Out
Out
Out
by
2013
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The female nude is one of the most prevalent representations in the history of art. Over the years,
the female form has taken on a multitude of associations. The nude began as a goddess of antiquity. From
there, she has become a tool for social and political expression. The invention of the photograph
transformed the female nude into the naked women. The medium of photography changed how to look at
an aesthetic object. The inherent realism of nude photographs paved the way for the creation of modern
pornography. Today’s most popular female nude is the pornographic image that circulates unhindered on
the Internet. Through the works of several photographers, this thesis seeks to determine the relationship
between contemporary art and pornography as well as the boundaries between an artistic image and a
pornographic image.
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Table of Contents
Introduction p. 6-9
Conclusion p. 47-48
Bibliography p. 49-51
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Illustrations
Fig. 1. Venus of Willendorf, 24,000-22,000 BCE; Oolitic limestone; 11.1 cm high; Photograph ©
Don Hitchcock, 2008
Fig. 2. Titian, Venus of Urbino, 1538; oil on canvas; courtesy Uffizi Gallery Florence
Fig. 3. Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres, The Turkish Bath, 1862; oil on canvas; 1.08m x 1.10m;
courtesy Louvre Museum Paris
Fig. 4. Edouard Manet, Olympia, 1863; oil on canvas; H. 130cm; W. 190cm; Photograph ©
RMN-Grand Palais (Musée d'Orsay) / Hervé Lewandowski
Fig. 5. Pablo Picasso, Les Demoiselles d'Avignon, 1907; Oil on canvas; H. 243.9; W. 233.7 cm;
Photograph © 2003 Estate of Pablo Picasso/Artists Rights Society
Fig. 6. Tom Wesselmann, Great American Nude #57, 1964; acrylic and collage on board;
H. 48 in; W. 65 in; Photograph © 2001 by PSMG, Inc
Fig. 7. Jemima Stehli, Strip No. 4, Curator, 1999; Chromogenic print; H. 17.25 in; W. 10.5 in;
set of 12 C-Type photographs mounted onto aluminum; Photograph ©2013 Stephen
Daiter Gallery
Fig. 8. Gustave Courbet, The Origin of the World, 1866; oil on canvas; H. 46m; W. 55cm;
Photograph © RMN-Grand Palais (Musée d'Orsay) / Hervé Lewandowski
Fig. 9. Katy Grannan, Dale, Southampton Avenue (III), 2007; archival pigment print on cotton
rag paper mounted to Plexiglas; H. 40 in; W. 50in; Photograph © Artnet Worldwide
Corporation
Fig. 10. Katy Grannan, Untitled, 1998; c-print; H. 44.5 in; W. 35in; Photograph © Artnet
Worldwide Corporation
Fig. 11. Renée Cox, Yo Mama’s Black Supper, 1996; Photograph © Renée Cox
Fig. 12. Robert Mapplethorpe, John N.Y.C., 1978; Photograph © Robert Mapplethorpe
Fig. 13. Jock Sturges, Flore et Fredeìrique, Montalivet, France, 1989; silver gelatin; H. 10.5in;
W. 13.5in; Photograph © Jock Sturges
Fig. 14. Thomas Ruff, Nudes in 03, 2000; c-print mounted on Plexiglas; H. 140 cm; W. 100 cm;
Photograph © Rubell Family Collection
4
Fig. 16. Thomas Ruff, Nudes ree07, 2000; chromogenic print; H. 110.2 cm; W. 136.2 cm;
Photograph © Thomas Ruff
5
Introduction
The debate between art and pornography is a hot subject among academics for several
fascination with an image that should not but nonetheless does excite. There is a pre-rational
curiosity inherent in pornographic images only to be secondarily suppressed. Also, the debate
involves a variety of disciplines among them aesthetics, psychology, sociology, gender, and
sexuality. The multitude of discourses assures the debate remains complex in approach and
conversation. Hans Maes notes, “The fact that we speak of consuming pornography and of
appreciating art indicates that there is a fundamental difference in how we are meant to engage
with both kinds of representation.”1 What makes the debate between art and pornography
controversial is the inability to clearly define the boundaries of sexually explicit images. On
pornography, United States Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart famously said, “I don’t know
how to define it, but I know it when I see it.”2 It is easier to classify images that fall at the
extreme ends of the scale but impossible to say where one category starts and the other ends. Not
all pornographic images are obscene or dirty. Likewise, some pornographic images can be
considered beautiful but this does not necessarily make them art.
This thesis will focus on the female nude form as it is portrayed through the medium of
photography in contemporary art. The main question is how to comprehend an image that has
both an aesthetic appeal and a sensual appeal. From the beginning of artistic production, the
human body has been a popular subject for representation. In particular, the female nude has
often been a site of controversy marked by time and place. During the Renaissance, the female
1
Hans Maes, “Who Says Pornography Can’t Be Art,” in Art and Pornography: Philosophical Essays, ed. Hans
Maes and Jerrold Levinson (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012), 22.
2
Jon Huer, Art, Beauty, and Pornography (Buffalo: Prometheus Books, 1987), 183.
6
nude was the visual pinnacle of art. The female nude represented ideal beauty that transcended
reality. Throughout the next three centuries, artists continually reinvented the form and context
of the female nude. In the nineteenth century, the invention of photography revolutionized the
way the female nude could be presented. Photography’s inherent realism portrayed an actual
naked woman rather than the imagined ideal nude. Almost immediately, governing bodies
enacted laws against obscenity in order to control the decency of nude images. Legal systems
created a division between artistic works and pornography. Pornography is the forbidden end that
Critics are divided between images as well as the basic definitions of words like “art,”
“erotica,” and “pornography.” While one art critic may define erotic art as nudity that falls
within art’s conventions, another critic may declare any sexually explicit image pornography. It
is necessary to define these terms before I continue. Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary defines art as
“the conscious use of skill and creative imagination especially in the production of aesthetic
objects.”3 This thesis focuses on the fine arts which include but are not limited to images or
love or desire.”4 Thus erotic art is the production of an aesthetic image or object that stimulates
sexual desire without being explicitly pornographic. Eroticism provokes but does not overpower.
Erotic art is a zone of tension between art and life allowing the viewer to dwell in stimulation
3
“Art,” Merriam-Webster Dictionary. Accessed September 7, 2013, http://www.merriam-
webster.com/dictionary/art.
4
“Erotic,” Merriam-Webster Dictionary. Accessed September 7, 2013, http://www.merriam-
webster.com/dictionary/erotic.
7
while appreciating the formal, expressive, social and political aspects of the representation.5 At
times, erotic art and pornography both feature sexually explicit imagery.
The word “pornography” derives from the Greek pornographos meaning writing about
prostitutes. Pornography debuted in English dictionaries in the mid nineteenth century.6 The
word first appeared in a medical dictionary regarding prostitution’s effect on public health. In
the walls of rooms sacred to bacchanalian orgies, examples of which exist in Pompeii."7 When
the ancient city of Pompeii was unearthed, excavators discovered pornographic representations
and hid them in a secret museum. While the secret museum was closed to the public, word of the
fascinating and forbidden images spread. Before common usage, pornography was referred to as
obscenity. At the time, pornography was associated with provocative literature meant to entertain
the depiction of erotic behavior (as in pictures or writing) intended to cause sexual excitement,
material (as books or photograph) that depicts erotic behavior and is intended to cause sexual
excitement, and the depiction of acts in a sensational manner so as to arouse a quick intense
emotional reaction.8 Since the genesis of the word, pornography has been a contentious subject.
Chapter One briefly outlines the transformation of the female nude form from antiquity to
present day. The features of the female nude are historically and culturally fluid. Chapter Two
traces the history of erotic imagery, sexually explicit imagery, and eventually pornography. The
chapter explores how the photograph revolutionized the availability of erotic imagery and the
origin of modern pornography. Chapter Three examines how the medium of photography
5
Jerrold Levinson, “Erotic Art and Pornographic Pictures,” Philosophy and Literature 29, no. 1 (2005).
6
Lynn Hunt, introduction to The Invention of Pornography, ed. Lynn Hunt (New York: Zone Books, 1993), 13.
7
Walter Kendrick, The Secret Museum (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1987), 13.
