| Issue 39
2004
Family, Sexuality, Gender, Art
Jo-Anne Berelowitz interviews Vivien Green-Fryd about her new book,
Art and the Crisis of Marriage
By JO-ANNE BERELOWITZ
[1] BERELOWITZ: (1) In this book you examine debates about marriage, family,
sexuality, and gender by focusing on the marriages of Edward and Jo Hopper
and Georgia O’Keeffe and Alfred Stieglitz. I was struck by a shift from your
previous focus on race and ethnicity in your book Art and Empire: The Politics
of Ethicity in the U.S. Capitol to the emphasis in this one on gender.
What drew you from the dramas of ethnicity on the national arena to the more
intimate dynamic that occurs between couples?
[2] FRYD: My switch in emphasis from race and ethnicity in the U.S. Capitol
in Art and Empire to gender in Art and the Crisis of Marriage
resulted from three major influences: my interest in the feminist movement
while an undergraduate and graduate student in the 1970s; my increasing interest
in and understanding of critical theory, especially feminist and gender studies;
and questions raised by my students and myself while teaching the art of Hopper
and O’Keeffe. I began studying art history as an undergraduate at Ohio State
University in 1970 when the feminist movement was beginning. At that time,
as Linda Nochlin and others have pointed out, women artists were marginalized
from the canon and scholars began to study "forgotten" women "masters." I
was aware of the burgeoning scholarship about women artists and feminist issues,
as well as feminist artists such as Judy Chicago and Eleanor Antin. I also
took one of the first courses in women’s studies, which contributed to my
interests in resurrecting and understanding women artists. Art and the
Crisis of Marriage in fact evolved from the first class I ever took on
American art: American art between the Two World Wars with Barbara S. Groseclose
in 1975. At that time, I wrote a rather naïve and uninformed paper about the
image of women during this period. Much later, in 1992, I audited a graduate
seminar on critical theory, which led to my teaching and studying in greater
detail feminist art, art history, and theory, as well as gender constructions.
At the same time, while giving lectures every spring semester on Hopper and
O’Keeffe, my students and I began to question the ways in which Jo Hopper’s
modeling for her husband allowed her to gain agency in her painted representations
and what this may inform us about their relationship. My interest in O’Keeffe
developed from the papers my students wrote about The Radiator Building
located at Fisk University; I never felt that they fully understood the layers
of meanings in it, so I began to examine this work in more detail. This led
me to consider other works by O’Keeffe, Stieglitz’s photographs of O’Keeffe,
and my realization that particular art works by Hopper and O’Keeffe intersect
in the ways in which their marriages were played out.
[3] BERELOWITZ: (3) There is always a risk in arguing for a transparency
between an artist’s work and life – the assumption that the work illuminates
the life and the life, the work. How have you negotiated this difficult terrain
and how do you think you have managed to avoid its pitfalls? And, along these
lines, how have you managed to negotiate the equally tricky pitfall of seeming
to cater to a voyeuristic interest in the personal lives of these renowned
artists?
[4] FRYD: I recognized from the outset that I needed to be careful about
addressing biography and art and the intersection of the two. I certainly
did not want to exploit the biographies of the artists in the way that the
film, "Pollock," did, nor did I want to contribute to the stereotypes exhibited
in that film of an artist’s wife as a neurotic shrew, which could have been
the case with Jo Hopper. Fortunately Griselda Pollock, an influence upon my
scholarship since Art and Empire, provided a quote that enabled me,
I hope, to address these issues in a more balanced manner: as she wrote in
"Agency and the Avant-Garde," "paintings, drawings, and letters . . . are
not reflections or expressions of a given and coherent subjectivity prior
to the work," but "rather their status becomes that of unforeseen and yet
complex texts generated from a subject position [of the author/artist]," in
this case Hopper and O’Keeffe. Elsewhere Pollock argues that a "feminist intervention
in the histories of art" involves the recognition that "sexual difference
is produced through an interconnecting series of social practices and
institutions of which families, education, art studies, galleries and
magazines are a part" (second emphasis mine). Mieke Bal and Norman Bryson
in "Semiotics and Art History" further provided ways for me to address art
and biography in a more nuanced fashion: "The ‘author’ is not an origin, but
one link in a chain," an "usher gathering in the various causal strands .
