Reinventing Herself - The Black Female Nude
Reinventing Herself - The Black Female Nude
Reinventing Herself - The Black Female Nude
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access to Woman's Art Journal
REINVENTING HERSELF
The Black Female Nude
By Lisa E. Farrington
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Fig. 2. Renee Cox, Yo Mama and the Statue, (ca. 1995), silverprint.
Artist's Collection.
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Fig. 5
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Fig. 4.
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ed that the woman artist, "see-
a ceremony the Vodou priest or ing herself as loathed, takes the
priestess draws a series of sym- C~L I U ~7 very mark of her otherness and
bols or veves on the floor of the ;~14 ~ by asserting it as the hallmark
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not the marks of any spirit; rather, ing the black woman's body,
they are the symbols for the artist's whose "otherness" lies with
own name-Alison Saar-in the both her gender and ethnici-
form of the initials "A" and "S." ty-in her dark skin, her broad
The presence of these emblems features, and her curly hair-
makes Mamba Mambo self-ref- attributes that, for much of
erential and identifies Saar as Western history since the
both the subject and the creator 1700s, undoubtedly have been
....:,
tique), it is too late-the impact of her discourse hits home even 1. The continued invisibility of the black female bo
as the imagery continues to delight. veys of the nude is evident in the recent exhibition
Female empowerment masquerading as apparent passivity can posed: The Victorian Nude (London: Tate Gallery, 2
also be found in the works of Rene Stout (b. 1958), particularly in London, Munich, New York, and Japan between 20
her 1988 mixed media sculpture Fetish No. 2 (Fig. 7). Inspired by nearly 200 catalogue illustrations, only two feature w
nkisi nkondi or "power figures" from the Kongo, Stout created a so Hugh Honour and Jean Devisse, The Image of the B
body cast of herself and "empowered" it, as might a Kongo 4 vols. (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University, 197
shaman, with medicinal sacks or bilongo that protect the wearer, son, "Getting Down to Get Over: Romare Bearden's
cowrie-shell eyes that thwart the male (or any) gaze, and monkey and the Problem of the Black Female Body in Afro-U
hair and beaded braid extensions that allude to both the artist's ed., Black Popular Culture: A Project by Michele W
African and Western cultural realities.49 Mounted on the stomach Press, 1992), 112-22; and Deborah Willis and Carl
of the figure is a glass-covered box reminiscent of the raised con- Female Body: A Photographic History (Philadelphia: T
tainers found on the bellies of Kongo figures. Like its African 2002). For my review of the latter see WA1 (S/S 03
counterparts, the container on Stout's figure holds symbolic mate- 2. Valerie M. Bentz and Philip E. F. Mayes, eds.,
rials-a weathered photograph of a baby, representative of inno- Roles as Portrayed in Visual Images in the Arts and M
cence and of the future, dried flowers that allude to the ephemeral N.Y.: Edwin Mellen, 1993); John Berger, Ways of S
nature of life and to memories, and a postage stamp from Niger, guin, 1972); Kenneth Clark, The Nude: A Study in I
emblematic of the artist's long-distant African past. York: Pantheon, 1956); Gill Saunders, The Nude: A N
The life-size plaster cast of the artist's body has been painted don: Harper & Row, 1989), 23; and Laura Mulvey, "
with several layers of rich, dark paint and stands immobile and Narrative Cinema," Screen (Autumn 1975), 6-18.
silent like an ancient sentinel. The figure is nude except for the 3. Carol Duncan, "The Aesthetics of Power in Moder
beaded and metal jewelry that adorns its ears, neck, wrists, and lene Raven, Cassandra L. Langer, and Joanna Frueuh,
hips, and its mesh mantle of medicine packets. Yet, despite its nu- Criticism: An Anthology (New York: HarperCollins,
dity and passivity, Stout's nude form bears only a vague and super- 4. Abby Wetten Kleinbaum, The War Against the
ficial resemblance to the inactive nudes that decorate the walls of McGraw Hill, 1983), 1-3; Duncan, "The Aesthetics o
so many museums. "This is ritual nudity, not the available female 5. Examples of female figures who portray allegor
nude of Western art," the historian Michael Harris assures us, and throughout the history of Western art. Two especially w
its function is neither to titillate nor to reinforce any racial or gen- separated by two millennia, are the 2nd century B.C.
or Winged Victory, and the French Romantic paintin
der status quo.? Rather, through visual affirmation, Stout's Fetish
WOMAN'S ART JOURNAL
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FALL 2003 / WINTER 2004
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PI. 10. Alison Saar, Mambo Mambo (1985), mixed media, 20" x 18".
Artist's Collection.
PI. 9. Faith Ringgold, Help, Slave Ra
tanka, 87" x 48". Artist's Collection
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