8
“Pornography,” Merriam-Webster Dictionary. Accessed September 7, 2013, http://www.merriam-
webster.com/dictionary/pornography.
8
changed the relationship between the artist and the subject depicted. Also, this chapter considers
ideas of looking and the gaze of the viewer. Finally, the chapter discusses the evolving
relationship between the viewer and the image. Chapter Four focuses on several approaches to
the pornography debate including censorship, morality, feminism, artistic intent, and intended
effect. Chapter Five details several contemporary artists working with or around themes of
nudity. In recent decades, art has drawn upon and critiqued pornography. Several artists working
in the medium of photography have been accused of producing pornographic content and
Overtime, the traditional female nude transitioned into the naked women. Pornography is
no longer a subject on the fringe of society. In popular culture, sexually explicit images
of this thesis to discover the relationship between pornography and contemporary art as well as
9
Throughout the history of art, depictions of the female form vary greatly. Statuettes,
sculptures, paintings and photographs chronicle the female nude’s transformation through the
centuries. Artists have used the female nude as allegory, saint, Madonna, and whore. The female
nude is among one of the most loaded representations in artistic production. Prehistoric images
of women, like the Venus of Willendorf, show the female nude as a symbol of fertility (Fig. 1).
The eleven centimeter high statuette was believed to be created between 24,000 and 22, 000 B.C.
The true utility of the figure is unknown but the breasts, abdomen, and vulva are emphasized
suggesting the importance of reproductive values. It is likely the statuette represented women in
general as she lacks any individual characteristics. Similar statuettes, also termed “Venus,” have
The Greeks invented the modern nude as we know it. The first nude sculptures were not
females but males traditionally referred to as “Apollos.” In Greek culture, nudity was common in
sport and religious ceremonies. The Greek people appreciated perfection in physical form and
this interest was reflected in their sculptures. In the interest of perfection, Greek artists strove to
perfect the nude form rather than imitate nature. Artists and philosophers alike saw the ideal
form as a postulate for ideal beauty. Female nude sculptures mostly depicted the goddess
Aphrodite or other divine beings. Female nudes were carved with draped garments meant to
enhance the curved forms of the otherworldly females.9 Nude sculptures of Aphrodite embodied
physical desire but the sculptures were foremost objects of religious veneration. The Greeks and
the later Romans also painted the nude female form on pottery. On pottery or in frescos, nude
figures represented mythological characters and occasionally scenes from daily life.
9
Kenneth Clark, The Nude: A Study in Ideal Form (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1956), 79.
10
In late antiquity, the development of Christianity emphasized piety and chastity. Thus,
representations of the female nude are almost non-existent except in the narrative of Adam and
Eve. Adam and Eve’s nakedness came to represent their sin and by proxy the human temptation
to sin. The nude was revived in the fifteen century with the birth of the Renaissance. Artists
transitioned from makers of a craft into intellectual circles. At this time, artists began to seek
established academic training. Renaissance history painting drew on themes from the Bible,
ancient history and classical mythology. Drawing from classical antiquity, academic training
embraced the nude male form. Studies of the male nude concentrated on anatomy, proportion,
and composition. Often, figures were sketched as nudes for anatomical reference and later
clothed during painting. When nude, male figures or lightly draped females flaunted a painter's
skill and stood as an academic achievement of perfect formal units. Leonardo di Vinci and
Michelangelo are famous for their masterful male nudes. Male and female semi-nude or nude
figures were permitted because these paintings were meant to extol moral and heroic virtues.
Another theme of the Renaissance was an interest in the beauty and mystery of the
natural world. The female nude flourished as an allegorical character of celestial beauty. Lynda
Nead explains, “The female body – natural, unstructured – represents something that is outside
the proper field of art and aesthetic judgment; but artistic style, pictorial form, contains and
regulates the body and renders it an object of beauty, suitable for art and aesthetic judgment.”10
Painters like Botticelli drew on representations of Venus and the Graces. Like the earlier Greek
female nudes, many of the figures wear draped sheer garments. The celestial Venus, seen in
paintings like The Birth of Venus, paved the way for representations of the female nude without
protective clothing.
10
Lynda Nead, The Female Nude: Art, Obscenity and Sexuality (London: Routledge, 1992), 25.
11
Painters of the High Renaissance, like Titian, embraced female nude figures with ample,
sensuous curves. The figure of Venus moved from a natural landscape into interior settings.
Idealized female nudes recline comfortably on luxurious beds and couches. Titian’s fleshy nudes,
like Venus of Urbino, lay upon one arm with the body facing toward the viewer (Fig. 2). As in
classical sculptures and Renaissance paintings, these nudes often look away in a blissful state.
Here, the female nude is rendered passive and contemplative. This type of depiction became a
During the eighteenth century and nineteenth century, classical culture and the female
nude enjoyed the prestige of high art. Immanuel Kant popularized the notion of aesthetic
pleasure and intrinsic beauty within the realm of art. Enlightenment aesthetics associated the
female nude with sensory beauty.11 Though the male nude was studied and represented in
ambitious history paintings, “the nude” as a term became associated with the female subject.
Artists continued to treat the female nude within conventional artistic codes. At this point, it is
interesting to note “the male identity of artist and connoisseur, creator and consumer of the
female body is fully installed.”12 The patron, artist, and viewer are male looking at the female
body. The idea of the artistic genius is inevitably connected with male sexuality.
By the middle of the nineteenth century, the female nude starts to reflect different parts of
society. Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres painted female nudes from the imagined East. His
paintings reflect French society’s interest with the exotic “Other.” In Odalisque with Slave, a
female nude reclines atop a bed in much the same manner of Titian’s fleshy nudes. The Turkish
Bath portrays a harem of female nudes relaxed and sedated (Fig. 3). The artist was interested in
showing these women in a sexual yet passive manner. Ingres never actually visited the Orient he
11
Kenneth Clark, The Nude, 162.
12
Lynda Nead, The Female Nude: Art, Obscenity and Sexuality (London: Routledge, 1992), 13.
12
depicted; his nudes are likely based on European models. In both cases, nudity was acceptable
because the foreign girls were seen as characters separate from the civilized world of Europe.
Manet’s Olympia portrays the stark nudity of a prostitute (Fig. 4). In an interior scene,
she reclines upon a bed abiding by artistic convention; however, rather than look away, the
woman confronts the viewer’s gaze. Manet’s figure demands the viewer admit her nakedness
rather than appreciate her form. Kelly Dennis writes, “ A deliberate quote of Titian’s Venus of
Urbino, by then part of the high-art canon, the Olympia serves to undermine the sense of entry or
access to viewing that was typified by the Venus but also established as a defining characteristic
of the painted nude.”13 The individual character of the figure transforms the nude from a female
type into a real woman. Not only is the women depicted realistically but Manet surrounds her
with attributes of a high-class prostitute. The painting highlighted prostitution, a common social
practice, thought outside the bounds of high art. From this point onward, artists use the female
By the twentieth century, artists began to revolt against the strict doctrine of the academy.
Artists embraced the concept of the nude rather than the anatomical properties of the body. For
example, surrealists saw the female body as a site of desire, fear, and mystery. On the other hand,
Picasso’s Les Demoiselles d’Avignon reconfigured the form as well as the context of the female
nude (Fig. 5). Like Manet, Picasso chose the prostitute, an already controversial member of
society, to make his radical departure from modern painting. The artist abandoned traditional,
European perspective in favor of a two-dimensional picture plane. The nudes are comprised of
angular forms and have faces inspired by primitive African masks. Not only are the prostitutes
available for purchase within the narrative of the painting, the figures offer themselves to be
13
With the rise of modernism and the avant-garde, Carol Duncan argues that the reason so
many seminal works from this period are nude is because they originate in and are sustained by
male erotic energy.14 Willem de Kooning is known for his series of women featuring sensous,
full figured women that represent females through the ages. Starting with the Abstract
Expressionists and continuing into Pop Art, The female nude, painted by the male artist, is
sensual and abstract. Tom Wesselmann's series of Great American Nudes employs the Western
tradition of a female nude reclining in an intimate domestic space. He alludes only to the
female’s overtly sexual parts like her lips, nipples, and pubic area. He packages the female nude
as eroticism for sale. Wesselmann shows the American women as seductive, depersonalized, and
Although a seemingly overworked subject, the body has been a huge concern for
contemporary artists. At a visceral level, the body and the nude are our most recognizable subject
manner. David McCarthy states, “The nude allowed artists to tie themselves to an ongoing
tradition while also examining the dramatic changes in society that placed the body, its pleasures
and experiences, at the very center of human consciousness.”15 Artists of the 1960s and 1970s
explored the body in relation to growing attention on race, ethnicity, gender, and sexuality.
