. By focusing on the
black woman's corporality and by juxtaposing dark skin with white cloth,
Benoist has directed attention to black woman's otherness in the realm
of the visual, the physical, and the social. Art historian Griselda Pollock
has outlined the history and semiotic significance of the headwrap in
context of the formulaic appearance of black women in European visualizations
of Orientalist and Africanist fantasy. She has described the headwrap
as "a highly specific signifier. . . [that is] too powerful a sign
of the exotic," having the ability to "Orientalize" a painting;
to generate and circulate the "politics of race, colonialism, and
sexuality."88 |
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It was with the eighteenth-century slave trade that
the headwrap became a familiar sign of servitude and poverty for black women
in the European colonies and in the United States.89 Since cloth
was produced domestically, most often by black women, the headwrap was also
associated with black women's labor. Helen Foster has asserted that "(white)
French women knew of the West African headwrap from written descriptions
and from pictorial illustrations."90 In fact, Foster uses
Benoist's painting as visual evidence that French women "actually saw
the headwrap being worn by African women brought to Europe."91
Although its supposed origins in Africa made it representative of African
continuity in the New World, the actual origins of the headwrap are unknown.
It has been suggested that an Arabic influence is possible and that the
headwrap derived from the male turban. If this is true, then the link supports
the element of exoticism ascribed to Benoist's image and its potential association
with Orientalist representational practices.92 |
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There are many suggestions as to the function of the
headwrap. It serves as an imposed mark of one's status as enslaved laborer.
It was of practical use to prevent infestation of lice and other scalp diseases.
And it was useful in absorbing perspiration during work. In the Caribbean
and in the American South, the headwrap took on a function as "a uniform
of communal identity " that encoded resistance to one's enslaved condition.93
So, as both a "badge of enslavement" and a "helmet of courage,"
the headwrap was paradoxical. In the case of Benoist's portrait, the headwrap
may operate as an instrument of identity and rebellion, even though its
very presence here also serves as a signifier of difference imposed upon
the sitter by a privileged white woman whose own sense of identity depended
on black woman's labor, physical submission, and forced anonymity. |
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| Fig. 8 Elisabeth Vigée-Lebrun,
Self-Portrait, 1790, oil on canvas, Florence, Uffizi |
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The headwrap was not, however, the exclusive domain
of black women. White women, in particular white artists such as Vigée-Lebrun,
often wore headwraps when engaged in the act of painting. With several self-portraits,
such as one from 1790 (fig. 8), Vigée-Lebrun often represented herself
sporting a headwrap while painting, actively engaging the viewer who becomes
a stand-in for the subject being rendered. The headwrap communicates to
the viewer that the artist is laboring. |
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The relationship between the headwrap, women's work
(specifically, the manufacture and cleaning of cloth), and black servitude
are noteworthy aspects of Benoist's portrait. It is important to reiterate
that the headgear speaks to the signification of fabric (here, crisply laundered)
in the master/servant relationship, between white woman and laboring black
servant.94 The black woman's "imprisoned" status within
a "bourgeois" domestic space is reinforced by how skin and cloth
relate in her physical surroundingsspecifically with the ancien
régime chair and the luxurious fabric that drapes both it and
her. The black woman constitutes an acquired item among luxury goods. |
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| Fig. 9 Simon-Louis Boizot, Moi
libre aussi (man), 1792, stipple engraving, Paris, Bibliothèque
Nationale |
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| Fig. 10 Simon-Louis Boizot, Moi
libre aussi (woman), 1792, stipple engraving, Paris, Bibliothèque
Nationale |
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Corresponding with and complementing the headwrap as
a "badge of enslavement" in Benoist's portrait is the visual approximation
of the headgear with the Phrygian cap of liberty. The allusion to the Phrygian
cap is underscored by visual comparison of Benoist's painting with images
produced just before and immediately after the emancipation decree of 1794
in which blacks wear headwraps that correlate visually with the Phrygian
cap as a signifier of the enfranchised slave (figs. 9 and 10). The abstract
idea of liberté was firmly linked with the Phrygian cap by
1789 and associated with racial thinking by way of historical occurrences
that included the French Revolution, the 1791 slave revolt on Saint-Domingue,
and the abolition of slavery in 1794. These relationships of history and
their interchangeable visual semiotics of headwrap and Phrygian cap provide
