THE ABJECT GAZE AND THE HOMOSEXUAL BODY - FLANDRIN FIGURE-DETUDE

被引:3
作者
CAMILLE, M
机构
[1] Department of Art History, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL
关键词
D O I
10.1300/J082v27n01_08
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
This article charts the history of the reception, reproduction and appropriation of a single image that has recently become a kind of ''gay icon'' -the Figure d' Etude in the Louvre, painted by Hippolyte Flandrin in 1835. Initially no more than a neo-classical academic exercise, the formal emptiness of this picture meant that it could be re-invested and reinscribed with new meanings and new titles at every turn. Emblematic of the anxious visibility/invisibility of the newly discovered homosexual body during a period when the gaze still had to be kept a dark secret, Flandrin's image only ''came out'' in its later photographic reworkings by Frederick Holland Day and Baron von Gloeden. After being reproduced for a specifically homosexual audience early this century, the popular Romantic pose of the young man curled-up in profile became a standard one, reappearing recently in the photographs of Robert Mapplethorpe. The inactive, abject and inward-turned isolation of the figure with its narcissistic self-absorption makes it, in my view, a profoundly negative stereotype of the gay gaze and the homosexual body. Flandrin's figure nonetheless appears today on gay merchandise world-wide as a sign of our separate and secluded subject positions and our community's unwillingness to radically alter older imposed and inherited classical stereotypes.
引用
收藏
页码:161 / 188
页数:28
相关论文
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