On the evening of 13 May, a large painting of a naked woman sitting
on a sofa by the British artist Lucian Freud will go under the hammer at
Christie’s auction house in New York, with an upper estimate of $50m
(£32.4m).
By any standards, Benefits Supervisor Resting (1994) is a
spectacular canvas: a thickly painted, clotted study of abundant female
flesh. Freud’s vision was relentlessly frank, and here he revelled in
describing every last mottle, blemish, wobble and sag of his curvaceous
model, the Londoner Sue Tilley, who then weighed around 20 stone (280lb,
120 kg) and worked as a supervisor in a Job Centre. “I want the paint
to feel like flesh,” Freud once said.
The effect isn’t cruel, in a
point-and-gasp kind of way, like those television ‘shock docs’ that
encourage us to mock the obese. Instead we are shown a sympathetic
figure with a remarkably palpable presence, flinging back her head as
though lost in ecstasy – or, perhaps, tranquillity.
Freud’s fiesta
of carnality belongs to a quartet of paintings that he made of Tilley,
aka ‘Big Sue’, in the ’90s. When Benefits Supervisor Sleeping (1995),
another painting from the series, was sold at Christie’s in New York in
2008, the Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich bought it for $33.6m
(£17.2m) – then the highest price paid for a painting by a living
artist. (Freud died in 2011.)
One of the most striking things about Freud’s
paintings of Tilley is how much they depart from conventional
definitions of female beauty. Although ‘plus-size models’ such as Ashley
Graham now enjoy increasing prominence, and the voluptuous, scantily
clad body of socialite and celebrity Kim Kardashian is endlessly
reproduced across social media, there is still a certain look for women
that glossy magazines encourage us to find attractive. And that look
usually involves being thin.
Within the context of art history,
though, Freud’s paintings of Big Sue do not seem so wayward. It is often
said that the ancient Greeks invented ‘the nude’. But there are
depictions of naked women or goddesses from earlier ages than the
Classical era – and many of them exhibit a full figure.
Ancient aesthetics
One
of the earliest – and best known – is a small limestone figurine,
little more than 11cm (4in) high, traditionally called the Venus of
Willendorf. (She is named after the Austrian village near the
Palaeolithic site where she was discovered in 1908.) Her modern name is
controversial, since calling her Venus invites comparison with the much
more obviously beautiful Venuses fashioned by the sculptors of ancient
Greece. This footless figure is, frankly, much fatter than her Grecian
descendants: her pear-shaped body boasts enormous breasts and an
unrealistically swollen belly, with a pronounced pubic cleft. She looks
like a fleshy hand grenade.
There is still great debate about why this
figurine was carved. In one infamous interpretation, the US critic
Camille Paglia argued in her book Sexual Personae (1990) that “[the
Venus of Willendorf] is buried in the bulging mass of her own fecund
body… Her fat is a symbol of abundance in an age of famine. She is the
too-muchness of nature, which man longs to direct to his salvation.”
Yet
Jill Cook of the Department of Prehistory in the British Museum is not
convinced that the Willendorf statuette was necessarily a fertility
goddess. “She is a depiction of an obese, middle-aged woman whose
childbearing is in the past,” Cook says. “When first found she was
described as ‘ugly’, ‘monstrous’, and ‘horrible’, and hailed as
indicative of the ‘primitive’ sexual tastes of people regarded at that
time as savages. Yet I fail to see any pornographic or erotic
significance in this piece. For me, Frau Willendorf has the kind of
candid reality and physical ease reflected by Freud in his paintings of
Sue Tilley.”
It would be fascinating to ascertain whether this
little statuette, the Big Sue of her day, was ever considered beautiful.
Certainly, when we look at later periods in art history, we quickly
realise that beauty is never an absolute concept, but something that
shifts and fluctuates over time.
The artists of the Northern
Renaissance, for instance, preferred to paint naked women with elegant,
slender and tapering, small-breasted bodies: just look, for example, at
the way that Lucas Cranach the Elder depicted Eve before the Tree of
Knowledge in a panel of 1526 now in the Courtauld Gallery in London.