compelling evidence that for Portrait d'une négresse, Benoist may
have been consciously drawing upon various historical and symbolic sources
related to the emancipation of women and blacks. |
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The historical significance and development of the Phrygian
cap iconography and its correlation with republican notions of liberty have
been analyzed by Yvonne Korshak, who has noted that the cap itself became
a popular and instantly recognizable image in France during and immediately
after the French Revolution.95 Significant to the potential meaning
I attempt to ascribe to Benoist's portrait, the historical roots of the
Phrygian cap lay in Greek and Roman antiquity when the manumission of a
slave was celebrated by the cap's adoption in a ceremony that came to symbolize
the close relationship between bondage and a slave's freedom.96
Benoist would have known of this aspect of the Phrygian cap's classical
meaning, for its symbolization, deeply rooted in the Roman custom of manumission,
appeared regularly in dictionaries of symbols and iconography of which Benoist
would have had access as a professional artist.97 Also, as one
of many republican symbols, the Phrygian cap and its association with images
of liberty became widely known and easily recognized by both the illiterate
and literate masses. |
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Another relevant tidbit about the Phrygian cap revealed
by Korshak that is significant to one possible meaning behind Benoist's
portrait is that its origins, also traced back to Greek art, reveal that
it was used to represent the people of Phrygia and, by extension, came to
stand for anyone from exotic regions. As the cap of "foreigners,"
the Phrygian cap also "appeared on alien captives and became a recognized
symbol of the prisoner."98 This history relates the condition
of Benoist's black woman as a servant/slave (i.e., a domestic "prisoner")
and exotic to the Phrygian cap and classicizing allegory. |
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Although Korshak neglects to mention it, the Phrygian
cap was typically worn by men, not by women. In relationship to the cap's
suggestive classical and exotic symbolism in Benoist's painting, the fact
that the Phrygian cap became a signifier associated with the enfranchisement
of male slaves only, supports my argument that Benoist consciously employed
masculinist tropes and symbolic gestures in order to empower and communicate
meaning germane to women. |
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The painting's allusion to the Phrygian cap and African
headwrap, coupled with the multiple meanings of the exposed breast, the
focus on contrastive textures of flesh and cloth, and the painting's neoclassical
styleall work together to connect the idea of the liberty of the black
colonial slave with the hopeful emancipation of women. So, in painting a
portrait of a black woman, Benoist had a host of allegories and historical
occurrences from which to draw upon that carry the significance and conceptual
impact of her image beyond mere display of aesthetic virtuosity alone. I
propose that Benoist made conscientious and pointed use of meaningful allegories
and symbolizations in a period when gains from the Revolution that were
thought to benefit women and blacks, no matter how seemingly minor, were
being eroded. |
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Some contemporary observers might perceive the painting's
allusion to the Phrygian cap of liberty, as well as the exposed breast,
not as subversive strategy as I have suggested, but as evidence of "displaced
cultural manifestations of the exclusion of women from political life."99
The argument that "there was a concerted effort by men to silence,
marginalize, and erase women's voices from the public and political domains"
has been challenged by Doy who makes insightful arguments about the relationship
between women and allegory during the revolutionary era.100 Doy
has acknowledged that during and after the Revolution women of all classes
were refused legal political rights. However, she also points out that even
though the Revolution did deny women these rights, it also "opened
up new possibilities for political and economic activity by women which
can not be measured simply in terms of legal political rights granted by
bourgeois legislation."101 Benoist's portrait is a testament
to one possibility for a woman artist to express political concerns during
a time when women of all classes were increasingly restricted from participating
in direct public action. Portrait d'une négresse was perhaps Benoist's
personal protest against the increasingly anti-woman and pro-slavery atmosphere
in 1800. It was her best means of repudiating the anti-feminist and racist
policies of her day while working within the culturally sanctioned, male-dominated
domain of art production. |
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"Race" and Visuality: The Gaze Revisited
Benoist's portrait not only addresses the "fact" of French
historical participation in slavery and abolition, but it also engages
a visuality in which the complications of race, class, and gender get
produced, reproduced, and circulated within those historical phenomena.