Artists like Carolee Schneemann, Ana Mendieta, and Hannah Wilke used their own bodies as
of digital technologies. Unlike a photograph, depictions of the body are not grounded in a
material object. The digital image complicates our corporeal relationships. The female nude is
14
Carol Duncan, “Virility and Domination in Early 20th Century Avant-Garde Painting,” Artforum 12 (1973), 36.
15
David McCarthy, “The Nude That Darling of the Artists, That Necessary Element of Success,” in The Nude in
Contemporary Art, ed. Harry Philbrick (Ridgefield: Herlin Press, 1999), 75.
14
by no means a new concept; the nude has both evolved and devolved throughout this time. Along
the way, the question of nudity became a question of obscenity. The female nude became the
naked women.
15
In the previous chapter, I have traced the history of the female nude as a subject. At this
time, it is appropriate to trace the history of erotic imagery, sexually explicit imagery and the
creation of modern pornography. Like the female nude, explicit imagery dates back to antiquity.
The ancient Greeks adorned their civic centers with erotic friezes that contained nudity and
sexual narratives. The ancient Greeks and Romans did not have a concept of pornography; the
cultures were merely depicting scenes of daily life. Similarly, Asian civilizations like Japan,
China, India, and Persia produced erotic painting. India produced the world’s most famous sex
manual, Kama Sutra, still widely referenced today. These civilizations would have seen these
Conventional theory surrounding the fall of Rome often notes the civilization’s
decadence. Christianity did not support Rome’s sexual pervasiveness. The early church did
feature erotic imagery but as a representation of sin. Suggestions of eroticism were acceptable if
they provided moral instruction. Well into the nineteenth century, this idea of morality insured
that artistic works for public display only featured nudes that fell within classical or mythological
boundaries.16 The Post-Puritan papacy deemed many of the early church’s representations of sin
lewd. As a result, the Church had licentious sculptures removed and paintings whitewashed. This
campaign against obscenity was the first instance of state intervention into pornography. By
suppressing explicit images, the papacy actually gave the images a great deal of power. The legal
structure of the day could not regulate how a person would react to an image so they announced
a list of banned items and arrested any violators. This effectively put a legal structure around the
16
Alan Moore, 25,000 Years of Erotic Freedom (New York: Abrams, 2009), 16.
16
The history of obscenity began with classical literature. These forms of pornography
were limited to educated gentlemen versed in Greek and Latin. Eventually, these classical texts
were translated and new and cheaper forms of print technology commercialized literary print
culture. When the general reading public grew, the production of pornographic works, intended
to entertain as well as arouse, grew as well. The sexual repression of the Victorian Era increased
the escapist fascination with pornographic novels.17 Soon, obscenity trials aimed to ban
pornography. Obscene lines or ideas were censored from texts or banned altogether.
Pornography, as we know it, is a concept created in the Victorian Era. Lynn Hunt states,
“Although desire, sensuality, eroticism and even the explicit depiction of sexual organs can be
found in many, if not all times and places, pornography as a legal and artistic category seems to
be an especially Western idea with a specific chronology and geography.”18 The definition of
pornography is also culturally fixed. In the mid eighteenth century, an Italian peasant discovered
the untouched ruins of Pompeii. Upon excavation, sexually explicit representations threatened
the way Victorians saw the classical world as an ideal society. These representations depicted
every kind of sexual act with every kind of partner and in some cases bestiality. For example,
one sculpture features a god, Pan, copulating with a goat. Excavators locked away these
sculptures and paintings in a secret museum in Naples. By taking what the Romans would have
seen as tame or humorous images and hiding them away, the excavators destroyed the original
context of the works of art. Removing the images from their original context created
pornography. The secret museum was meant to keep obscene objects away from women,
children, and the lower classes. Victorian society believed that sexually explicit images could
17
Steven Marcus, The Other Victorians (New York: Basic Books, 1964).
18
Hunt, The Invention of Pornography, 10.
17
become an addiction and distract people, namely the poor and uneducated, from their proper
jobs.
Before the invention of the printing press, sexually explicit images were limited to upper
class males because they were handmade and therefore expensive. It was thought gentlemen
scholars were well educated enough to be able to identify the line between art and obscenity.
These men could be trusted not to lose themselves to human behavior. Gentlemen created private
collections and exchanged pornographic drawings and illustrations. The invention of the printing
press ushered in an explosion of pornography. For the first time, it was profitable to copy and
distribute images on a large scale. In addition, the legal system created a taste for the forbidden.
Illustrators ridiculed royalty in the interest of individual freedoms. In revolutionary France, they
drew Queen Marie Antoinette copulating with the impotent King’s brother.19 These
compromising positions attracted the reader’s interest and humor. After initially interested by the
illustration, the reader would attend to the pamphlet’s textual propaganda. The greater realism
allowed by the printing press also increased the circulation of masturbatory pornography. The
French are credited as the worldwide supplier of nude photographs by the early 1860s.20 As was
the case with the increasing availability of print novels, the reproducibility of the photography
The boundary between the aesthetic and the obscene became more complicated with the
invention of the photograph in 1839. The history of the camera is vastly older than the history of
photography. Although the notion of the camera obscura dates back to the ancient world, camera
19
Pornography, directed by Fenton Bailey, Chris Rodley, Dev Varma, and Kate Williams (2006; Port Washington,
NY: Koch Vision, 2006), DVD
20
Anne McCauley, Industrial Madness: Commercial Photography in Paris 1848-1871 (New Haven: Yale
University Press, 1994), 161-2.
18
pictures were first scientifically explored in the late Renaissance.21 The camera obscura used a
hole to project an image outside of the box upside-down onto a surface; however, this device
could not permanently capture an image. The history of photography began when chemical
reactions with light fixed the camera’s image. Throughout the nineteenth century, inventors like
Louis Daguerre and William Henry Fox Tablot, experimented with the photographic process.
Photography was popularized through daguerreotype portraits. After all, this development in
photography was much cheaper and faster than oil painting. Unfortunately, the daguerreotype
was limited to a single photograph and could not be reproduced. The invention of the negative
allowed for reproduction and became the preferred method of photography. As a mechanical
process, photographs conveyed a record or fact that was seen as objective and impartial.
Eventually, photography was used to record travel, medicine, war, motion, and science. As the
photographic process matured, exposure time shortened and the materials necessary to create a
photograph became more available. The scientific advancement of the photograph was a natural
Critics of artistic photography argued the mechanical process did not bear the distinct
marks of the artist’s hand and thus lacked artistic merit. Art critics often referred to photography
negatively when describing a painting that did not transcend the mind but merely recorded the
facts of the world.22 Art photography’s original purpose was for academic studies. The
photograph was useful as a first sketch in an elaborate composition. Art photographers stove to
separate their work from the archival mode associated with documentary photography. By the
end of the nineteenth century, art photography grew in popularity among artists. Photographers
began forming camera clubs and photographic societies that gave birth to publications like
21
Beaumont Newhall, The History of Photography (New York: The Museum of Modern Art, 1982), 9.
22
Ibid., 83.
19
Camera Work. From here, the camera and the photograph were cemented as instruments of
artistic practice.
The unprecedented realism of photography directly related to the real world. Almost
immediately, photographs with sexually explicit images arose. Academic female nudes, called
académiques, faced away from the camera or wore sheer veils. Académiques were created for
both academic and erotic purposes. Under the guise of academic photography, these nudes could
be registered with the French government for sale. The first personal photographic nudes were
luxury items much like the early daguerreotypes. Often framed and encased in velvet, the images
were owned by men of financial status and viewed in private.23 Similarly, stereoscopic
daguerreotypes, viewed through a special binocular lens device, added to this aspect of
discretion. Stereoscopes created the illusion of a field of depth by superimposing two slightly
different images onto a singular plane. The binocular vision in combination with the two slightly
touch, and the sense of the proximity of object to viewer.”24 Stereoscopes changed the nature of
the experience because there was a sense that the viewer was alone with the picture.
