Wednesday, June 13, 2012

The issue of nudity and pornification in artworks.


The issue of nudity and pornification in the works of Jeff koons,
Nobuyoshi Araki and Thomas Ruff.

Nowadays the boundary between pornography and art is getting unclear....

The age old question of “What is art?” will always be difficult to define. People are constantly pushing boundaries and challenging our preconceptions on what we consider to be acceptable art. Nudity and pornography forexample has always been touch and go in the art world, and has us constantly questioning, how far is too far? How much is too much? 
  
In this essay I am going to explore the issues of nudity and pornification in three of the following contemporary artists: Jeff koons, Nobuyoshi Araki and Thomas Ruff, All of these artworks were produced in the 1990s’, and they all caused controversy during the time they were released; therefore I focus on the impact they have had on our culture and society today.
Before we examine these artworks, I would like to briefly explain the term of “Pornification”, that been widely use in recent years. According to the Oxford Dictionary it is defined as: 
The increasing occurrence and acceptance of sexual themes and explicit imagery in popular or mainstream culture.” The Oxford Dictionaries (2011)
The word pornification is simply to add pornographic content to an image. 





Jeff Koons “Made in Haven, 1991”


The first artwork that we are going to look at is made by the famous American artist Jeff koons. This is a series of work that features the artist with his then wife, the Italian porn star Ilona Staller, also known as Cicciolina in moments of sexual foreplay. 
These images of exuberant sexuality were first presented at the 1990 Venice Biennale where, exhibited among more conventional forms of expression, they produced both shock and titillation among viewers. Koons hit a nerve in the art world with this series, in part because it was shocking subject matter that tested the limits of late twentieth century censorship. While audiences are quite familiar with the semiotics of popular media, pornography was a form of popular culture that was and is still taboo in polite company. Koons has always sought to test the boundaries of appropriate taste. In Made in Heaven, love, romance and sexual desire are examined critically, implicating the viewer by making him a participant, as nearly all pornography requires an outside viewer to be classified as such. (Christie’s 2011, para 1) 
As he said in the interview for his book:
I am dealing with the subjective and objective. Modernism is subjective. I use Modernism as a metaphor for sexuality without love -- a kind of masturbation. And that’s Modernism. I played this off the Post-Modern. Sex with love a higher state, in which one can enter eternal, and I believe that’s what I showed people. There was love there. That’s why it wasn’t pornographic. (Muthesius & Riemschneider 1992, p.30)
This billboard poster is part of a project in which Koons made works depicting his sexual relationship with his wife. These provocative works show the naked couple in explicit poses and reference paintings by artists such as Edouard Manet to examine the place of sexuality in visual culture. Koons employed Ilona’s regular photographer and backdrops, to create the distinctive aesthetic associated with 'glamour' imagery. 
The artist is the modern day Adam, looking buff, muscular with perfectly coifed hair. Ciccolina is the late night cable television Eve, wearing the contemporary accouterments of lace hose, a tight corset and a diamond tennis bracelet. He holds her and she holds him. While they are embracing each other, it is their individual pleasure that seems to guide their grasp of one another. The artist and Ciccolina are surrogates for all our fantasies. Blurring the boundaries between fine art and pornography, Koons challenged the conventions of artistic taste, encouraging his audience to make their own decisions about what is acceptable.” (Christie’s 2011, para 2)
As he said in the interview for his book:
In Made in Heaven I wanted to take this vocabulary of embracing your class and make it more wide. Not just to a bourgeois class but to a much wider audience. I was trying to deal with people’s desires. Also, I think it was presenting the idea of the chameleon - that if one emulates what one wants to be, one can become that. (Muthesius & Riemschneider 1992, p.29)





