I’m back from Berlin.
Berlin is bullet hole city.
Berlin seems to lack an old city.
I’m guessing everything was destroyed during WWII.
Walls everywhere are riddled with bullet holes.
Photo taken near the Berlin Victory Column
I’m back from Berlin.
Berlin is bullet hole city.
Berlin seems to lack an old city.
I’m guessing everything was destroyed during WWII.
Walls everywhere are riddled with bullet holes.
Photo taken near the Berlin Victory Column
A couple of weeks ago, I got up at five in the morning to be interviewed by Annemie Tweepenninckx in her radio show Bar du Matin.
Detail from Rubens’s Three Graces, the most iconic of Rubenesque women
The occasion was the exhibition Sensation and Sensuality – Rubens and His Legacy. I had been asked to explain my stance (first voiced in my book The History of Erotica) that the female beauty ideal of the 17th century was perhaps not the Rubenesque woman, but rather that the Rubenesque woman was a personal fetish of Rubens.
In preparing for the radio show I first phoned the Rubenshuis asking if someone wanted to comment on my position. The representative of the Rubenshuis said a Rubens expert would get back to me. As I sensed when hanging up, this has not happened until today.
Online research led to the discovery of a new paper: Defining beauty: Rubens’s female nudes by Dutch scholar Karolien De Clippel. Her paper includes “De Forma Foeminea“, a section from Peter Paul Rubens’s notebooks. It is in this section that Rubens tellingly compares woman to … a horse, “the most noble and elegant amongst animals”.
I wrote an email to Mrs. De Clippel asking her what she thought of the Rubenesque question. In her answer, De Clippel takes the middle position, stating that the Rubenesque woman is an “artistic beauty ideal” (rather than a plain “beauty ideal”) born from Rubens’s desire to emulate. This, she says, “brings him to his type of ladies, very idiosyncratic.” She adds that “Titian’s women too were very voluminous, but because of the less lifelike depiction of skin and flesh, these seem less full but if you would measure them you would get the same proportions as in Rubens.”
I’m not convinced by Mrs. De Clippel’s arguments.
Than I remembered research by Devendra Singh I first stumbled upon in 2011. In this research, “independent judges compared European paintings from 1500-1650 with Rubens’ paintings to determine whether other artists painted women as fat or fatter than those in Rubens’ depictions. Results showed that the preponderance of Baroque artists did not share Rubens’ inclination to paint heavy women.”
So I wrote to the University of Texas to find out more about this research. I managed to get in touch with Jaime M. Cloud who sent me his chapter “Bodily Attractiveness as a Window to Women’s Fertility and Reproductive Value” (2014), a text by himself and Carin Perilloux (dedicated to the memory of Devendra Singh) and which features the result of “Singh’s research into the Rubenesque“.
In Jaime M. Cloud’s chapter is Figure 7.2 (above) which “presents the percentages of paintings depicting women with varying degrees of fatness relative to the women depicted in Die drei Grazien (ranging from definitely less fat to definitely more fat). For each 50-year interval between 1500 and 1650, the majority of artists depicted women as less fat than those in Die drei Grazien. These findings indicate that like Picasso’s (1881–1973) unusual depictions of the human form, Rubens portrayed atypical characterizations of women for the Baroque era. The fact that the preponderance of Baroque artists did not idealize a female figure as considerably different from the figure preferred today calls into question the most prevalent example for the argument that standards of beauty are culturally defined.”
I was thrilled with this paragraph and wanted to know more. Specifically, I hoped to find out about the sample paintings and the methodology. Who, for example, were the Baroque artists?
So again I wrote to Jaime M. Cloud.
Sadly, he informed me that the information in his chapter is all there is of the research. In the words of Jaime M. Cloud: “Singh was largely responsible for designing the study and collecting the data; after he passed, I lost access to much of that information (although his daughters might be able to access it). I simply wrote up his results.”
Maybe one day I will contact Singh’s daughters, of whom Jaime M. Cloud gave me the names.
For now, I’m going to leave the data in limbo.
Sade, Attacking the Sun (2014-15, “Sade. Attaquer le soleil”) is an exhibition held at the Musée d’Orsay on the legacy of Marquis de Sade. The exhibition runs until January 25.
Above is the promotional video clip of the exhibition, showing a stylized orgy of writhing nudes who in the end form the letters S A D E.
Sade is in my canon.
And and then there is this: Ubisoft will release a video game based on Sade, a follow-up to the French Revolution-set “Assassin’s Creed” series.
I wonder why the exhibition is sub-titled “attacking the sun”.
RIP Style Scott, Jamaican drummer, famous for playing in the Roots Radics and, later, with Dub Syndicate.
Above: Scientist Meets the Space Invaders (the cover and concept is an example of black science fiction).
The number of reggae musicians who have died of crime violence is high (think King Tubby and Henry “Junjo” Lawes).