By "visuality," I refer to the ways in which discursive concepts
and codes such as race get caught up and circulated within the
domain of the visual.102 Benoist's portrait addresses more
than just our eyes; it speaks to complex human relationships and desires
that engage the artist, the sitter, and the viewer. Within the complicated
structure of Western patriarchy and political economies, vision and visuality
are multiplethat is, they can be "hetero- and homo-sexualist,
gendered, racist, racial, etc."103 |
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Jacqueline Rose has summarized the importance of analyzing
race as a significant aspect of visuality: "the introduction of racial
politics into visual space, a racial politics which is also a sexual politics,
reconfigures the relation of image to identity, of identity to its undoing
[and] reconfigures what we might call . . . tradition and desire."104
With Benoist's portrait, we are in familiar territory in that racial and
erotic forms of representation are not only embraced, but are disrupted
as well. Viewer identities and identifications are engaged and are put into
conflict. |
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Portrait d'une négresse challenges static notions
of the racial in visuality through its multiple networks of looking. The
dynamics of viewing and the erotics of the gaze are played out among three
protagonists: the black sitter, the (unseen) white artist, and the contemporary
viewer. The tensions produced by these players in multiple gazes are highlighted
in the crisscrossing dynamics of seeing, being seen, and not being seen.
Benoist's painting is about viewer location and it raises the question of
exactly who is looking at whom and how the viewer identifies with the subject
viewed. It is a work that engages both history and contemporary viewership
in that it speaks to the social, political, and psychosexual nuances of
"race," gender, and colonial desire in the act of looking. I want
to briefly enter into this web of visual exchange to tease out what I see
as complex and multiple positionalities that force an analysis of the portrait
from critical perspectives that do not necessarily adhere to a reliance
upon empirical readings of history alone. Discourses about the gaze typically
concern issues of pleasure and knowledge, power, manipulation, and desire.105
The discursive and dialogic complexity of the image and import of the gaze
indicate that one cannot simply read the work as evidence of white-over-black
and male-over-female structures of oppression. There are additional complicating
networks of looking and power relationships at work here. |
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In most feminist theories of the gaze, the power of
the look is erotically inscribed. It is men who supposedly possess the power
of the gaze and, as such, women are subjected to it and reduced to objects.
Women become, like slaves, commodities or "capitalist objects of [possession
and] symbolic exchange . . . in market economy."106 This
regime of power is particularly meaningful within the context of colonial
slavery and domestic "servitude"the lived contexts of Benoist's
black woman. However, recent scholarship in areas outside art history, in
particular cinema and performance studies, has suggested that there are
alternate gazes irrespective of gender that reorder the importance of the
visual and produce more fluid forms of subjectivity.107 Benoist's
portrait allows for such alternate gazings. Viewing the gaze as only phallocentric
is problematic in this instance, for as a woman who happened to be a professional
painter, Benoist has deployed meaning regarding her own tenuous and ambiguous
position vis-à-vis patriarchal power in 1800. |
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With Benoist's portrait, the one-on-one confrontation
propels us into a visual and emotional entanglement with the black woman.