. . before the work." Art and the Crisis of Marriage thus focuses upon
the "causal strands" that involve gender, family, marriage, and sexuality,
showing how these two American painters’ histories and art merge with the
culture at large. I thus argue that the meanings of artworks are determined
both consciously and unconsciously by artists influenced by social and cultural
factors. I thus reclaim the author/artist, whether a man or woman (O’Keeffe,
Stieglitz, Jo and Edward Hopper), as a participant in a "series of causation"
that results in a work of art. The work of art, in turn, has amorphous boundaries
in which meanings circulate among other texts and between other sites of social
formation, participating in and negotiating among various ideologies, in this
case, those involving marriage, gender, sexuality, the body, and the gaze.
I hope that these theoretical models enabled me to avoid the voyeuristic interest
in the personal lives of the artists.
[5] BERELOWITZ: (5) At one point (48) you write that "Jo and Edward Hopper,
on the one hand, and O’Keeffe and Stieglitz, on the other, represent different
resolutions to the marital crisis that pervaded white middle-class American
culture and society." You seem to be positioning these couples as polar opposites.
Granted, on some levels, this does seem to be the case. Certainly one can
argue that O’Keeffe represents a willingness to transgress puritanical sexual
mores – not only in terms of the highly sexualized photographs which Stieglitz
took of her, in whose production she collaborated, and in the exhibition of
which she seemingly acquiesced, but also in her willingness to live openly
with him for several years in a relationship not sanctioned by marriage. Hopper,
on the other hand, seems to stand for the persistence of Victorian mores into
the 20th century. And yet one can also argue that artists almost
always operate outside the conventional mainstream – and that this renders
them less useful as paradigms for hot-button issues in their day. Do you see
the marriages of these two artist couples as paradigmatic of issues that faced
marriages during the first third of this century?
[6] FRYD: I did wonder what marriage
could have to do with art and artists given the widespread assumption that
artists exist outside the norm of society and bourgeois culture. Artists,
art historians, and critics promote this view, positioning art beyond the
traditional, middlebrow, conservative, and typical cultural patterns. Pablo
Picasso’s art has been viewed within the context of his many mistresses as
is evident in Steve Martin’s play, Picasso at the Lapin Agile, and
the movie, Surviving Picasso. Marsden Hartley’s homosexuality forms
the basis of many studies, while Renoir’s secret affair with a lower class
woman often inspires commentary. Artists, according to this account, exemplify
non-traditional and experimental lives that defy the norm; they challenge
tradition in art, society, and culture often exemplified by their sexual orientations
or affairs. They seem to exist outside the realm of the ordinary, which is
the case with O’Keeffe and Stieglitz. What is at stake, we might ask, in considering
artists within the context of marriage? The fear of ordinariness which seems
antithetical to what we consider to be the norm of an artist’s bohemian lifestyle?
Does this association threaten our expectations that artists belong to an
outside status in terms of culture, placing them instead within the context
of white, middle-class conventionality? Does this imply the lowering of the
artists’ status from the "high art" realm to the middlebrow, mainstream category
that they themselves so adamantly resisted? Even though artists have married
and divorced, their experiences within the confines of family life seem antithetical
to the production of art and the kind of mentality that produces it. As
I continued my research, I recognized that the older notions of marriage,
which entailed the imposition of patriarchal authority, the repression of
female sexuality, the control of male sexuality, and the occurrence of unplanned
pregnancy, and the newer ones, which were yet to be fully formulated but which
included affection, comradeship, and mutual sexual gratification, affected
the art and lives of both artists and their spouses. I also realized that
marriage and the family were considered institutions in crisis because of
issues that related to O’Keeffe and Hopper’s art and lives: overt discussions
of sexuality, increased industrialization and urbanization, and women entering
the workforce. I hope that my book resolves
some of these puzzling issues, showing that marriage indeed forms one frame
through which art can be viewed and further understood, especially with O’Keeffe
and Hopper.
[6] BERELOWITZ: One of the factors that makes the work of Hopper, O’Keeffe,
and Stieglitz so fascinating is the articulation of a growing awareness and
openness in the society at large with matters sexual. As I think about the
work of other modernists active in America during these years – artists like
Duchamp, Demuth, Hartley, Stettheimer, it seems that what they are all dealing
with in their art is a crisis in sexuality. Although you’ve chosen to focus
on the crisis of marriage, wasn’t sexuality in general a newly opened terrain
for exploration between 1910 and 1940?
