The Crouching Woman. A painting by the Belgian artist Adrien de Witte (1850-1935)
Déshabillé: The state of being carelessly or partially clothed.
In figurative art, one could extend the meaning by adding: A glimpse of the body unintentionally revealed.
For the artist, this is easier said than done. The unintended glimpse is not one that can be staged in the studio. It invariably happens when the sketch book isn't at hand. Attempts to recreate that illusive moment, from memory or the posed model, are rarely successful. However, the opening painting by Adrien de Witte of a kneeling woman is a masterly exception.
My own contribution to the genre is of a model at her first sitting. The sarong was meant to be tied above her breasts, but as she turned it slipped, and the unintentional won preference over what was meant to be.
The unintended glimpse is easier to achieve in the moving image, as in this 1968 live recording of Eartha Kitt singing, If you go away.
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