In this instance, the nature of one of many possible dialogic exchanges
occurring between viewer and viewed stresses the play between the optical
and the tactile. Both define what is seen as an object and both are underscored
by the sensual rendering of smooth flesh set in visual and tactile contrast
with fabric. Here is a perfect moment of what Martin Jay has called "ocular
desire" or "erotic projection in vision," where "the
bodies of the painter and viewer [are] forgotten in the name of an allegedly
disincarnated, absolute eye."108 As with Caravaggio's early
paintings of seductive male youths, Benoist's black woman stares back at
us while radiating, and indeed complicating, an erotic "energy sent
our way."109 The implicit erotic address of the black woman
in the gaze broaches the seeming necessity of an eroticized exoticism apparent
in most colonialist imagery. Robert Young has convincingly argued that the
majority of colonial representations are pervaded by images "of transgressive
sexuality . . . with persistent fantasies of inter-racial sex."110
In the case of Benoist's portrait, interracial and homoerotic desires are
implicit in the exchanged gazes between artist and sitter. This is not to
say that Benoist or the sitter was homosexual, but it does force one to
consider the ways in which same-sex wants, needs, and desires can be generated
and circulated in the interracial colonial gaze. |
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Because of its dialogic charge, the gaze forces us to
assume that the relationship between Benoist, the black woman, and the contemporary
viewer is one in which there is a struggle occurring in terms of power and
hierarchy. The returned gaze of the black woman, in the sense of altering
the I-you/self-other relationship, does not work in this case because by
looking back, the black woman is unable to dislodge herself from the objectification
effects of the gaze sent her way. She is forever othered, forever locked
into a "crushing objecthood."111 At the same time,
the black woman's look of quiet resignation could be taken as thoughtful,
woefully introspective, passive, troubled, even dignifiedan uncertain
interpretation that further confounds any definitive reading of the painting
and secures the possibility of competing senses or strategies within the
work. |
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Benoist's portrait forces the one observed (the black
woman) into a state of "permanent invisibility," while the state
of the observer (Benoist and the assumed white viewer), although not technically
present in the painting, is pronounced. This is the opposite of the typical
panoptic model that emphasizes the subjective effects of imagined scrutiny
and "permanent visibility" on the observed, but fails to explore
the subjectivity of the observer.112 So, precisely who is the
master/mistress and who is the subordinate is not so clear in this case.
Indeed, the historical realities of slavery and colonialism in the year
1800 would have rendered the gaze upon the black woman as clearly subjugating
rather than as a gaze of mutual equality. However, Benoist's assumed sympathy
toward the black woman and her own oppressed status as a woman vis-à-vis
patriarchal culture dislodge any fixed positionality of the gaze. As well,
Benoist's image provides a bridge between the all-female space of the home/studio
and the mixed gender space of the Salon. Despite the fact that women would
have also seen this work at the annual exhibition, it was subject to critical
readings (such as those by Boutard) largely determined by a predominantly
male community. I think Benoist had this reality of the contemporary moment
well in mind when she started the portrait. |
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Hal Foster has acknowledged the menacing aspect of
the gaze, referring to it as part of "a politics of sight" where
"menace is a social product, determined by power, and not a natural
fact."113 The fracturing or destabilizing of the gaze occurs
when the looker is in turn looked atwhen the viewer becomes spectacle
to another's sight. When this happens, as it does in Benoist's portrait,
the question of where the subject resides surfaces. All three participants
(artist, sitter, and viewer) constitute viewing subjects. Where each resides
is constantly shifting. Each is the result of changing locales of subjective
and intersubjective formation since multiple identifications and positionings
can be associated with the gaze. This is to say that viewing subjects (Benoist
and the contemporary viewer), their objects of vision (the black woman),
and the dynamics of visual exchange that operate among them, are complexly
produced. |
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Conclusion Even though Benoist's painting
is aesthetically successful and technically proficient, and although her
work constituted an attempt "to locate [herself through] an African
woman [as surrogate] in political [and artistic] modernity," the
ultimate result was, I believe, a political failure.114 The
portrait "reduced" a potentially radical icon of liberty for
blacks and women to an aesthetic level of sensualism for male consumption.
While attempting to negotiate the scientific and aesthetic codes associated
with the depiction of blacks and women, Benoist ended by catering to the
status quo desires of men. Her attempt to create a historical and moral
style on combined feminine and masculine terms succumbed to the masculinist
mode and formal strategies she employed. Benoist's portrait is part of
high culture that is positioned against feminism. High culture tends to
exclude the knowledge of women artists produced within feminism, and also
works in a phallocentric system of signification in which woman, whether
white or black, is reduced to a sign within the discourse on masculinity. |
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The ambivalence of agency and identity for both women
and blacks has always been a significant part of the equation of modernity.
