Nudity in Early Cinema, or the Pictorial Transgression
Détails
Télécharger: ValentineRobert_NudityEarlyCinema.pdf (1300.86 [Ko])
Etat: Public
Version: Final published version
Licence: Tous droits réservés
Etat: Public
Version: Final published version
Licence: Tous droits réservés
ID Serval
serval:BIB_766BBE59A4A3
Type
Partie de livre
Sous-type
Chapitre: chapitre ou section
Collection
Publications
Institution
Titre
Nudity in Early Cinema, or the Pictorial Transgression
Titre du livre
Corporeality in Early Cinema: Viscera, Skin, and Physical Form
Editeur
Indiana University Press
Statut éditorial
Publié
Date de publication
2018
Langue
anglais
Résumé
This chapter analyzes the early cinematic disclosing of the naked body. Nudity emerges in early cinema using a pictorial alibi. Models posing in the artist’s studio are a key topic, but tableaux vivants, namely films, which reenact paintings, are a privileged site for filmed nakedness. Series such as the Biograph Living Pictures (1899-1903), Pathé Scènes grivoises (1897-902), Gaumont Vieilles Estampes (1907) and Aktskulpturen – Studienfilm für bildende Künstler (Oskar Messter, 1903) constitute our field of investigation. These films reflect a fascinating ambivalence between what Kenneth Clark distinctly termed “nakedness” (associated with the illicit and obscene exposure) and “nudity” (identified as an artistic category, addressing ideal beauty and legitimate contemplation). On one hand (the “naked” one), a pornographic quality characterizes these films. Their exhibition of a naked body, in motion, transgresses the Victorian boundaries of modesty and reopens the censorship debate which has been raging in music-halls about staged tableaux vivants. An exalted voyeurism (using devices such as mirrors or revolving pedestals allowing a comprehensive vision of the bare body) directly links this first cinematic nakedness with contemporary pornographic photography. On the other (“nude”!) hand, these films reproduce paintings, claiming (more or less sincerely) the artistic quality of the portrayed body. Strategies are combined with this pictorial imitation in order to idealize the nude body, from the covering and smoothing flesh-colored leotard to the graceful posing and slow motion of the model. On the basis of the prolific ambiguity of Jonathan Auerbach’s concept of “early film body”, referring as much to the filmed body as to the “body” of film, we will finally question these naked “incarnations” as a way of asserting early cinema as a transgression of painting.
Création de la notice
19/03/2019 10:03
Dernière modification de la notice
29/05/2024 6:18