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Model
and Supermodel: The Artist's Model in British Art and Culture
Jane Desmarais, Martin Postle, and William Vaughan, editors
Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2006
169 pages; 40 b/w illustrations, 13 color illustrations; select
bibliography; index
Cost: $85.00 [cloth]
ISBN 0 7190 6662 x
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The trope of the male artist and
female modelparticularly the woman who posed for the nudeis
a commonplace of modern fiction and art, and has featured prominently
in art historical discourse. The model has been constructed both as
the beloved muse who inspired masculine genius, and the passive object
of the active, scopophilic male gaze, but recent scholarship has begun
to suggest alternative approaches. Some scholars have sought to recuperate
the model's agency, proposing that the model's role went beyond serving
as a compliant still life arranged for the artist's inspection. Others
have begun to explore how a change in the familiar gender pattern,
the introduction of racial or ethnic difference, or a model's professional
experience might inflect the artist/model transaction.1 This volume
presents eight essays and two interviews that explore aspects of the
artist/model relationship in Britain from the eighteenth century to
the present, and broaden this expanding area of scholarship. The collection
is an extension of papers presented at two symposia organized in 1999
in conjunction with the exhibition The Artist's Model from Etty
to Spencer, curated by Martin Postle and William Vaughan, and
presented at York City Art Gallery; Kenwood London; and Djanogly Art
Gallery, University of Nottingham.2 If the exhibition focused primarily
on painting, the essays enlarge the frame of reference to include
fictional, performative, and photographic aspects of the pose. Although
the editors disavow a revisionist impulse, the collection suggests
avenues for future exploration. |
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Martin
Postle's "Naked civil servants: the professional life model in
British art and society," examines the working experiences of
the men and women who made a living posing in teaching academies and
in private studios. Drawing from artists' memoirs and letters, he
provides rich and detailed information on the nitty-gritty of day-to-day
work as a model. Since British institutionsunlike their French
and Italian counterpartsrelied on female models as early as
the late eighteenth century, moral issues emerged early on in public
discourse. The women who posed were subject to scrutiny, and Postle
documents their relegation to private studios after the middle of
the nineteenth century because of public opposition to their presence
in teaching academies. He suggests that their equivocal social position
has remained a persistent problem into the twentieth-first century
despite efforts to organize associations, such as the Register of
Artists' Models, that would foster a professional identity and improve
working conditions. |
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Elizabeth Prettejohn in "The
Pre-Raphaelite model" explores the singular studio practice developed
by the members of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood who were committed
to preserving the likenesses of particular models within their paintings
of historical and imaginary subjects. The importance of the personal
relationships between these artists and their models has long been
noted. Unlike earlier authors, who have often emphasized the intimate,
sexual aspects of the exchange, Prettejohn provides a more balanced
view by suggesting that the artists' attentiveness to their models'
identities may have originated in the social and political climate
in the late 1840s, and by focusing on the men who posed. She notes
that the fusion of "real models" and "imaginary subjects"
in Pre-Raphaelite work has long provoked a mixed response and perceptively
uses Freud's notion of the uncannythe disquieting effect produced
by something simultaneously familiar and strangeto explore the
discomfort that numerous viewers experience when confronted by this
apparent disjunction. Since it is more common within the Western tradition
for the model's identity to be subsumed to the requirements of the
composition, the Pre-Raphaelite commitment to a contrary practice
might, she suggests, help explain why their work is often ignored
in art historical discussions of the modernist canon. |
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Jane Desmarais surveys French and
English fictional narratives of artists and models in "The model
in the writer's block: the model in fiction from Balzac to du Maurier."
