Ever since Pope Paul IV initiated the banning of lasciviousness in religious art in 1557, paintings and sculptures that depict the beauty and innocence of the nude figure have been subjected to the obnoxious practice of obfuscation. In the words of D H Lawrence:
A fig leaf, or if you can't find it, a wreath of mist with nothing behind it.
With the advent of social media censorship, obfuscation reached new heights, but with the irony that in sanitising the image, they teasingly sexualise it.
Academy by the French painter Alexis Axillette (first image below) shows how nudity loses much of its sexual connotation when the eye is free to accept the beauty of the body as a whole, rather than being drawn to its supposedly private parts.
The second image shows how the model's breasts would appear after being subjected to social media's brutal surgery.
At least artists from five hundred years ago carried out the operation with greater delicacy and flair, as shown in the third image.
Academy by the French painter Alexis Axillette (1860-1931)


No comments:
Post a Comment