Nobuyoshi Araki “Shikijyo Sexual Desire, 1994-96”
Nobuyoshi Araki is best known as one of the key art photographers to present sexually explicit work. He is the epitome of the promiscuous photographer, taking tens of thousands of pictures using a range of cameras, with a predatory fluidity that gives a woman’s body, a flower, a bowl of food or a street scene a literal and psychological sexual charge.
Araki is a major celebrity in Japan, he lives and work in Tokyo, having published close to over 350 books of energetically gridded, juxtaposed and sequenced photographs, and still producing more every year. Many of his photographs are erotic; some have been called pornographic. Among his photography books are Sentimental Journey (1971, but later reissued), Tokyo Lucky Hole (1985), and Shino (2002). However, it was not until the early 1990s that Araki became well known outside Japan, the Shikijyo Sexual Desire was one of his photography series that got the West attention. His acceptance as an artist in the West has relied on the subjectivity, photographed women smeared with paint or bondage ropes, images that reflect attitudes rooted in Edo’s ancient past or Tokyo’s modern sexual underworld, as well as the boldness of his work.
Araki’s photographs of young Japanese woman are seen as a visual diary of his sexual life, for he clams to have sex with most of the woman depicted. His images are often seen as a kind of photographic foreplay, rather than a detached and exploitative voyeurism. The infrequency with which other men appear (typically as clients or sexual partners of the women whom Araki photographs) is important in preserving this reading of the work. Sometime the relationship between the photographer and his models is described as collaborative in a romantic way. As he stated:
What's important in my work is always the relationship between me and the object -- it's a kind of love story. I don't concern myself with why a relationship starts or where it goes. The most important thing is just the relationship between the two of us at that moment. This world becomes our world. As stated by Liddell (2006) ‘Nobuyoshi Araki - Intimate photography: Tokyo, nostalgia and sex’
To the extent, that it is also suggested that Araki and his camera are conduits for these women’s sexual fantasies. 
“Since his photography is considered to be a diary, one that promotes his genuine desire for these women, much of the potential debate about the possible pornographic and exploitative aspects of his work is curtailed. This shying away from obvious reading of Araki’s images demonstrates how intimate photography can circumvent debates that surround so much other contemporary art photographers and photographic imagery in general.” (Cotton 2009, p.143)





Thomas Ruff “Nudes, 1999”
With the development of internet then the explosion of porn website, the Nudes series were made. German photographer Thomas Ruff is specifically interested in just how far he can restrict immediate sexual association while still leaving the subject matter clear. Ruff is best known for coolly objective images which support his claim that "photography can only reproduce the surface of things".Ruff records, but generally refrains from implying a particular viewpoint, inviting others to supply their own interpretation of his work. His aim, in other words, is to render sexual material somehow un-sexual, and to achieve this he employs a number of distancing devices.The sources of his works were downloaded from the porn website, re-photographed, blurred then enlarged and enhanced with digital pixellation. Ruff's images are photographs of photographs from which he wishes to remove his own interpretative presence. 
“With their saccharine tonal ranges, these are beautiful images that demonstrate how idealization is key to the representation of a subject , and that potentially any subject (and here a relatively new form of images-making and viewing) can become a meditaton on aesthetic form.” (Cotton 2009, p.213-4)
To this end, the only information he specifically provides regarding their content is a single word: 'Nudes'. Other than this, viewer are left to draw their own conclusions. Our inability to make out exactly what is happening may cause us to lose interest or even experience frustation. Eventual recognition of the context might cause concern, shock or even a voyeuristic sense of pleasure. For others, the partially veiled nature of the images could render them more erotic.Yet as Ruff has made clear:
  “What people see, eventually, is only what's already inside them.” (Brennan 2005, para 2)

After the last 20 years, our society had been exposed to all these erotic artworks and images, we have been immersed in the pornified mass media and the arrival of the internet era,
where the satisfaction of every kink is a click away, we live in a world where the pornification of popular culture is nearly complete.... Bryant Paul, who teaches telecommunications at Indiana University and has written about media images of sexuality:
You've seen this throughout history," he adds. ''Every time a new medium comes around, there's an explosion of sexual content. It happened with books, it happened with movies, it happened with the VCR. And now the Internet allows it to happen to an even greater extent.” As stated by Aucoin(2006) ‘The pornification of America’.
Pornography has become part of our main stream culture.Therefore the question, “is it art or pornography?” may depend on what era you came from, and how strong is the story or message behind it. Maybe art is just there to challenge our society, leading us to think more and view further.




