ARTH 451(F) Ideal Bodies: The Modern Nude and Its Dilemma (Same as Women's and Gender Studies 451)
The nineteenth century is so dominated by the female nude that the very term
"nude" has come to stand for the female body. And yet, the history of the nude
during this period is not devoid of male bodies. This course looks at both male
and female nudes in order to understand how the nude became gendered female.
Required readings include Kenneth Clark's classic study The Nude: A Study in
Ideal Form (1956) and Lynda Nead's The Female Nude: Art, Obscenity and
Sexuality (1992), with special attention to texts which show how the nude and
the discourse of the ideal function to obscure social issues. We will explore the
ways in which certain types of bodies have been defined in opposition to the
white western ideal, and thereby exoticized or marginalized. Our prime focus is
the work of David, Ingres, Géricault, Courbet, Manet, and Renoir but more popular nineteenth-century images as well as selected works by artists working
today will be discussed.
Evaluation will be based on biweekly 1-page papers, short reports, an oral presentation and a 10- to 20-page paper.
Prerequisites: ArtH 101-102. Enrollment limited to 12. Preference given to junior Art majors, Women's and Gender Studies majors and European History
majors. Permission of instructor required.
This course may be taken in lieu of ArtH 301 (Methods of Art History).