The industrialization of photography gave every man the ability to take nude
photographs. It was not necessary to be trained by the academy in order to produce and sell
images. Secretly, legitimate photographic studios produced pornographic sets of female nudes on
handheld cards. The trading of pornography was still underground because the images could not
be registered for sale with the government. This type of production professionalized the
pornographic market. At the turn of the century, halftone printing lead to the creation of the mass
market magazine Halftone printing allowed for the cheap production of magazines that could be
23
Dennis, Art/Porn,76.
24
Linda Williams, “Corporealized Observers,” in Fugitive Images, ed. Patrice Petro (Bloomington: Indiana
University Press, 1995), 12-13.
20
widely circulated. Originally, these productions masqueraded as “art magazines” but soon gave
way to soft-core pornography. For decades dirty magazines, like soft-core Playboy and later
hard-core Hustler, were pornography’s chief vehicle. Unlike handheld cards, magazines featured
full-page spreads. By the middle of the twentieth century, glossy (or girlie) magazines embraced
the increasingly fragmented consumer market. Magazines began to specialize for different
personal tastes like breasts or legs. Soon, there was a pornographic magazine for every
readership niche. The ownership of an individual magazine allowed the viewer to be alone with
pornographic material. The sensual experience of touch increased the girlie magazine’s
masturbatory function. Similarly, the viewer could control the pages of his sexual material
In the late twentieth century, this appreciation of control carried over to the video
revolution. Although German gentlemen could view film pornography in brothels as early as
1904, adult theaters in the United States didn’t arise until the 1970s. Of course, the sensation of
touch was prohibited in public theaters. Unlike cinema, the invention of video allowed viewers
greater control; viewers could fast forward, pause, and rewind. The majority of pornographic
material was increasingly produced on videotape. The popularity of the videotape moved
pornography out of the public and into the home. Just like the pornographic magazine, the video
industry specialized in every kind of scenario imaginable. As technology evolved, viewers made
their own pornographic videos replicating themselves as sexual images. The power of the image
was now completely in the hands of the viewer. The viewer could be producer, star, and later
observer.
21
images are always available for immediate download. As a result, the pornographic market
To me, the most eye-opening statistic is the following: Hollywood makes approximately
400 films a year, while the porn industry now makes from 10,000 to 11,000. Seven
million porn videos or DVDs are rented each year…Pornography revenues-which we can
broadly be constructed to include magazines, Internet Web sites, magazines, cable, in-
room hotel movies and sex toys – total between 10 and 14 billion collars annually.25
The “porn industry” is a churning machine of mass produced commodities. The Internet’s
mass proliferation of images revolutionized the way viewers look at sexually explicit imagery.
The introduction of pornography to the Internet complicates how the viewer consumes the naked
female body.
25
Linda Williams, “Porn Studies: Proliferating Pornographies On/Scene: An Introduction,” in Porn Studies, ed.
Linda Williams (Durham: Duke University Press, 2004), 2.
22
The boundary between a female nude and a pornographic image is complex. While both
may contain sexually explicit imagery, the female nude is ideal whereas the naked female body
is too close to nature. Kenneth Clark associates the term “nude” with formal artistic qualities
while the term “naked” suggests a figure deprived of clothing and implies shame or
naked female photograph of real female sexuality. Previously, artistic conventions mediated the
nakedness of the female body. Nead writes, “The transformation of the female body into the
female nude is thus an act of regulation: of the female body and of the potentially wayward
viewer whose wandering eye is disciplined by the conventions of protocols of art.”27 Prescribed
rules in the conventions of painting and drawing alleviated the anxiety of what to look at and
how to look.
Since antiquity, the female nude has been a mostly passive being. The artist adverted eyes
her eyes so that the viewer could gaze upon her form unchallenged. Traditionally, there is a clear
divide between the artist (male) and the object he depicts (female). Berger writes, “On the one
hand the individualism of the artist, the think, the patron, the owner: on the other a hand, the
person who is the object of their activities – the woman – treated as a thing or an abstraction.”28
Historically and as a group, males have had more opportunity and power to stare than their
female counterparts. The woman, as a representation, has been shaped by erotic codes into a
sexual object of the male gaze.29 At the most fundamental level of the academies, art students
(male) learned to master the nude form (female). Life drawing classes encouraged the active
26
Clark, The Nude, 3.
27
Nead, The Female Nude, 6.
28
John Berger, Ways of Seeing (London: Penguin Books, 1972), 62.
29
Laura Mulvey, “Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema,” in Art and Theory: 1900-2000, ed. Charles Harrison and
Paul Wood (Malden: Blackwell Publishing, 2003), 986.
23
male and the passive female. The idea of the artistic genius is inevitably connected with male
sexuality.
In 1998, artist Karen Finley attempted to break this stereotype; however, the nudity
featured in her performance lead to a censorship case. Finley v. National Endowment for the Arts
set “standards of decency and respect” that affect funding for artistic projects in public spaces. A
week later, the Whitney Museum in New York City canceled a separate Finley exhibition with
three other performance artists.30 Finley moved her performance/installation, Go Figure, to The
Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art. According to the exhibition’s catalogue, “Go Figure
consists of a gallery in the Museum which has been converted into a life drawing classroom.
Everyday the exhibition is open there will be drawing classes, with a model and an instructor,
open to any Museum visitor. Participants are invited to pin their finished works on the walls of
the gallery for public viewing.”31 Finley’s exhibition works to undo the traditional relationship
between model, artist, instructor, and viewer. The artist uses the traditional setting of an
academy/gallery but invites any gender or age to draw the nude model (male or female). Her
goal was to undo the long-standing gender stereotypes. Instead of the power asserted by a male
artist or instructor onto the female model, everyone can look or be looked at. The artist invited
the museum’s visitors to participate in staring at the model’s nakedness. The actual naked model
shocked members of the public. Nudity is acceptable as tradition but nakedness is not. Her
significant attempt to obliterate the gendered gaze was lost on viewers focused on the naked
body. Nudity in art is altogether welcome, but nakedness in the real world is for private viewing.
As with paintings in the Salon, the fundamental issue of the female nude is not nudity but
24
the idealized painted nude. Painters combined idealized body parts in order to create the perfect
nudity into photography further complicates the relationship between the viewer and the image.
Nead agrees, “The assumed immediacy and accuracy of the photographic image is invested with
a pornographic intent; whereas the abstraction and mediation of artistic methods such as painting
and drawing are believed to be contrary to the relentless realism of the pornographic intent.” In
mediums like painting and drawing, the female nude presents less of a threat than in the medium
successfully produced reality and changed how the content of an image is represented. The
photographer cannot combine separate parts like a painter. Unlike the fictive space of an oil
painting, the pro-filmic space has a real world referent. The pro-filmic space consists of the
entire setting of an image. The setting includes models, actors, costumes, and props. In other
words, it is the content that exists before the camera. The camera frames the pro-filmic event
Photography is dangerous because it comes closer than any other medium to the ability to
“simply presenting the requisite object – typically, a women or man or combinations thereof-
directly, as a material for sexual fantasy and gratification.”32 Similarly, the camera is a sort of
detached eye. We have an idea that we see exactly what the photographer saw. The
photographer’s choice to depict certain sexual objects or scenes provokes specific reactions.
Unlike cinema, a pornographic photograph does not need to lean on formal considerations to
benefit a narrative. Rather the purpose of the image is to seduce and inspire sexual arousal.
Selecting a particular frame within the pro-filmic event directs the viewer’s eye. John Berger
notes, “Photographs are not, as is often assumed, a mechanical record. Every time we look at a
32
Levinson, “Erotic Art,” 232.
25
photograph, we are aware, however slightly, of the photographer selecting that sight from an
affinity of other possible sights.”33 The material was actively selected. In post-production, the
image was cropped for the purpose of dissemination. In the case of pornography, the image was
captured, produced, and sold with the intent of being consumed as pornography.
Through the image, pornography gives the viewer complete sexual control. The
photograph was a material object one could own. The pornographic photograph, magazine, or
videotape is inherently fetishistic. These mediums allow the viewer to see as well as own,
consume, and touch. The viewer experiences a level of power unequal to coporeal relationships.