Bibliography
2011, The Oxford Dictionaries, Oxford University Press, Oxford.
 Aucoin, D 2006, ‘The pornification of America’, The Boston Globe, retrieved  November 2,2011,from http://www.boston.com/yourlife/articles/2006/01/24/the_pornification_of_america/
Brennan, M 2005, Sex and sexuality in art, retrieved Nov 5,2011, from http://www.modernedition.com/art-articles/sex-in-art/sexuality-contemporary-art.html
Christies.com 2011, Jeff Koons (b.1945) Ponies, Christie’s auction house, retrieved November 7,2011 from http://www.christies.com/LotFinder/lot_details.aspx?intObjectID=4288606 
Cotton, C 2009, The photograph as contemporary art (new edition), Thames & Hudson Ltd, London.
Liddell, C.B 2006, ‘Nobuyoshi Araki - Intimate photography: Tokyo, nostalgia and sex’, The Japan Times online, retrieved November 7,2011 fromhttp://www.japantimes.co.jp/text/fa20061123a1.html
Muthesius, A & Riemschneider, B 1992, Jeff Koons, Benedikt Taschen, Cologne.

Post-Modern issues and artworks.

Post-Modern issues and artworks.


The Avant-garde, Originality & Appropriation


Gender & Sexuality
Feminism. Gay rights. Taboo expressions


Cultural Identity & Indigenous Identity
Cultural orgins. Indigenous cultures, Globalisation


Class, Economics and Politics
Marxism. Political models. National wealth


Environment & Material Consumption
Ignorance, Complicity, Apathy




Arbeit McFriesJake & Dinos Chapman, 2001.
Mixed Media. 122 x122 x 122cm



Stimulus:
  • Plastic figures without clothing, some deformed.
  • Plastic body parts partially painted with red paint.
  • McDonald’s sign
  • Vultures (Some standing on the rooftop, some standing on the ground and some landed on plastic figures.)
  • A brick house with one wall partly collapsed and a tall chimney.
  • Black smoky colour painted in the interior of the brick house
  • Glass roof, partly broken
  • High metal net fence surrounded the brick house
  • Tress
  • A poster / billboard
  • Broken windows
  • Glass door
  • Pillars

Meaning:

  • Red painted on figures and bodies = Blood
  • Deformed plastic toys figures and bodies = Injured or killed people
  • Figures with vulture landed in it= Attacked / eaten by vulture.
  • McDonald’s= The world largest cain fast food restaurant
  • McDonald’s sign on a brick house with tall chimney and poster on the wall= A fast food shop / factory.
  •  Vulture=Bird that eat death or injured animal or person.
  • Black smoky colour painted in the interior of the brick house = Dirty;Dusty;Burn mark.
  • Broken windows, door and glass roof= Damaged
  • High metal net fence surrounded the brick house = High defense
  • Partly collapsed wall= Damaged




Signs:

  • Fast food(McDonald’s)= junk food - high in fat, sugar and salt, and low in fibre and vitamins; negative.
  • Fast food shop= Unethical business.
  • Vulture= Death, horror, negative.
  • The dust, the burn mark and all the damaged had found on the house= Hazard, destroy, ruined; negative.
  • Fence - High defense= Prison; negative.
  • People attacked or eaten by vulture= Death, horror; negative.

Myths:
  • McDonald’s is the evil --
  • Bringing people greater risk of heart disease, cancer, diabetes and other diseases.
  • Sick people eaten by vulture.
  • The place will finally be destroy, just like a horror movie, the evil and the others will die at the end.
Ideology:
  • Consumerism
  • Famine
  • Poor animal rights, animal finally fight back.
  • End of the world


How the artwork “The flower that bloom in midnight” by Yayoi Kusama is influenced by colour field, surrealism, and pop art from the Modernist period.