In this respect, both Benoist and her black subject have something in common.
It is this struggle that helps chart and define modernity and its ambivalences
of agency.115 The lack of agency and the inability of black woman
to control the imaging of her own body in the nineteenth century, constitutes
a major problem of which we are reminded in Benoist's portrait. The significance
of the (re)presentation and reinvention of a black woman by a white woman
artist at the very beginning of the nineteenth century in France is intimately
and ultimately connected with the workings of patriarchal power in society.
In the end, both Benoist and her "negress" were slaves to a male-dominated
culture. However, the same portrait also exposes the cold reality of the
oppression of blacks and women at the dawn of the nineteenth century in
that both sitter and painter represent victims caught in a system fostering
subordination and erasure of that system's oppressed members even in the
face of their attempts to assert themselves. |
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Note: unless otherwise indicated, translations are by the author.
1. See Ann S. Harris and Linda Nochlin, Women Artists 1550-1950
(New York: Knopf, 1976). For a recent study of these artists in the context
of revolutionary ideology and bourgeois French culture, see Gen Doy, Women
and Visual Culture in 19th-Century France, 1800-1852 (London and New
York: Leicester University Press, 1998).
2. Benoist was forced to abandon her career because her husband received
from the restored Bourbon government a high profile appointment. Her mother
was concerned about her daughter's professional and personal persona and
put pressure on her to quit painting. Art historian Gen Doy points out
that Benoist was a victim of a bourgeois ideology that maintained that
women should not have a public presence in French cultural life. As a
result, many women were dissuaded from starting a career as an artist.
See Doy, Women and Visual Culture,1998, p. 36. In terms of the
tension most painters such as Benoist experienced between wanting recognition
as a professional painter and fulfilling expected duties as wife and mother,
it is significant to note that Benoist signed her painting with her maiden
name "Laville Leroulx," and just under it she added "(épouse)
Benoist."
3. For example, as recently as 1989, the British art historian Hugh
Honour saw Benoist's portrait as "the most beautiful portrait of
a black woman ever painted." Today, this cautious and politically
correct statement sounds overly simplified. See Hugh Honour, The Image
of the Black in Western Art 4, pt.2 (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University
Press, 1989), p. 7.
4. All persons of African descent were viewed as distinctly non-French.
When represented in art, blacks were typically and immediately classed
into the de-personalized category of "exotic" or "oriental."
They were never recognized as full-fledged participants in the forging
of a French modern identity. On the visual and theoretical dynamics of
racial obfuscation and periodic inclusion in works of high modernism and
popular culture in the late nineteenth-century, see James Smalls, "'Race'
As Spectacle in Late-Nineteenth-Century French Art and Popular Culture,"
French Historical Studies 26, no. 2 (Spring 2003), pp. 351-382.
5. See Honour, Image of the Black, 1989, p. 7.
6. On the restrictive nature of the Code Napoléon to women, see
Robert Nye, Masculinity and Male Codes of Honor in Modern France
(New York: Oxford University Press, 1993).
7. Marie-Juliette Ballot, Une élève de David la Comtesse
Benoist L'Émilie de Demoustier, 1768-1826 (Paris: Librairie
Plon, 1914), p. 83, n. 2. Other biographical details of the life of Benoist
are also derived from Ballot, 1914.
8. Ibid., p. 87. Because he was a member of the royal cabinet, Benoist's
father was, on one occasion, brought before a police board of inquiry
to ascertain how much his daughter was involved in royalist plots to save
the royal family from execution. Benoist herself was questioned and released,
for the police were really more interested in the affairs of her husband.
For more than a year Benoist was constantly followed and put under surveillance
by the police, see Ballot, 1914, p. 102.
9. Ballot 1914, p. 83.
10. Ibid., p. 151. Hugh Honour, The Visual Arts: A History (Englewood
Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall,1982), p. 482. Also see Arts Council of Great
Britain, The Age of Neo-Classicism. Exh. cat. (London: The Arts
Council of Great Britain, 1972), p. 19.