Since the artist/model exchange was a popular trope in nineteenth
century literature, her accounts are necessarily brief summaries rather
than extended analyses.3 She distinguishes between the English preoccupation
with the ancient myth of Pygmalion, in which art is transformed into
life, and the French Realist tendency to view the model as a modern
social figure. This distinction provides the framework for her more
developed discussion of George du Maurier's novel, Trilby,
in which the heroine, Trilby O'Ferrall, is transformed from artist's
model to operatic diva by the mesmerist Svengali. Desmarais suggests
that the heroine's progress from "working girl" to "beautiful
Muse" combines the two dominant narratives to expose the ambiguities
of the model's position as passive object and active subject. The
novel's ultimate denial of Trilby's agency is typical, Desmarais suggests,
of a fundamental conservatism in fin de siècle literature
and art. |
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Alison Smith's essay, "Modelling
Godiva: the female model as performer in Victorian England,"
returns to the model's ambiguous position within British culture to
argue that although the female models were social outcasts, some were
able to leverage their performance on the model stand to craft a public
persona, and to capitalize on their celebrity to secure some social
mobility. Through a study of the women who performed as Lady Godiva
in the popular festival held at Coventry, Smith explores the links
between the festival, the artist's studio, tableaux vivants
restaging familiar contemporary works, and the theatrical performances
of equestriennes. The women who mobilized the notoriety generated
by their performances as Godiva included both theatrical performers,
who occasionally posed for well-known artists, and women whose career
trajectory took them from the model stand to the stage. Smith's essay
demonstrates that an interdisciplinary approach, exploring the links
between the theater and the studio, might do much to recover the sense
of the model's agency that is missing from many fictional and visual
representations. |
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Reena Suleman's "Still Lives:
the art of Edward Linley Sambourne" provides a case study of
Sambourne's practice, which entailed substituting photographs for
live models in order to sustain a demanding career as an illustrator
for Punch. Her summary of Sambourne's early career and nineteenth-century
journalistic procedures provides a useful contextualization of a profession
thatdespite the growing interest in the study of visual cultureis
not widely familiar. She limits her discussion primarily to the photographs
of Sambourne's family and servants, rather than those made from the
women he hired to pose nude at the Camera Club.4 The links between
the home and the studio, the domestic and the artistic, were surely
widespread in the nineteenth century, but have not been carefully
investigated: this context might provide the basis for an alternative
to the eroticized exchange between artist and model. The photographs
Reese includes as illustrations are fascinating and amusing, but for
those unfamiliar with Sambourne's oeuvre, a sample his drawings
for Punch would have been illuminating. |
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Michael Hatt examines the relationship
between Henry Scott Tuke and the young boys who posed for the plein
air paintings he produced on the Cornish coast in "'A great
sight': Henry Scott Tuke and his models". By focusing on the
homosocial exchange, Hatt shifts the artist/model transaction away
from the familiar heterosexual interaction. He uses Tuke's engagement
with Uranianismthe Victorian term for man-boy love, whether
chaste or overtly sexualto provide a context for the paintings
of naked "lads" swimming and boating, which Hatt characterizes
as Utopian fantasies of a homosocial idyll played out in the eternal
presenta kind of Never-Never Land in the fishing village of
Falmouth. While Hatt underlines that the models' youthful purity served
as an erotic stimulus, he argues that Tuke, who eschewed professional
models, maintained a resolutely avuncular relationship with the local
boys who posed for him. Examining Tuke's painted surfaces, he suggests
that artist's preoccupation with the nuances of colored light on skin
served to sublimate his desire: looking itself became an erotic experience.
In the process Hatt also introduces issues of class and race through
considerations of the difference between Tuke's middle class background
and his models' working class origins and the Anglo-Saxon associations
evoked by the models' milk white skin-tones, which signify their innocence. |
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William Vaughan, in "Overexposed?