It has parallels with the violence in hip hop (think 2Pac, think The Notorious B.I.G.).
Both are fueled by machismo and have homophobia and misogyny as side effect (see homophobia and black music and misogyny in hip hop culture).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nzclhRnlC08
The Love Life of the Octopus (1965, French: Amours de la pieuvre) is a film on octopi by Jean Painlevé, who is also the narrator. The music is by Pierre Henry.
Last year, or two years ago, I saw Microcosmos and for a while I was very much into the love lives of animals[1].
The Love Life of the Octopus has also a scene of lovemaking of octopi.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fl_r7rIcds8
Do Communists Have Better Sex? (2006) by André Meier
Do Communists Have Better Sex? (original German title: Liebte der Osten anders? – Sex im geteilten Deutschland) is a documentary by André Meier. The film compares the sex life of people of East Germany and West Germany during the Iron Curtain period.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wwKWbKB2wW8
Hollywood Babylon (Nigel Finch documentary)
French publisher Jean-Jacques Pauvert first came to my attention as the publisher of Hollywood Babylon, published by Pauvert in 1959.
Over at my Tumblr microblog I’ve posted[1] Jayne Mansfield’s décolleté on the cover of that book.
Pauvert was also the first publisher of the works of Marquis de Sade, which had not been published for a long time.
This led to an obscenity trial.
Above is Nigel Finch‘s documentary based on Hollywood Babylon.
Pauvert is in my canon.
Via research into the canonical Giordano Bruno I stumbled upon the concept of the unity of opposites, which in turn led me to Heraclitus who is famous for two dicta: one involving a river: “You cannot step in the same river twice” and one involving a road, “The road up and the road down are the same thing.”
I’ve put the two dicta above in my category Dicta at http://artandpopularculture.com/Dicta. I currently have 330 dicta. The first 330 of what will become an unranked top 1000.
I spent some time trying to find out why Heraclitus is often depicted with a globe. Unsuccessfully. Anyone?
I saw an early episode of the Big Bang Theory which mentioned Olds and Milner’s rats and how these rats would self-stimulate their pleasure center to the point of exhaustion.
This led to my discovery of American psychiatrist Robert Galbraith Heath (1915 – 1999).
In a documentary dedicated to the work of this man, “Brain Mechanisms of Pleasure and Addiction”, an unidentified woman who has undergone deep brain stimulation pushes her own pleasure button repeatedly[1].
She even says “I think it’s somewhat of a sexy button.”
The experiment is considered unethical nowadays.
If an estimated 10% of the Western world is on anti-depressants (“One in 10 Americans now takes an antidepressant medication; among women in their 40s and 50s, the figure is one in four.”nytimes[2]), why is deep brain stimulation with a “pleasure button” considered unethical?
Deep brain stimulation is used with astonishing results in patients suffering from Obsessive–compulsive disorder.
Maybe one day we will all have an orgasmatron in our brains?
Would it prove to be so addictive that we would die in great numbers from starvation and fatigue just as Olds and Milner’s rats and Korean video game addict Lee Seung Seop, who died in 2006 after playing for more than fifty hours straight.
Or would there be more cases as the one of Kim Sa-rang, a 3-month-old Korean child, who would die in 2009 from malnutrition after both her parents spent hours each day in an internet cafe raising a virtual child in an online game.
I used to believe in the complete sovereignty of one’s own body.
But today I’m not against protecting people against themselves and against the overuse of their “sexy button.”
Here’s a quote of what happened to another woman who was unable to control self-stimulation of her “sexy button”:
“At its most frequent, the patient self-stimulated throughout the day, neglecting her personal hygiene and family commitments. A chronic ulceration developed at the tip of the finger used to adjust the amplitude dial and she frequently tampered with the device in an effort to increase the stimulation amplitude. At times she implored her family to limit her access to the stimulator, each time demanding its return after a short hiatus” (Portenoy et al., 1986)[2]
And then there’s the tragic story of patient B-19.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RProlO-KvKw
The Way Things Go by Peter Fischli & David Weiss is World Art Classic #463.
Peter Fischli & David Weiss’s work is unclassifiable. Which is a good thing. Yet despite this quality of being genre-defying, their work is defined by playfulness and humor absent from 90% of contemporary art.
I rather enjoy wit and humor in art.
The absence thereof, seriousness, is, in my view, one of the faultlines in 20th century art. Modernism, for example, was reigned by a detrimental “cult of seriousness”.
I first realized my predilection for humor in art somewhere around 2006, when I saw the painting ‘Man weeping, his tears form a waterfall‘.
The humor of Peter Fischli & David Weiss reminds me obliquely of that of The Chapman Brothers, minus the Chapman’s fondness for painfullness.
I’ve recently canonized Fischli and Weiss.
As I said in the title of this post, The Way Things Go is ‘World Art Classic’ #463. Its alphabetical neighbors are The Unswept Floor, a second century AD mosaic and The Witch by Salvator Rosa.