11. See Griselda Pollock, Differencing the Canon: Feminist Desire
and the Writing of Art's Histories (London and New York: Routledge,
1999), p. 287.
12. Prior to the temporary abolition of slavery in 1794, the laws governing
the legal status of colonial slaves brought onto French soil was ambiguous.
However, once on continental French soil, a slave's status changed to
that of servant and he or she could legally petition for liberty. For
a history of the social status and legal complexities of slaves brought
into France proper during the late eighteenth century, see Shelby T. McCloy,
The Negro in France (Lexington: University of Kentucky Press, 1961);
Robert Louis Stein, The French Slave Trade in the Eighteenth Century:
An Old Regime Business (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1979).
13. Harris and Nochlin, 1976, p. 209. The only monograph dedicated to
Benoist and her work is by Ballot, 1914.
14. Margaret A. Oppenheimer, "Three Newly Identified Paintings
by Marie-Guillelmine Benoist," Metropolitan Museum Journal
31 (1996), p. 143.
15. For an expanded discussion of this painting in the context of the
interests and social status of nineteenth-century women artists, see Doy,
Women and Visual Culture,1998, pp. 214-215.
16. Pollock, 1999, p. 264.
17. Ibid., p. 254.
18. I borrow this idea from Tamar Garb who used it in the context of
the much later images of masculinity produced by Gustave Caillebotte.
See Tamar Garb, "Masculinity, Muscularity and Modernity in Caillebotte's
Male Figures," in Terry Smith, ed., In Visible Touch: Modernism
and Masculinity (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1997), p. 55.
19. David Theo Goldberg, Racist Culture: Philosophy and the Politics
of Meaning (Oxford: Blackwell, 1993), p. 151.
20. During the nineteenth century, the definitions of these terms, along
with the designations "esclave (slave)" and "noir (Black),"
tended to shift according to historical and political circumstances. On
the history of the French etymology of these racial designations, see
Serge Daget, "Les mots esclave, nègre, noir, et les jugements
de valeur sur la traite négrière dans la littérature
abolitioniste française de 1770 à 1845," Revue française
d'histoire d'outre-mer 60 (1973), pp. 511-548; Simone Delesalle and
Lucette Valensi, "Le mot 'nègre' dans les dictionnaires français
d'ancien régime: Histoire et lexicographie," Langue française
15 (September 1972), pp. 79-104; also see William B. Cohen, The French
Encounter With Africa: White Responses to Blacks, 1530-1880 (Bloomington:
Indiana University Press, 1980).
21. For an extended discussion of this painting, see Sylvia Musto, "Portraiture,
Revolutionary Identity and Subjugation: Anne-Louis Girodet's Citizen Belley,"
RACAR 20, nos. 1-2 (1993): pp. 60-71; Helen D. Weston, "Representing
the Right to Represent: The Portrait of Citizen Belley, ex-representative
of the Colonies by A.-L. Girodet," Res 26 (Autumn 1994), pp. 83-99;
Helen D. Weston, "Portrait du citoyen Belley, ex-représentant
des colonies," in Olivier Bonfait and Brigitte Marin, eds., Les
portraits du pouvoir (Paris: Somogy Editions, 2003). Also see Viktoria
Schmidt-Linsenhoff, "Male Alterity in the French RevolutionTwo
Paintings by Anne-Louis Girodet at the Salon of 1798," in Ida Blom,
Karen Hagemann, and Catherine Hall, eds., Gendered Nations: Nationalisms
and Gender Order in the Long Nineteenth Century (Oxford and New York:
Berg, 2000), pp. 81-105.
22. Both images are used as cover illustrations for Hugh Honour's two-volume
The Image of the Black in Western Art. Also see Weston, "Portrait
du citoyen Belley", 2003, pp. 127-133, 152-155.
23. For Belley's biography and politically active significance in postrevolutionary
France, see Weston, "Representing the Right to Represent", 1994.