The model in British figurative art form Sickert to [Lucien] Freud,"
argues that with the rise of realism in the nineteenth century, the
individuality of the model displaced the notion of the model as exemplar
that had prevailed within the traditional academic paradigm. He begins
with the female model in the work of Walter Richard Sickert, who was
influenced by French Realism in general, and Degas in particular,
and Stanley Spencer, who preferred to pose intimate associates rather
than professional models. The primary concern of the essay, however,
is the complicated work and practice of Francis Bacon. Vaughan carefully
distinguishes between Bacon's statements, in which artist emphasized
that he did not work from the photographs that littered his studio,
and the contradictory evidence of his drawings. It isn't unusual for
an artist to disavow a reliance on photography, but Vaughan points
out that in other ways Bacon's practice was unique: the images he
relied on were often commissioned photographs of friends and lovers
who presumably would have been available to pose. Bacons' use of photographs,
thus, is shown to be both a means of managing both his lack of training
and the intensely intersubjective, but not necessarily sexual, nature
of the artist/model transaction. |
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Catherine Wood, "Paper dolls:
the found model in contemporary art" examines recent artists'
substitution of photographs and images drawn from consumer culture
for live models. She argues that such artists as Julian Opie, Graham
Little, Jake and Dinos Chapman, Kirsten Glass, Jun Hasegawa, Gary
Hume, Muntean/Rosenblum, Mark Leckey, Ben Judd and Alessandro Raho
embrace the pervasive presence of "the image world" to explore
the role of glamour, fashion and branding in shaping consciousness.
She suggests that any sense of the live model's individuality, as
examined in Prettejohn's and Vaughan's essays, is displaced by simulation:
the mediated skin of the model masks the models' identities. |
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The volume concludes with two interviews.
Painter Peter Blake talks with Colin Wiggins about his work in the
life studio, beginning with his instruction in the 1940s and continuing
through recent participation in a weekly open studio. Susannah Gregory,
a former model, talks with Jane Desmarais about her experiences posing
for life classes, individual artists, and the sculptors working for
Madame Tussaud's wax museum. These two conversations bring a first-person
perspective to the practice of the pose, and resonate with other recent
studies.5 |
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Since the volume is organized in
a chronological sequence and a number of the essays provide thematic
surveys rather than narrowly focused case studies, several themes
reoccur throughout the collection, including the impact of Realism,
the importance of photography, and the equivocal status of the female
model. This contributes to the richness of the anthology, so it is
disappointing that the limited number of reproductions40 black
and white and 13 color illustrationsdon't adequately represent
the range of works discussed. Presumably this was a cost issue, but
fortunately it detracts only minimally from a collection that presents
suggestive new ways to approach a familiar topos. |
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Susan Waller
Associate Professor, University of Missouri-Saint Louis
wallersu[at]umsl.edu |
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1. See for example: Dawkins, Heather, The Nude in French Art
and Culture, 18701910. (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 2002), 86-114; and Colin Ford, "'Mountain Nymph' and
'Damnèd Villain': Posing for Julia Margaret Cameron,"
History of Photography 27, 2 (Spring 2003), 6065.
2. Martin Postle and William Vaughan, The Artist's Model from
Etty to Spencer. Exh. cat. (London: Merrell Holberton Publishers,
Ltd., 1999). This exhibition was preceded by Ilaria Bignamini and
Martin Postle, The Artist's Model: it's role in British art from
Lely to Etty. Exh. cat. (Nottingham: University of Nottingham
Press, 1991).
3. For a more extensive discussion of the artist's model in French
literature, see Marie Lathers, Bodies of Art: French literary
realism and the artist's model. (Lincoln: University of Nebraska
Press, 2001).
4. Other aspects of Sambourne's practice were explored in a special
issue of The British Art Journal, 3, 1 (Autumn 2001). See
in particular, Martin Postle, "Hidden Lives: Linley Sambourne
and the female model," 2027, and Reena Suleman, "Out
of the ordinary, Linley Sambourne and the amateur model," 2835.
5. For a sociological study of the model in contemporary culture,
see Sarah R. Phillips, Modeling Life: art models speak about
nudity, sexuality and the creative process. (Albany: State University
of New York Press, 2006).
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© 20089 Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide
and Susan Waller. All Rights Reserved. |
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