Posts

End Thoughts

       Language opens doors and connects thoughts and meanings. I have found from all the readings and countless hours of research, writing, and rewriting that I got this. From the beginning of my Master's journey, I have been relearning how to write, and it sometimes was a struggle, but in the end, it taught me how to better convey my meaning. Eng624 Women & Art taught me the vocabulary and knowledge to properly discuss art, specifically women in the arts. I learned about incredible and groundbreaking artists who shattered the norms and reinvented art. The artist's life experiences and struggles influenced their artwork, and the opportunity to analyze and dissect their meanings was an interesting experience. It helped me appreciate and honestly dislike some of the artwork. It teaches us to not judge by appearance, even as aesthetically appealing as it may be. This class helped me look at art with a better eye and to be able to discuss art clearly. It helped me better under

Yoko Ono's " Cut Piece" (1964)

Image
C  Yoko Ono, " Cut Piece " Kyoto, Japan 1964 Yoko Ono's "Cut Piece"           Yoko Ono is a multimedia artist, performance artist, filmmaker, and musician. She also dedicated much of her time to being a peace activist, which is a recurring theme in her artwork. She was born in Tokyo, Japan, in 1933 to a prestigious and wealthy family. Her early years were marked by living in the US and Japan, and she attended prestigious schools. She trained in voice and piano. The family returned to Japan in 1941. 1945 was a turbulent time in Yoko Ono’s life. It was right after the bombing of Tokyo during World War 2 her father was captured and put into a concentration camp in Thailand by the Americans. Yoko and her mother and brother escaped to the countryside. They would peddle their household items for food. After the war, her family was reunited, and their wealth was restored. Yoko went back to school. Her family moved back to New York, and she had a brief stint at Sarah La

Hans Bellmer: A Psychoanalytic Perspective

Image
  Han Bellmer, PoupĂ©e in Hayloft , 1935-1936          Surrealist photographer  Hans Bellmer, c. 1902-1975, was born in Kattowitz, Germany. His father was a proud member of the Nazi party, which created issues with his son, who was anti-Nazi and anti-Fascist.   Bellmer’s photography juxtaposes harsh and often violent scenes depicting doll forms that he made in various environments. These violent and violating displays of doll form create a connection with the oppressive Nazi Germany that Bellmer lived in and with his relationship with his father. Bellmer introduction to AndrĂ© Breton in Paris in 1935 solidified his inclusion in a group exhibition at the Galerie des Quatre Chemins and launched his membership in the surrealist circle. In March, he was back in Berlin (Taylor, 2000, p.70). The Nazi persecution of avant-garde artists is well known, but it is important to realize that Bellmer’s mentors and closest associates in Berlin in the 1920s were among those now targeted for public abuse

Did The Modernist Movement Really Provide Freedom for Early 20th Century Women Artists?

Image
  Winifred Gill and Nina Hamnett modeling dresses at the Omega Workshops, c. 1913       Great changes occurred in art in the early 20 th century, with the modernists kicking down doors and reinventing how we create and view art. Modernists were often associated with artistic and social freedom and differed from the artists from the century before. Modernism created more inclusive spaces and opportunities for women than 19th-century academies. Modernism brought new ways of thinking about surface planes becoming the carriers for the spiritual content, which defines the “new” art and removes it from the domain of the decorative (Chadwick, 2021, p.85). It is interesting to see how this bending of color and perspective is utilized differently, often outside the ‘static’ painting medium. Modernists explore textiles and clothing as an art form and a form of social change that bent gender and cultural identities.       During this time, groups like the Omega Workshops were created, providing

Elizabeth Jane Gardner Bouguereau's The Dove Fanciers (1883)

Image
  Elizabeth Jane Gardner Bouguereau The Dove Fanciers c.1883 Elizabeth Jane Gardner Bouguereau’s “ The Dove Fanciers ” is a scene that shows two women, one staring at the other while the other looks at and contemplates the white dove. This seems to be an intimate exchange with disregard for the viewer. The women are barefoot in nature. One woman holds a birdcage, while the other holds a dove. They are a triangle intertwined into each other, with the bird cage as an artifact of change. The painting represents transition. The 19 th century was a transitionary period for women. This was when women were gaining their independence and being freed, like the dove in the women's arms. The woman with the dove is dressed in white and pink and is kneeling before the woman in blue, holding the birdcage. The woman with the dove is the representation of change. She is a renewal of feminine ideologies dressed in white, and she reflects innocence. In comparison, the woman in blue holding the bird

Judith Beheading Holofernes: Analyzing Artemesia Gentileschi and Caravaggio

Image
 Artemisa Gentileschi Judith Beheading Holofernes  (1611-12) Caravaggio Judith Beheading Holofernes (1598-99) Judith Beheading Holofernes Analyzing Artemesia Gentileschi and Caravaggio                   There is something about a justified and violent revenge, where you don’t feel guilty by thinking, “Well, he deserved it.” A well-traversed revenge subject of Biblical origin from the Old Testament is the story of Judith killing Holofernes, a Babylonian general who almost took the ancient city of Bethulia until the widow Judith seduced him, got him drunk, and then cut off his head. Thus, providing victory for the Hebrews. It is a violent act depicted in many paintings by artists in the 16 th and 17 th centuries. Two such artists are Caravaggio and Artemesia Gentileschi. Caravaggio has a history with the Gentileschi family, being that Artemisia and her father, Orazio, were both followers of Caravaggio. Orazio Gentileschi was one of Caravaggio’s greatest followers (Chadwick, 2020, p 39)

Matthew Barney: The Cremaster Cycle (1994-2002)

Image
  The Cremaster Cycle: Thoughts on Contemporary Masculinity         I recently researched and watched clips of the Cremaster Cycle. If you are still getting familiar with this installation art/film/transcendental experience, it was created by visionary visual artist Matthew Blarney. It is a visual experience that spans five films, four of which are an hour long, and the final installment, Cremaster Cycle 3, is a three-hour film. The film is named after the Cremaster muscle that raises and lowers the testes to help regulate heat and protect sperm production. The film isn’t in chronological order but can be viewed as a stand-alone. The movie’s order starts at four, one, five, two, and three. It is an exciting film that explores different stages of the male’s sexual maturity from conception to gestation and growing from a child to sexual maturity. It is a film that explores themes of masculinity, and Blarney (2001) strives to show through the characters that he plays that “violence is sub