Friday, 1 June 2012

The Met in NYC goes "Naked Before the Camera"


Posted: 31 May 2012 10:00 PM PDT
artwork: (Left) Charles Alphonse Marlé - "Standing Male Nude", circa 1855 - Salted paper print from paper negative - 25.7 x 17.6 cm. (Right) Nadar - "Standing Female Nude", 1860–61 - Salted paper print from glass negative - 20.2 x 13.3 cm. The Met, NYC On view in "Naked Before the Camera" until September 9th.

New York City.- The Metropolitan Museum of Art is currently showing "Naked before the Camera", through September 9th. Since the beginning of art and in every medium, depicting the human body has been among the artist's greatest challenges and supreme achievements, as can so easily be seen by Museum visitors walking through the galleries of Greek and Roman statuary, African and Oceanic art, Old Master paintings, or Indian sculpture. Tapping veins of mythology, carnal desire, hero worship, and aesthetic pleasure, depictions of the nude have also triggered impassioned discussions of sin and sexuality, cultural identity, and canons of beauty. Controversies are often aroused even more intensely when the artist's chosen medium is photography, with its accuracy and specificity—when a real person stood naked before the camera—rather than traditional media where more generalized and idealized forms prevail.
 In the medium's early days—particularly in France, where Victorian notions of propriety held less sway than in England and America, and where life drawing was a central part of artistic training—photographs proved to be a cheap and easy substitute for the live model. 

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