Berger notes, “Almost all post-Renaissance European sexual imagery is frontal – either literally
or metaphorically – because the sexual protagonist is the spectator – owner looking at it.”34 The
female’s exposure benefits the viewer. This convention continues with the medium of
photography and becomes the natural ally of pornography. The one-sided relationship between a
viewer and an image gives the viewer total and complete control.
The gaze is used to explain the relationship between the viewer and the image. In a life
drawing class or an artist’s studio, the viewer can assume that the model would have been aware
of being looked at or aware that someone outside of the room may see the depiction. When
technology adapts to the point that it is possible to reproduce an image several times, the
an image taken by a camera obscures the direct gaze. Any discussion about the female nude
cannot avoid a discussion of voyeurism. Voyeur, a French term, means “the one who looks.”
Traditionally, the female nude invited voyeurism. For centuries, artists composed the female
nude based on a basic formula. The female reclined comfortably in an interior setting surrounded
33
Berger, Ways of Seeing, 10.
34
Ibid., 56.
26
by lavish fabrics. She was an otherworldly type; she could be gazed upon but was out of reach.
The male gaze asserted power over the object portrayed. The gaze is decidedly voyeuristic. The
person depicted becomes an object that can be viewed at anytime. The term voyeur also takes on
a deviant meaning referring to a sexual interest or spying on people in intimate space with the
subject often unaware of the looker’s eye. There is a suggestion that laws of privacy are being
violated. Photography often allows the viewer to see an image or object they would not
otherwise be in a position to view. The voyeur can look without being seen; the camera lets the
undermine the privileges of the voyeur and question the importance of the nude in female
photography (Fig. 7). The artist places her body between the camera and a male participant as
she begins to strip off her clothing. A male artist, curator, or critic sits facing the camera while
Stehli faces the participants. The male participants take photographs by using a cable release at
intervals of their choosing. Stehli uses her own studio setting and has a body that fits the mass
media’s ideal. The artist does not allow the camera to capture her frontal image. Whether her
naked body is meant to entice or fluster, the cable denies the subject the ability to control his
own representation. Although the sitter is in charge of capturing the image, the male is forced to
capture his own gaze. The gaze of the photographer and the objectifying lens of the camera are
denied a privileged view of Stehli’s naked body. The purpose of Stehli’s series is to invert the
male gaze of her participants; the series does not depend on the content of the photographs
produced. The artist removes all of her clothing but her naked body does not lend itself to
pornographic content. The series viewer is denied all but one of her sexually explicit features.
27
Pornography is an ally of the vouyeristic male gaze. Pornography presents an image for
the purpose of consumption. The pornographic image lacks the activity of imagination because
all the viewer needs to know is clearly and aggressively represented. The male gaze is especially
apparent in the POV category of pornography. The POV, point-of-view, spectator is no longer a
voyeur standing outside the representation. The POV is almost exclusively male and concerned
with almost exclusively male satisfaction. The amateur cameraman receives sexual gratification
from his partner through fellatio or penetration. The genre became popular with the invention of
video recorders. Amateurs took their cameras into their personal sexual acts. The image can be
produced by any person and consumed by any person. POV images allow the viewer to
experience an even more direct access to pornographic material. The viewer is no longer the
The male gaze is a facet of both artistic production and pornographic consumption. The
mass proliferation of pornographic images through the Internet changed the relationship between
artist and product into viewer and image. With shifting relationships, it is often difficult to decide
28
We talk about pornography differently than we talk about other aesthetic objects like
literature, films, or paintings. As David Rose illuminates, “Accepted artistic objects are judged
aesthetically separate from any considerations of immoral practice in their production or immoral
ideas in their expression, and immoral practices or decisions on the part of artists.”35 Once a
work is labeled as art, we tend to offer opinions, criticisms, and judgment. There is an objective
character to these conversations. Artistic works refer to and comment on subjects outside of
cultural norms without bearing the accountability necessary for their production. We like to think
of a work of art as something that stands on the pedestal of high taste. In other words, a work of
art can refer to pornography and include pornographic images without bearing the label
pornographic.
A pornographic image is a sexually explicit image; however, not all sexually explicit
images can be labeled pornographic. Pornography pushes limits. We talk about the transgressive
nature of pornography as if the subject exists on the fringe of society. Art itself has often been
applauded for its transgressive qualities that push the boundaries of societal limits. The truth is
most people will admit seeing pornographic images. It is hard to passionately condemn
something you have never seen personally. The Internet allows every age access to pornographic
images and most people have explored this opportunity at one time or another. Anti-pornography
groups call for the blanket censorship of pornography. As the papacy learned, censorship often
has the opposite of the intended effect. All pornography should not be censored or prohibited
except in cases of child pornography which should be strictly regulated as so to protect children
35
David Rose, “The Problem with the Problem with Pornography,” in Porn, ed. Dave Monroe (Hoboken: Blackwell
Publishing, 2010), 178.
29
The availability of naked images touches all aspects of the visual arts. The discussion
connects a number of social, political and economic agendas. Culturally supported laws relate
what is and what is not visually acceptable. For example, films are given ratings based on the
amount of nipple shown and it is considered “human indecency” to expose your genitalia on the
subway. In recent years, art and social critics have embraced the subject of pornography with
vigor. These critics attempt to define what characteristics or visual representations denote
pornography. When the boundary between art and pornography includes multiple sections of
Hans Maes believes critics usually draw the line between art and pornography based on
four different categories: representational content, moral status, artistic qualities, or prescribed
response.36 The most obvious way to define a pornographic image is to focus on the body parts
depicted. A pornographic image is often arrestingly anatomical. For the female, this means the
breasts and genitalia will be obviously displayed. Luc Bovens suggests that an artist will often
avoid using graphic representations in favor of suggestive features. The subjective nature of
individual characteristics triumph the mere facts of anatomy. Art relies on suggestion and
illusion. “Thus art reveals in concealing, whereas pornography conceals in revealing.”37 If the
main value of art is intellectual contemplation, lustful desires nullify the purpose of art. By
obscuring sexually explicit representations, the viewer can objectively attend to the aesthetic
considerations made by the artist. Ideally, a successful representation of the nude should be in
control of the potential risk of pornographic associations. Samuel Alexander famously quoted,
“If the nude is so treated that it raises in the spectator ideas or desires appropriate to the material
36
Maes, “Who Says,” 18.
37
Maes, “Who Says,” 18.
30
subject, it is false art, and bad morals.”38 On the other hand, Kenneth Clark believes, “No nude,
however abstract, should fail to arouse in the spectator some vestige of erotic feeling.”39 Of
course pornography fails if it fails to arouse the viewer, but must a work of art fail to arouse in
order to be art? It is improbable that a successful nude representation would not affect the senses.
Frequently, both sensuality and eroticism exist within an image. What terrifies most anti-
pornography viewers is the way pornography can move our bodies without our consent. One
does not need to approve of an image or the effect of an image to experience arousal. Clark
admits, “The desire to grasp and be united with another human body is so fundamental a part of
our nature, that our judgment of what is known as ‘pure form’ is inevitably influenced by it; and
one of the difficulties of the nude as a subject for art is that these instincts cannot lie hidden.”40
Whether art or pornography, a photograph’s representational content has the ability to influence
the body. Alone, representational content cannot be the sole basis for pornography. A nude
Another objection to the proliferation of sexual images is the questionable moral status of
pornography. The Victorians believed that pornography and by extension masturbation could
lead to an addiction and cause a breakdown in society. Licentious material was destructive to
production. During production, it is unlikely that the actors are purposefully harmed. This may
seem like the case with pornographic niches like bondage. For a person unfamiliar with bondage
scenarios, these sexual acts may look as though they condone brutality and rape. In actuality,
38
Clark, The Nude, 8.
39
Ibid., 8.
40
Ibid., 8.
