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Marie
Lathers
Bodies of Art, French Literary Realism, and the Artist's Model
Lincoln and London: University of Nebraska Press, 2001
294 pp.; 17 b/w ills.; index, bibliography; $60.00(hardcover)
ISBN 0803229410 |
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The various ways in which artists
and writers approached the live model throughout the nineteenth
century provide Marie Lathers with the focus of her examination
of the relationship between literature and the visual arts. Weaving
a complex web of correspondences between the arts, Lathers discusses
the existence of different types of modelsItalian, Jewish, and
the Parisiennethat writers and visual artists used in the creation
of their works. Each type is interpreted as evidence of gender structures
employed by such leading writers as Honoré de Balzac, Edmond
de Goncourt, and Emile Zola. Lathers also demonstrates how the continuously
changing interest in different types of models symbolically reveals
how artistic reclamation of the body was modified as the nineteenth
century progressed. These models' bodies, as seen against the cultural
background of the era, functioned as symbols for societal decay
at the fin de siècle and into the twentieth century.
As Bodies of Art unfolds, the reader learns how the cultural
historian, doubling as a literary critic, can provide significant
insights into the interpretation of literary and visual works of
art. |
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In her first
chapter, "Paris Qui Pose: The Female Model in Nineteenth Century
France," the author traces the use of models in classes at the
Academy or their employment by working artists, which contributed
to the professionalization of modeling as a career. By presenting
evidence for shifts in the selection of models, from the exotic Italian
or Jewish type to the more prevalent Parisienne, Lathers provides
a historical context for the profession. In more general terms, the
artist's perception and choice of a model affected how the female
nude, or "woman," was received by the viewing public. |
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The greater part of the book is devoted
to chapters that analyze how major writers, such as Balzac, used stories
from the pastbeginning with that of Raphael and his seductive model,
the Fornarinaas guides for the presentation of the model in the
nineteenth century. Lathers advances the proposition that artists
either employed the model as a source for realist interpretations
or transformed her into an "ideal" icon. In each case, the
artist could not produce his creations without first studying the
model. A later chapter focuses on the career of Charles Baudelaire,
how his literary characters were drawn from specific individuals,
including Madame Sabatier, and how these figures inspired the often
seductive phrases in the poet's Fleurs du mal. Lathers's examination
of Edmond de Goncourt's model, Manette Salomon, presents the female
model in a different role. As a Jew, a type believed to be uncontrollable,
the poser is increasingly seen as a threat both to society and to
the continuing creative prowess of the artist. However, this type
of model was not as complicated or as dangerous as the Parisienne,
who was the embodiment of the femme fatale; the latter dominated
the pages of writers and the canvases of Salon painters in Paris at
the end of the century. |
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"The Model's Postpartum Belly:
Zola's L'Oeuvre" offers an approach to the study of the
model when she is used as a naturalist icon. In this chapter devoted
to literary and visual works that are crafted with scrupulous realism,
the model becomes interesting not so much for her ideal shape, but
for her personification of a genuine woman. Represented in her motherly
role and mired in the grip of poverty, she becomes a grim reminder
of the transience of life, often symbolized in the decaying appearance
of her body. Zola's creation in L'Oeuvre of a new, modern type
of model, one that shows the vulgar side of life, provides a parallel
construction for Lathers's discourse. |
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In "Maupassant, Mauclair, and
Villiers: The Aging and Death of the Model," Lathers argues that
by the last decades of the century the model is no longer confined
to the artist's studio. Painters now depict the Parisienne everywhere
in society, in her street clothes, suggesting that another type of
model had become the dominant type. The last segments of the book,
including a commentary on how artists renounced the live model in
favor of working from published or available photographs of the nude,
demonstrate how new techniques replaced the earlier tradition. In
a brief postscript, Lathers recounts the suicides of several models
whose raison d'être no longer existed. A centuries-old profession
simply vanished at the close of the century as artists ceased to take
inspiration from the closely observed, living human body. |
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Lathers's compelling and well-researched
text poses numerous questions that are left unanswered. Did the nineteenth-century
writer or artist use the model only as metaphor, as a means of analyzing
gender specific texts? Or, as Lathers tantalizingly suggests, was
the posed nude really a symbol for the changing course of modernism
as filtered through the creative approaches and methodologies of painters
and writers? This provocative book suggests many avenues along this
line of investigation, but leaves the reader to follow his or her
own path. |
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Gabriel P. Weisberg
Professor of Art History
University of Minnesota, Minneapolis |
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