Closer to the Mediterranean, however, Italian artists often painted
naked women with much sturdier, more statuesque frames: witness
Giorgione’s Concert champêtre or the hearty nudes of Titian. Here,
perhaps, the emphasis was more upon passionate, worldly sensuality than
spiritual concerns.
Fleshy pursuits
The
Western artist arguably most famous for depicting voluptuous women was
the 17th Century ‘prince of painters’, Peter Paul Rubens. The
well-nourished models in his paintings are routinely described as
‘fleshy’. While they would be unlikely to grace the cover of Vogue
magazine today, Rubens’ models were once lauded as the apogee of beauty:
one of them, the artist’s own wife, was considered the most beautiful
woman in Flanders.
Rubens’ portrait known as Het Pelsken
(The Little Fur), a life-sized nude in which his second wife, Hélène
Fourment, partially drapes herself with a sensuous fur robe, is a
masterpiece of eroticism and sensitivity: the artist dwells upon the
dimples and folds of his young wife’s flesh. As a result, there is
little about this portrait that feels ‘airbrushed’. While her pose has
an element of titillating fantasy, the way that Rubens presents her is
intimacy itself.
Rubens became the benchmark for later artists
who, for whatever reason, wanted to paint women with ample bodies. His
influence, for example, can be seen in the late Bathers of Renoir, or
the large-scale nude women painted by contemporary British artist Jenny
Saville.
Eye of the beholder
Even the Young
British Artist Sarah Lucas has occasionally operated within a tradition
that goes back to Rubens. Around the time that Freud started painting
Tilley, Lucas created Fat, Forty and Flabulous (1991). It belonged to a
series of works that she made by photocopying double-page spreads in
tabloid newspapers. In this particular piece, we see a dark-haired woman
with a body shape not dissimilar from that of Big Sue. This time
though, the woman is held up as an object of ridicule by story from the
Sunday Sport that Lucas used as her source: the article’s opening
paragraph describes her as someone’s “marshmallow mound missus”.
Lucas,
of course, wasn’t inviting us to join in the baiting. Strongly
influenced by feminist writing at the time, she wanted to skewer a
punitive, misogynistic society that believed that people who deviated
from the ‘ideal’ of the body beautiful – or even the ‘norm’, in terms of
their appearance – were worthy of scorn. Her target was the mocking
tone of the tabloid newspaper rather than the woman at the heart of the
story.
Freud’s portraits of Tilley also belong to a lineage
stretching back to Rubens, despite the fact that Big Sue does not have
the same distinctively lustrous, mother-of-pearl skin tone as the women
in the earlier artist’s paintings. Unlike Rubens, Freud didn’t want his
full-figured model to appear seductive.
Freud, of course, was operating in the wake of
Modernism, which had vigorously assaulted time-honoured ideals of
beauty. (There is no way, for example, that you would find Picasso and
his cohorts painting lush ‘stunners’ as the 19th Century Pre-Raphaelites
had done.) As well as harking back to Rubens, Freud’s paintings of
Tilley also belong to a tradition of supposedly ‘ugly’ 20th Century
nudes. Think of the women in early masterpieces of modern art such as
Cezanne’s Bathers or Matisse’s Blue Nude (Souvenir of Biskra) of 1907,
whose haunches, in particular, are wilfully distorted and misshapen.
Yet
ultimately, of course, there is nothing ‘ugly’ about Freud’s portraits
of Big Sue: anyone who argues otherwise is seeing them through the prism
of their own prejudice rather than looking at their actual effect,
which presents Tilley sympathetically. Back in the ’90s, when they were
painted, they may have appeared surprising as a celebration of what was
then (and is still) an unconventional type of beauty. But seen in the
wider context of art history, suddenly they don’t seem so radical after
all. Just like Lucas, Freud understood that beauty is an artificial and
fluid concept constructed by different societies in different ways.
By Alastair Sooke, an art critic of The Daily Telegraph
Wednesday, 13 May 2015
The art of the full-figured nude
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