31
participants exercise a great deal of trust with their partner between pleasure and pain in which
Critics of pornography’s moral status are much more likely to refer to the post-production
effects. Pornography can be damaging to social constructions of sexuality. Critics view the
effects of pornography as a masculine aim to exploit and objectify women. They fear
discourses in the late twentieth century were especially wary of the effect of pornographic
materials on female sexuality. Catharine MacKinnon and Andrea Dworkin worked extensively
explicit subordination of women through pictures and/or words.”41 Among other acts, her
commodities” and “in scenarios of degradation.”42 For those on the censorship side, pornography
supports and even encourages these actions. In her writings, Dworkin went as far as to argue that
pornography is the latest reincarnation of all the exploitation and brutality of human history.43
The feminist critique of pornography tends to declare almost all sexually explicit representations
offensive to women. In fact, some female performers believe their participation in pornography
to be empowerment for female sexuality. Moreover, this assumes that all women participating in
pornography have been forced in some way. The success of the pornographic market encouraged
the growth of the porn star. Female performers are picked for their attractiveness and willingness
to perform sexual acts. On the other hand, male performers are picked for their ability to
complete the sexual act on cue. The 1970s, nicknamed “The Golden Age of Porn,” embraced
41
Walter Kendrick, The Secret Museum (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1987), 233.
42
Ibid., 233.
43
Andrea Dworkin, Pornography: Men Possessing Women (New York: Plume, 1981).
32
these stars as a way to market the brand of a particular company. The availability of pornography
Pornography does not solely depict the subordination of women. Most pornography is
directly at the heterosexual male viewer but pornography is a vast collection of images. Many of
these images do not fall into male-female sexual relations. The debate on pornography has
greatly avoided gay male, lesbian, and transvestite categories. Dennis observes, “Pornography in
mainstream debate is presumptively heterosexual because gay and lesbian pornography cannot
be cited as a “cause” of the exploitation of women. It tends not to be cited at all.”44 This view
suggests that only women are in danger of being harmed by sexually explicit imagery. Can
pornography not also be harmful to men? Pornography is a blanket term that includes any
number of subgenres. “By displaying sexual diversity – different positions, different partners,
different gender combinations – pornography depicts sexual activity and enjoyment outside the
represents sex and pleasure outside of class and social hierarchies: sex: not money is the great
leveler.”45 The mass proliferation of sexual representation and pornography has larger social
implications.
reading pornography as a “meaningful” text about sexual acts.46 Angela Carter insists, “sexual
relations between men and women always render explicit the nature of social relations in the
society in which they take place and, if described explicitly, will form a critique of those
44
Dennis, Art/Porn, 10.
45
Ibid., 112.
46
Carol J. Clover, introduction to Dirty Looks, ed, Pamela Church Gibson and Roma Gibson (London: British Film
Institute, 1993), 1.
33
relations, even if that is not and never has been the intention of the pornographer.”47 Thus the
pornographer’s aim is not always to exploit the female form. Of course there are types of
pornography that are degrading to women like rape scenarios; however, there is not a direct link
between viewing violent pornography and becoming compelled to imitate violent actions. If
certain types of pornography are indeed harmful, this label should be applied only where
“verbal or pictorial material which represents or describes sexual behavior that is degrading or
abusive to one or more of the participants in such a way as to endorse the degradation.”48
Another anti-pornography argument cites the effects of false female body images. The
feminist camp focused the energy they had previously put towards fashion models and
this ignores the fact that a huge fraction of the pornographic market embraces less-than-ideal
amateurs. Instead, Lynne Segal argues, “What women need, according to feminists opposed to
anti-pornography crusades, is not more censorship but more sexually explicit material produced
by and for women, more open and honest discussion of all sexual issues, alongside the struggle
against women’s general subordinate economic and social status.”49 Declaring all pornography
harmful is dangerous and naïve. By saturating the debate on pornography with gender politics,
Thus, the most successful way to differentiate between art and pornography is to consider
the artistic intent of the image. Art values form, medium, and vehicle. An image aimed purely at
sexual arousal has a lesser need of formal qualities. The artistic intent of an image is “the way
47
Hunt, The Invention of Pornography, 40.
48
Helen Longino, “Pornography, Oppression, and Freedom,” in Take Back the Night: Women on Pornography, ed.
Laura Lederer (New York: William Morrow, 1980), 43.
49
Lynne Segal, “Does Pornography Cause Violence?” in Dirty Looks, ed, Pamela Church Gibson and Roma Gibson
(London: British Film Institute, 1993), 9.
34
the medium has been employed to convey the content.”50 A work of art demands that the viewer
attend to its artistic dimension. Bence Nanay states, “One striking feature of most pornographic
images is that they emphasize what is depicted and underplay the way it is depicted: the
image does not give the viewer the ability to see through its formal qualities. The image is a
whole rather than a number of sexually explicit parts. Nanay continues, “We experience
pornographic pictures as transparent if our experience does not involve attention to the ‘design’
pornographic images, the viewer ignores or looks through the medium in favor of the anatomical
properties shown. For an image to be considered a work of art, the viewer must pay attention to
how the image is constructed not only what the image portrays.
effective once it elicits certain body responses. While pornography is meant to arouse, art is
meant to allude to the sexual desires of the subject. Art is an intellectual pursuit while
pornography is a means to satisfy a desire. Pornography attends to what images are for rather
than what they show. For pornography, aesthetic concerns are an obstacle to arousal. Jon Huer
offers, “We could define pornography as something through which arousal is intended as an end
in itself; if the arousal is adopted, on the other hand, as a means to a larger purpose, such as a
message of the while work with a definitely symbolic and structural meaning in viewer, we may
grant it the benefit of our doubt and call it art.”53 If the image is meant to arouse foremost and
50
Levinson, “Erotic Art,” 232.
51
Bence Nanay, “Anti-Pornography: André Kertész’s Distortions,” in Art and Pornography: Philosophical Essays,
ed. Hans Maes and Jerrold Levinson (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012), 191.
52
Ibid., 198.
53
Huer, Art, Beauty, and Pornography, 188.
35
endmost, typically the image was produced as pornography with the intent of being distributed as
pornography.
Art, and likewise erotic art, can easily arouse sexual desire in the viewer. Pornography is
defined as intending to arouse for the main purpose of sexual release. There are inherent
problems with works of art intended to arouse pornographic interests in their viewer. Gustave
Courbet’s The Origin of the World is one of the most famous examples of erotic art (Fig. 8). A
Turkish collector commissioned The Origin of the World from Courbet and after a confusing
number of provenance issues the oil painting resides in the Musée d’Orsay. The painting is on
public display and is viewed as one of the great accomplishments of French art. Courbet
masterfully paints a nude female with her legs parted. A sheet covers her torso leaving one breast
exposed. Although the painting is cropped closely, the artist’s attention focuses more on the flush
tones of the skin rather than extreme detail featured in pornographic images. Pornographic
images tend to show extreme detail; females use their fingers to expose their genitalia. Courbet’s
rendering attends to an intimate reality rather than the hyper-reality of pornography; the artist
There are also problems with “artful” pornography. While artful pornography aims at
arousal, it employs artistic quality like line and style. “Artful” pornographic images use formal
qualities to a pornographic end. The overriding goal of arousal or sexual activity will always
the intent of being distributed as pornography. The best way to classify the debate between art
and pornography is to what aim the image aspires. Art and pornography are not and will never be
mutually exclusive. Art has been used to describe pornography and vice versa. The two are
36
Even in an artistic institution like a museum or gallery, the nude has been under fire by
the general public of its particular time. When Manet’s Olympia was first displayed in the Paris
Salon in 1865, the painting was deemed indecent. Now, the painting is accepted as a masterpiece
in the art historical cannon. Origin of the World would have been considered obscene if
displayed in public at the time it was painted. Even now, viewing the painting in the Musee
d’Orsay continues to be an uncomfortable experience for some viewers. Upon visiting the
museum, the viewer experiences a self-awareness that he or she is looking at a sexually explicit
image. Rather than enjoying a private gaze, the viewer is forced to gaze in public. There
continues too be a strange tension between an artistic depiction and the reality of our bodies.
The controversy of the nude is often a “function of personal taste, which in turn is
affected by religious affiliation, educational background, economic status, sexual identity, and all
of the other variables that contribute to human subjectivity.”54 Objective measures for personal
taste or judgment do not exist. Social and cultural complicate what is publically appropriate It is
diffuclt to determine the boundaries between a sexually explicit image and an acceptable work of
art. Since the beginning of the printing press, some of the images circulated have been
pornographic in nature and/or intent. As these images came to light, they have been policed and
censored but never quieted. The urge to subdue pornographic images only added to their
One would hope that the artistic endeavors of the female nude would provide an
intellectual experience unavailable in pornography. The female nude seeks to a higher facet of
culture established in museums and galleries. Art institutions have an incredible amount of
influence defining art from pornography. Museums circulate postcards featuring upcoming
54
McCarthy, “The Nude,” 71.