The flowers that bloom at midnight,2009.
YAYOI KUSAMA
Flowers That Bloom at Midnight M1, 2009
Fiberglass-reinforced plastic, metal and all-weather urethane paint
85 7/8 x 71 1/4 x 116 1/8 inches (218 x 181 x 295 cm)


The artwork “the  flowers that bloom at midnight”(2009) was a set of seven pieces non-naturalistic looking exuberant flowers sculpture in large scales, which measure from four to sixteen feet high. Cast in highly durable fiberglass-reinforced plastic and metal, all hand painted in bold opaque subtractive colours with Kusama’s signature polka dot, which she calls "infinity nets", all over each piece. Arranged in the gallery like an artificial garden, the flowers tower and sprawl about in their psychedelic glory, offering the viewer multiple vantages while reaching outward into the surrounding space in all directions.
“The artist Yayoi Kusama has experienced hallucinations and severe obsessive thought since childhood, often a suicidal nature.”(Wikipedia) In my point of view, her polka dots obsession is a way to relieve her suicidal nature,Kusama is often quoted as saying: "If it were not for art, I would have killed myself a long time ago,"(Art Review) also she believe the polka dot is her source of energy as she quoted “A polka-dot has the form of the sun, which is a symbol of the energy of the whole world and our living life, and also the form of the moon, which is calm. Round, soft, colorful, senseless and unknowing. Polka-dots become movement… Polka dots are a way to infinity.”(Kusama)- she started to begin covering surface (walls, floors, canvases, and later, household objects and naked assistants) with the polka dots that would become a trademark of her work.The vast fields of polka dots, or “infinity nets”, as she call them, were taken directly from her hallucinations, which influenced by surrealism, a movement was founded in Paris, in 1924. “Surrealism was closely related to Dada, its principal source; each of which was conceived as a revolutionary mode of thought and action - a way of life rather than a set of stylistic attitudes. The central idea of the movement was to release the creative powers of the unconscious mind.” (Chilvers,2003) “Surrealism dedicated to expressing the imagination as revealed in dreams, free of the conscious control of reason and convention.”  As you can see the photo above, the sculpture that cover with polka dots and the twisty non-naturalistic looking flowers, would be a reflection of Kusama’s subconscious, her dreams and her hallucinations. Also, each piece or the whole set of artwork can be arranged differently (It is a random arrangement which is not based on any definite plan.) (see the small photo above) every time where it is exhibited, the artist recreated the whole structure of the artwork. It aimed to create art which was ‘automatic’, meaning that it had emerged directly from the unconscious without shaped by reason, morality or aesthetic judgement.
The artwork that cover in flat opaque subtractive colours and polka dots, I also consider had influenced by colour field painting. “A type of abstract painting in which the whole picture or surface consist of large expanses of more or less unmodulated colour, with no strong contrasts of tone or obvious focus of attention” (Chilvers,2003) Look at the color of the artwork, it had been painted in only two flat colours in each surface with no highlight or tone involved. “This type of painting developed in the US in the late 1940s and early 1950s, leading pioneers including Barnett Newman and Mark Rothko” (Chilvers,2003),whom Kusama’s work has been compared to. It is thus an aspect of Abstract Expressionism and it has been seen as a type -- or precursor -- of minimal art.
The other art movement that influenced the artwork or the artist herself, was pop art. “A movement based on the imagery of consumerism and popular culture (hence “pop'”), flourishing from the late 1950s to the early 1970s, chiefly in the US and Britain. The term was coined 1955. Comic books, advertisements, packaging, and images from television and the cinema were all part of the iconography of the movement.” (Chilvers,2003) Kusama was living in New York in the late 60s, actively involved in lot of art movement such as minimalism, feminism, surrealism, abstract expressionism, conceptual art and pop art, during that period she embraced by some of the leading pop artist such as Claes Oldenburg and Andy Warhol. She had recognized herself as a pop artist in one of the magazine interview “I was in the vanguard of Pop Art, and regarded as a Pop artist by the people around me. I felt that America’s energy was trying to change its history. I was part of the movement.”(BOMB) 

Refer the artwork, there contain certain elements of pop art. First, the colours of use, Kusama used fair amount of primary colours(Red, yellow, blue) which is very common to found in comic or billboard like pop art and a combination of analogous colours, such as blue and green; lime green and yellow -- These colors sit next to one another on the color wheel and are in harmony with one another. The primary and analogous colours created a harmony and cheerful atmosphere for the art work. Also each piece -- the non-naturalistic flowers, had very curvy  shape thats giving a adorable (cutie), child - like feel to the entire work, which may influenced from the Japanese comic style - Manga. In the last two decade, Kusama’s works became very popular, especially in Japanese. Kusama herself turns into a pop culture icon, since then she started making her artwork into all sort of merchandise. (see pictures next) That’s what pop art is all about -- mass-production and popular culture.