Also see Schmidt-Linsenhoff, 2000, pp. 81-105; Alexandra Wettlaufer, Pen
vs. Paintbrush: Girodet, Balzac, and the Myth of Pygmalion in Postrevolutionary
France (New York: Palgrave, 2001).
24. Weston "Portrait du citoyen Belley", 2003, p. 129.
25. Roland Barthes explores the concept of evacuation and "fill-in"
in his Mythologies (Paris: Seuil, 1957; reprint: New York: Hill
and Wang, 1994), pp. 109-159. Barthes' evacuation thesis was also a "critique
of the ideology of mastery, for which the visual field was seen as the
predominant site," see Jacqueline Rose, "Sexuality and Vision:
Some Questions," in Hal Foster, ed., Vision and Visuality
(Seattle: Bay Press, 1988), p. 120.
26. Art historian Griselda Pollock has chimed in on this very point
in accusing modern feminist scholars of putting black women through the
ordeal of display as a result of their (the feminists') desire, indeed
need, to "excavate a history of women artists" as a means to
secure "the cause of European women's creativity." See Pollock,
1999, p. 300.
27. Maxim Silverman, ed., Race, Discourse and Power in France
(London: Avebury, 1991), p. 12.
28. See Pollock, 1999, 256. Also see Tzvetan Todorov, Of Human Diversity:
Nationalism, Racism, and Exoticism in French Thought (Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press, 1993), p. 157. In the French colonial and national
context, the notion that race was a biological fact was fueled by society's
belief in the ability of science to contribute to social and material
progress and, therefore, to national greatness.
29. Jean-Baptiste Boutard, Arlequin au Muséum,ou Critique
des tableaux, en vaudevilles, (Paris, 1801), quoted in Ballot, 1914,
p. 150; Honour, Image of the Black, 1989, p. 12; Doy, Women and Visual
Culture, 1998, p. 215. The French text reads: "A qui se fier
dans la vie, Après une pareille horreur, C'est une main blanche
et jolie, Qui nous a fait cette noirceur."
30. Charles Thévenin, Le Nouveau Arlequin et son ami Gilles
au
muséum, vol. 22, no. 624, (n.d.).
31. Gen Doy has pointed out that the use of the term noirceur
(black horror) to describe the sitter has multiple meanings including
aversion to blackness, melancholy, viciousness, and horror. See Doy, Women
and Visual Culture, 1998, p. 215.
32. Weston, "Portrait du citoyen Belley", 2003, p.
129.
32. Goldberg, 1993, p. 1.
34. In this regard, Doy gives significant meaning to Benoist's choice
of palette in suggesting that the dominant colors used intentionally recall
the tricolor. This is an observation that adds to the notion of Benoist's
attempt to integrate (at least rhetorically) black people into the corps
politique of the French nation. See Doy, Women and Visual Culture,
1998, p. 215.
35. Ibid., 1998, p. 6.
36. This assertion is in response to Hugh Honour's unapologetic assessment
that "there is not the least suggestion of servitude in the painting.
The black woman is completely at her ease in this warmly humane and noble
image . . . Few, if any, European images of non-Europeans are as calmly
and clear-sightedly objective." See Honour, Image of the Black,
1989, p. 7.
37. See J.-B. Boutard [M. B.], "Salon de l'an 1806," Journal
de l'Empire (Journal des débats), 7 November 1806, pp.
1-2.
38. Mary D. Sheriff, The Exceptional Woman: Elisabeth Vigée-Lebrun
and the Cultural Politics of Art (Chicago and London: University of
Chicago Press, 1996), p. 111.
39. See Doy, Women and Visual Culture, 1998.
40. Sheriff, 1996, p. 111.
41. Ibid., p. 111.
42. Gill Perry and Michael Rossington, eds., Femininity and Masculinity
in Eighteenth-Century Art and Culture (Manchester and New York: Manchester
University Press, 1994), p. 6.
43. See Elisabeth Vigée-Lebrun, Souvenirs, des femmes
(Paris, 1835), vol. 1, p. 55. On Vigée-Lebrun and the sexual politics
of the French Academy, see Sheriff, 1996.