37
exhibitions of voluptuous Aphrodite sculptures. On the other hand, girlie magazines are incased
in black plastic warning off any person that might be offended by pornographic material. New
naked images create controversy but classical objects in an institutionalized context do not shock
or awe. Context is often the key element in the battle between nudity and nakedness. In an
exhibition, viewers are less likely to feel ashamed or embarrassed to look at a nude female
photograph than in a dirty magazine at a convenient store. It is possible some of these same
images would likely be accepted as art if they were on display in a renowned art gallery.
Traditions of Nudity
Working in the tradition of the nude, Katy Grannan, places newspaper advertisements
seeking art models for portraits. She adds that no experience is necessary. After individuals
contact her, she meets them in their homes, public places, or even her home. She lets her amateur
models pose wherever they like in whatever way they choose. Many of the people that reply to
her art model advertisements choose to pose nude. Although she holds the camera and places the
props, the setting is up to her models. This collaboration produces a bizarre and almost eerie set
of portraits. The artist captures a moment of blunt, often not conventionally pretty, realism
whose visual codes should read pornographic. Dale, Southampton Avenue (III), 2007 reclines
upon a pillow in her unmade bed (Fig. 9). Her pose is identical of a Venus by Titian but her eyes
confront the viewer. There is a realness to her sitters that is not present in pornographic
photography. Instead, she manages to capture perfection in outright flaws. Dale’s body blends
into the monochromatic linens and wall color. The individualism of her sitters inspires
imagination and contemplation. Dale’s eye contact challenges the viewer to read into her as a
person rather than consume her sexual parts. Although subjects may pose in a sexually
38
Grannan transforms the traditional nude into a contemporary, real nakedness. Yet, there
is a clear eroticism in the subject’s gaze meeting the camera in such intimate settings. The
confusion between nudity and a sexually explicit image is a symptom of cultural anxieties. It is
often hard to say if our shifting feelings about nudity are becoming more liberal or in fact more
conservative. As a function of personal taste, the nude grows more and more problematic. While
forums for publishing nude media have expanded, the criteria for establishing taste and judgment
when it comes to these images is unstable at best. What makes Grannan’s photographs successful
is the “awkward negotiations between self-image and media-image.” 55 The perfection of the
celebrity nude and the professional pornographic image create a new standard image that the
body may not be able to live up to. An earlier photograph, Untitled from 1998, shows a younger
women perched atop her bed (Fig. 10). The bed is covered in a cozy, leopard throw. The
blackened blinds and dull green plant in the background are particularly unremarkable; the two
could just have easily been found in a low budget office building. The girl poses opposite a oddly
colored but passionate figurine of two lovers. Their natural passion is offset by the girl’s hunched
pose. In mid-undress, the girl pauses to look at the camera. Although she has a body closer to the
ideals of the mass media, she does not allow the camera to use her body in such a way. She
refuses to give the viewer unnatural access. The photographer nor the sitter or eventually the
viewer sees the works as tools for sexual arousal; the photograph is a comment on the
Typically, artists working the tradition of the nude reference the long lineage of artistic
tradition’ however, well-established artists are not always safe from controversy. Photographer
Renée Cox uses her own nude body to explore black female sexuality through the lens of art
history. She references the lineage of the female nude in traditional conventions in order to show
55
Carmine Iannaccone, “Katy Grannan,” Frieze Magazine, April 2001.
39
where she as a woman is represented in the history of art. In the Western tradition, the features of
the female nude are fair skinned and delicate. In a 2001 exhibition entitled “American Family,”
the artist took nude photographs of herself in masterpieces like Olympia, La Grande Odalisque,
and Le Déjeuner sur l’herbe. By casting herself as the classical (read: white) female nude, the
artist displays an antagonistic re-envisioning of racial and sexual stereotyping. Cox erupted into
the public eye with a show at the Brooklyn Museum which featured her 1996 work Yo Mama’s
Black Supper (Fig. 11). The large color photographic montage features five panels and is a quote
of Leonardo da Vinci’s famous The Last Supper. Cox casts herself as a nude, female Jesus with
outstretched arms surrounded by eleven dreadlocked, African American disciples and one white
Judas. The artist alone occupies the middle panel and the disciples fill up the other four panels in
groups of three. Cox does not arrange her disciples in the same arrangement as Leonardo da
Vinci but rather re-conceives their placement and poses. New York City mayor Rudolph Giuliani
immediately called for a special commission on indecency that would ban such pro-fane,
blasphemous works of art from publically funded locations. Besides the fact that indecency is
immeasurable, it is impossible to say what the mayor was most offended about. Was it the
presence of African Americans at the last supper? Was it white Judas? Was it Cox representing
herself as Jesus (which I highly doubt the artist was proclaiming herself to be)?
William Donohue, the president of the Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights,
admitted it was the artist’s nudity that earned Yo Mama’s Last Supper its irreverent association.
At a debate between Cox and Donohue, he voiced, ''I don't care if Christ is depicted as a black
man and black woman,'' he said. ''But this is pushing the envelope.'' He added, ‘‘there would be
no problem if you had kept your clothes on.''56 Cox’s stark nakedness brought the biblical theme
too close to reality. As an artist working in the grand tradition of the female nude, Yo Mama’s
56
Monte Williams, “’Yo Mama’ Artist Takes on Catholic Critic,” New York Times (New York, NY), Feb. 21, 2001.
40
Black Supper was not a controversial step within her established body of work. Christianity is
powerful part of the African American community but members often go without representation
in traditional biblical themes. The artist interpreted Leonardo da Vinci’s The Last Supper through
the representation of people she knows through personal experience. A big part of that
experience is black female sexuality. For a subject as old as art itself, it is hard to believe that the
The Accused
Traditionally, the studio is the most established setting in photography. The studio allows
the photographer to control what the camera sees and how the viewer will see it. Robert
sculpture. As a discipline, bodybuilding requires perfecting the physical form. The emphasis on a
physical and aesthetic ideal transforms the female body into a work of art. The artist presents an
interesting challenge to the studio nude. Sexually explicit female representations are more
acceptable as art than male representations. Once male nudity is included, a work is more likely
Mapplethorpe was the first major artist to photograph homosexual S&M practices. S&M
was and still very much is seen as a deviant sexual practice. Photographs like Mapplethrope’s X
Portfolio clearly reference a classical tradition of erotic art and refer to his experience with
pornography. The artist was inspired by pornographic images in novelty shop magazines as a
teen. He also drew from his experience as a gay male. Mapplethrope uses the language of
formalism to take artistic photographs that elicited the same intrinsic sensation he felt when
looking at pornographic material. Danto adds, “His ambition was to create work that really was
41
pornographic by the criteria of sexual excitement, and really was art.”57 John, N.Y.C. is a tightly
cropped image of a man inserting a dildo into his anus (Fig. 12). The artist employs hard edges
and dark chiaroscuro to show his aesthetic control in black and white photographs.58 As a whole,
the image is elegant and even beautiful. Although the portfolio is like pornography and about
pornography, the images themselves are considered high art for his classical use of the studio and
pictorial conventions.
C. The Museum refused to host the exhibition because of homoerotic content. The Corcoran and
several members of the U.S. Congress felt that federal funding should not be given to obscene
works of art. This raised questions of what is deemed appropriate for public display in the arts.
These questions continue today as no law has been able to judge the limits of obscenity.
Frequently, questions of decency exist outside of the photographic frame. Jock Sturges is
known for his nude photographs of children and adolescents. In 1990, his San Francisco studio
was raided by the F.B.I. and he was accused of child pornography. The charges were dropped
and his photographs returned; however, the nudity of children, like the S&M of Mapplethrope,
became his calling card. Luc Sante argues that the artist’s behavior, the artist’s motives and the
viewer’s response are the fundamental issues in pornography.59 Sturges behavior does not give
any hint of malice. There is nothing inappropriate or immoral about his beautifully simplistic
photographs. Flore et Fredeìrique, Montalivet, France features a young girl and her mother on a
nude beach (Fig. 13). Sturges often shoots groups and families together. The girl stands in a
classical contrapposto and stares confidently into the camera. Several feet away, the mother
57
Arthur C. Danto, Mapplethorpe (New York: teNeues, 1992), 326.