Yayoi Kusama is without doubt Japan’s most famous and premiere artist of the modern era.  She is currently the second highest living female artist at auction and the most expensive and coveted female Asian artist. Her unique work had inspired lot of artist and had a huge affect in modern art history.
For me, Kusama is a great example of “nothing is important”, her childhood and her mental illness did not stop her determined to be an artist. It really encourage me to keep on what I’m doing, following my dream no matter how.










ArtReview magazine, October issue, 2007.
http://www.artreview.com

Wikipedia.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yayoi_Kusama#cite_note-4

CHILVERS, I. 2003. The concise Oxford dictionary of art and artists, Oxford ; New York, Oxford University Press.
KUSAMA,Y. 1978. Manhattan jisatsu misui joshuhan (Manhattan Suicide Addict), Kosakusha, Tokyo,(extract) reproduced in Hoptman et al., p.124.
BOMB Magazine, issue 66,1999. Interview by Grady Turner.

Saturday, May 26, 2012


The Grade of Earthly Delights lll,Raqib Shaw, 2003.

1974 born in Calcutta, India, lives and works in London, UK.
Grew up in Kashmir.
Mixed media on board
(Car enamels / industrial paint, glitter, semi-precious stones)
3 panels, each 305 x 152.5cm




Prehistory
Hinduism (Kashmir- home to Hindu divinites)
Late Neolithic in the early Hareppan period   (5500-2600 BCE)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hinduism#History
Mesopotamian and Persian art
Mosaic                   second half of 3rd millennium BC           

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mosaic

vitreous enamel             Ancient Egypt,around 3150BC
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Painted_enamel


Mural                  around 30,000 BC
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mural




Ancient history c3350BCE- 500

Animals studies between          5th & 3rd century BC

Indian carpet          500BC
http://sourcing.indiamart.com/apparel/articles/history-indian-carpets/

Kama Sutra        between 400BCE and 200BC
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kama_Sutra




Medieval history c500 -1500


Magic carpet -(One thousand and one nights)      early 8 centry
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magic_carpet
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/One_Thousand_and_One_Nights

Mohammedan blue/ Prussian blue         1368

Hieronymus Bosch - The Garnden of Earthly Delights   1500- 05
Pieter Bruegel the Elder - Dull Gret/Mad Meg       1562
(Flemish Renaissance)




 


Modern era c1500-onwards

 
Rajput painting/Rajasthani Painting        18th century
(A style of Indian painting.
Evolved and flourished during the 18th century in the royal courts of Rajputana,India.
Flowing from the style of Mughal painting, itself derived from the Persian miniature.)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rajput_painting

Ukiyo-e Picture of the floating world   (Japanese woodblock print)  
Edo period, Early 16 century1567- 1790
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ukiyo-e

Shunga 春画    1336-1573
(spring pictures- A Japanese term for erotic art)
Artists:
Katsushika Housai (1760 - 1849)

Hishikawa Moronobu (c.1618-94)





 

Modernism c1875-1975



Deep sea exploration  mid 19th century


Surrealism             early 1920s
Joan Miro - The Tilled Field 1923-24
Salvador Dali

Jägermeister (herbal liqueur)      1935

Glitter         1934




Post - Modernism c1975-Present

Futurma        1999

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Dialectic:
 A system of inquiry into the nature of reality.

The dialectical method is dialogue between two or more people holding different points of view about a subject, who wish to establish the truth of the matter by dialogue, with reasoned arguments.


"What is rational is real and what is real is rational." 
-- Georg W.F. Hegel  (Early 19th century German philosopher)









Examples:


I like burger.    vs   I don't like plain steam rice.

Then....

What about a "Mos rice burger" ???
Problem solved!  












(An old form of entertainment) Magic 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magic_(illusion)
vs

(A new form of entertainment) Technology : computer games / ipod,iphone, iwhatever product's apps.
               Then...

Now we had Techno-illusion, by Marco Tempest.