44. Admission to David's studio was highly competitive, and David may
have accepted Benoist as a gesture of defiance, since the king had declared,
in 1785, that women artists were not to be trained in the Louvre. See
Harris and Nochlin, 1976, p. 209. Benoist lived at the Louvre through
1797 and was later awarded an apartment and studio in the Maison d'Angivillers.
See Paris, Archives nationales F13 965, no. 147; Archives nationales F13
965, no. 314; Oppenheimer 1996, p. 150, n. 2.
45. Nonetheless, David was told by the Comte d'Angiviller, in 1787,
that he had to send away his female students. See Sheriff, 1996, pp. 112-113.
46. London Arts Council of Great Britain, 1972, p. 19.
47. As well, the palette of each work is supposedly loaded with color
symbolismthe David, in reference to the republican cockade and the
sitter's impending execution; the Benoist, in reference to the French
tricolor. See Anita Brookner, Jacques-Louis David (New York: Harper
and Row, 1980), p. 105; Doy, Women and Visual Culture, 1998, pp.
214-215.
48. Oppenheimer, 1996, p. 150.
49. See Ballot, 1914, pp. 50-51.
50. See Ballot, 1914, p. 150. Joseph-Etienne Esménard (1769-1811)
was a highly recognized publicist and poet. He was editor of the conservative
newspapers La Quotidenne and the Mercure de France from
1797 to 1799. In addition, he held the posts of consul of France in Martinique
and in the Ile Saint-Thomas. He was also secretary to general Leclerc
in Saint Domingue, and so his views of blacks were biased.
51. Bruun Neergaard, Sur la situation des beaux-arts en France, ou
lettres d'un danois à son ami (Paris, 1801); Quoted in Ballot,
1914, p. 150. The French text reads: "Madame Laville-Leroux nous
a donné le Portrait d'une négresse. Il est facile de voir,
à la pureté du dessin, qu'elle est élève de
David."
52. On masculinity and its breakdown in neoclassicism, see Abigail Solomon-Godeau,
Male Trouble: A Crisis in Representation (London: Thames and Hudson,
1997); Thomas Crow, "Revolutionary Activism and the Cult of Male
Beauty in the Studio of David," in Bernadette Fort, ed., Fictions
of the French Revolution (Illinois: Northwestern University Press,
1991), pp. 55-83; Alex Potts, "Beautiful Bodies and Dying Heroes:
Images of Ideal Manhood in the French Revolution," History Workshop
30 (1990), pp. 1-21. On the gendered nature of the French Revolution and
neoclassicism, see Joan B. Landes, Women and the Public Sphere in the
Age of the French Revolution (Ithaca and London: Cornell University
Press, 1988).
53. See Gen Doy, "Women and the Bourgeois Revolution of 1789: Artists,
Mothers and Makers of (Art) History," in Perry and Rossington, 1994,
p. 190.
54. My italics. See Jules Renouvier, Histoire de l'art pendant la
Révolution (Paris, 1863), vol. 1, p. 30. The French text reads:
"Le mérite des femmes et leur vaillante participation aux
Arts est un des titres distinctifs de ce temps," and "la citoyenne
Benoist et Mme. Mongez ne craignirent pas d'etre initiées aux pratiques
les plus viriles de l'atelier de David." For an account of the gendering
of art genres in post-Revolutionary French painting, see Margaret Fields
Denton, "A Woman's Place: The Gendering of Genres in Post-Revolutionary
French Painting," Art History 21, no. 2 (June 1998), pp. 219-246.
On Angélique Mongez and other women artists influenced by David
during the nineteenth century, see Doy, Women and Visual Culture,
1998.
55. See Ballot, 1914, pp. 52, 55, 150. Quoted in Doy, Women and Visual
Culture, 1998, p. 99.
56. For an engaging discussion of how women artists, writers, and activists
in the revolutionary period constructed the female body and related it
to experiences in the male-reserved public realm, see Dorinda Outram,
The Body and the French Revolution (New Haven |