58
Nead, The Female Nude, 8.
59
Luc Sante, “The Nude and the Naked,” The New Republic 212, no. 18 (1995): 30.
42
looks on confident and proud. His focus is the beauty of the human body. An artist’s motives are
harder to establish but so is the viewer’s response. The nude body of a child is not controversial.
Controversy arises when the law imposes ideas of adult sexuality onto these images. As I have
established, the standard of decency is not a fixed property. Although both artists have been
accused of pornographic imagery, Sturges and Mapplethorpe’s photographs fit squarely within
artistic intent.
Pornography as Art
The introduction of pornography into public discourse has complicated the female nude
as a subject in contemporary art. Pornography is the natural encroachment of the female nude
figure. The subject has taken the female nude to its farthest, most explicit form. As a result,
artists often run into trouble when heavily referencing pornography although it is a subject
universally and intimately known. Pornography is worth talking about because it is a culturally
prints from digital stills of Internet pornography. The artist appropriates digital files as he surfs
upon them. He carefully chooses each of his images for their compositional particularities in
order to evoke the aesthetic of the classical female nude.60 The pornographic stills are enlarged
blurring the pixilated image. Then, he further distorts the image with digital technology
producing a disarmingly, painterly effect. While the monumental scale of the print should result
in a confrontational experience, Ruff’s pictorial strategies invite the viewer to decipher the
blurred image. Like a Monet, you see nothing up close until you step back and the whole image
seems relatively focused. There is a delay between what you see and perceiving that you are
60
Okwui Enwezor, “The Conditions of Spectrality and Spectatorship in Thomas Ruff’s Photographs,” in Thomas
Ruff, ed. Okwui Enwezor (Haus der Kunst: Schirmer/Mosel, 2012), 16.
43
seeing it. The viewer is forced to imagine the content of the image. Ruff robs the viewer of the
unmediated, immediacy of the genitalia or the sexual act. Instead, “the editing opens up a
beautifying and thus enticing associative space charged with seduction, desire, availability,
voyeurism and exhibitionism.”61 The viewer experiences a pre-reflective curiosity to find out
what lies within the image’s blur. From a distance, the blurred image is explicit but the viewer’s
willingness to spend contemplative time with this type of content accomplishes the artistic intent
Nudes in 03 depicts a naked, blonde female inserting a sex toy into her genitals (Fig. 14).
Her legs are cropped out of the frame as they are unimportant to the aim of the image.
Pornography is not complex. It depicts the same kinds of roles, settings, sexual acts, and stunted
narratives. These features do not have to be multi-layered and various because they all aim to the
same sexual release. While art has the ability to illuminate our reality, pornography only seeks to
satisfy our immediate desires. Pornography does not belong to a place. It is a mixture of fantasies
that are not bound to any representation. Her arm juts downward and her hand fervently grasps
her instrument. With wild blonde hair and red lips, the viewer has a sense of her passion.
is a pornographic image (Fig. 15). The two poses are almost identical; however, the
pornographic image is cropped even closer to the body. The photographer takes great care to fit
as many as her sexual parts into the image as possible. The flatness of the image creates an
absolute proximity to the viewer. Ruff’s photograph reads from the top down while the
pornographic image reads from the bottom up. The artist presents us with a space for entry and a
space to read into but the other image is “too close.” Nude photography is typically cautious of
61
Thomas Weski, “The Scientific Artist,” in Thomas Ruff, ed. Okwui Enwezor (Haus der Kunst: Schirmer/Mosel,
2012), 31.
44
the female nude and thus uses forms of abstraction to distance the viewer from being “too close”
to the image. Thereby, the viewer can experience a bit of the erotic through a safe boundary. We
happily explore the terrains of art but consider the pornographic image as “too close” to the other
sense of touch. Pornography, privately, allows the viewer to have a sensual experience with his
or her body. The pornographic image appeals directly to the consumer. The title of the image
insures that users searching for particular interests like high heels or dildo can easily find what
they are looking for. The toy is not a device for her pleasure but a tool to show as much detail of
her genitalia as possible. Her arms and her hair do not get in the way of displaying her breasts
like Ruff’s photograph. The viewer need not have a thought past the content expressly displayed
Artistic intention allows one to see the formal qualities of the work initially while
processing the content. Nudes ree07 references a classic pornographic shot called the “beaver
shot (Fig. 16).” The shot focuses directly and almost exclusively on female genitalia. Throughout
the history of pornography, the representation of female genitalia endures. As such, the camera
angle is a decidedly male viewpoint. The pose and the cropping of the subject fit well into
conventional art history. Nudes ree07 is a direct quotation of Courbet’s Origin of the World. The
photographic “beaver shot” presented what the ideal female nude had always gracefully covered.
After centuries of idealization, the photographic nude presents public hair.62 There is no shortage
of female genitalia in the history of art. Painted in 1866, Origin of the World is in historical
proximity to the photography and is cropped suitably for a “beaver shot” photograph. It could
also be said that photographic reproductions of the painting are convincingly pornographic. Both
62
Dennis, Art/Porn, 61.
45
The female’s red panties show considerable restraint in the world of pornography. They
suggestively lower the age of the women while at the same time displaying an intimate tone.
There is innocence to the scene depicted and it is certainly one of Ruff’s more tame nudes. Ruff
likely picked the image for its imaginative qualities. The viewer is forced to imagine what
follows in the next frames. There is accessibility in less-than-ideal pornography not present in
professional porn layouts. The perception of the image is more important than the content of the
image. Even after the viewer is satisfied by the content of the pornographic image, the viewer
Ruff’s nudes not only comment on the effects of digital manipulation in photography but
on the proliferation of images on the Internet as a whole. Originally, the artist intended to use the
Internet to research the genre of nude photography. He quickly discovered fashion photography
but found the stylish, beautiful models uninspiring. Soon, he found pornography “which he
essentially found more honest than the entire representation of the nude in art.”63 Although
professional bodies are certainly popular in the world of pornography, the artist noticed that most
representations were amateurs. Pornography does not distinguish between amateur and
professional photography. In addition, Ruff takes his stills not from artful pornographic
photography but from smaller thumbnails and preview images. Websites use thumbnails and
previews to accommodate the bandwidth for a large number of images; this technique allows the
site to load quickly in an archival manner. This also allows viewer to more easily scan through
dozens of images simultaneously. The photograph is not really reality anymore but an image we
have of that reality. The continuous cycle of the pornographic image shows how we view and
63
Okwui Enwezor, Thomas Ruff, 142.
46
Conclusion
Traditionally, art has been a way to transcend the reality of the moment. The visual arts
are a facet of high culture. When artists begin to incorporate lowbrow features of culture into
high art, the value of art comes into question. Pornography challenges the high culture of art. A
work of art no longer solely belongs to high culture. Art can be produced from the lowbrow
fragments of our contemporary moment. Increasingly, art reflects our everyday experience.
Pornographic images have made their way into high cultural institutions. The inclusion of these
images reflects what we see on a daily basis and what we are interested in looking at.
There have been many attempts to censor pornography in public spaces. Pornographic
images proliferate unchecked on the web. Hysteria over the ill effects of pornography exposes
the cultural anxieties about the endless cycle of images. Technology is the medium of
pornography. Each new vehicle of dissemination has created new forms of pornography. Kelly
Dennis notes:
“From lithography to photograph, and from video games to the Internet, pornographic
images constituted some of the earliest visual forms created in each of these media.
Whereas the formal conventions of nineteenth-century photographic pornography
followed the technological evolution of the medium, twentieth-century pornography at
times drove the technology.”64
Pornographers, like artists, follow changes in technology and explore new mediums for
their expression. The Internet most likely will not be the last technological advance that sees the
pornographic landscape.
64
Dennis, Art/Porn, 128.
47
pornography should be featured in contemporary art. The subject should not be censored because
the censorship of art is dependent on existing legal systems. The law is not particularly interested
in aesthetic concerns. As the papacy learned, the suppression of images only adds to their
dissemination. A society can both consume pornography and appreciate art. The two activities
48
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