[7] FRYD: The crisis of marriage and changing attitudes towards sexuality
indeed can be found in the art of other artists such as Duchamp, Demuth, Hartley,
and Stettheimer. I originally had considered including a section on the New
York Dada movement, focusing especially on the art of Marcel Duchamp and Francis
Picabia. I posited that their works that construct gender identities along
technological and organic lines could be examined within the context of American
novels such as Sherwood Anderson’s Poor White (1920) and John
Dos Passos’ Big Money (1936) and that Duchamp’s Large Glass,
which embodies the inability of a bride and groom to consummate their marriage,
could also be addressed within the context of the American white middle-class
marriage-in-crisis. I realized, however, that it would be difficult to sustain
the connections among the New York Dada movement, O’Keeffe, and Hopper, that
issues concerning Duchamp’s and Picabia’s nationality as Frenchmen living
in New York would complicate matters, especially in terms of cultural studies,
and that the resultant book would be too long. Wanda Corn in The Great
American Thing does a fantastic job of addressing the transatlantic nature
of art from 1915-1935 and issues related to sexuality (but not necessarily
marriage).
[8] BERELOWITZ: You touch on a number of fascinating themes that I would
like to ask you to expand on. One of them is the significance of the hotel
as a motif in the work of Hopper and O’Keeffe. In the case of Hopper, hotels
are often the subject of his work. In the case of O’Keeffe, the Shelton Hotel
was her and Stieglitz’s residence for many years. Could you comment further
on the role of the hotel in the work of these artists and, perhaps, on the
role of the hotel in the crisis of marriage?
[9] FRYD: I am fascinated that you ask this question because I had not thought
about the connection between Hopper and O’Keeffe in terms of the subject of
hotels! Yes, O’Keeffe and Stieglitz lived in the Shelton Hotel for many years,
but this was primarily a bachelor hotel (which itself raises questions that
I failed to explore in my book). When O’Keeffe and Stieglitz rendered this
building in their art works, they focused upon it more as a symbol of the
New York City skyscraper and its embodiment of modernity. The images themselves
do not address relationships or the institution of marriage. The Shelton Hotel
as a bachelor pad, however, does raise issues connected to this. What does
it mean, for example, that hotels existed during this period for single men
and single women, including residences for women that ranged from establishments
like the Salvation Army to more upscale "residence clubs" like the Barbizon
or Martha Washington? Were rules enforced about certain behaviors, such as
when women could visit? I know that Claire Tichi at the University of California,
Berkeley is writing a dissertation on the residential bachelor hotel during
the 1950s, so these questions may be answered by her and applied to the art
of O’Keeffe and Stieglitz. Paul Groth in Living Downtown: The History of
Residential Hotels in the United States does address the issue of gender
in such hotels, explaining that single women in the upper and middle classes
took advantage of hotel service which freed them from household work. Hopper
on the other hand represented people, often women, inside hotels that did
not function as a bachelor residence. And his images convey more the theme
of isolation of modern man rather than that of modernity, which takes on additional
significance, according to Tichi, because discussions of bachelorhood for
men and women always touch on individualism, isolation, and loneliness as
well as the problem of sex roles. The single woman is a particularly weighty
symbol of isolation in the modern scene because she is totally detached from
what at the time would be considered her natural role as wife and mother.
While single men were long tolerated and often elevated as symbols of freedom
and individualism, the single woman, and by extension the urban single residence,
represents special urban problems.
[10] BERELOWITZ: The other interesting theme that these very different couples
shared was the automobile. You note on several occasions that for both Jo
and O’Keeffe the automobile symbolized emancipation. Could you elaborate on
this and on the automobile’s role in the crisis of marriage?
[11] FRYD: I was surprised and delighted to learn that Americans during the
two world wars considered the automobile as one cause of the destabilization
of the modern white middle-class family because Hopper often painted images
with roads and cars. I was also surprised and delighted to learn that some
associated the car with unsupervised dating, which they believed led to pregnancy,
a threat to the innocence and purity of young women but also to the social
fabric of American families and ultimately American culture. I argue that
these issues are manifest in some paintings by Hopper, but that the automobile
takes on additional significance as a site of conflict between Hopper and
his wife. Just as the automobile was a site of bitter dispute, physical abuse,
and battles over control for the Hoppers, it also became a point of departure
in the debate over the proper place of women within modern society: in the
home or in the passenger seat. I also realized that Stieglitz’s fifteen photographs
of O’Keeffe beside her sedan embodied tensions in their marriage as well as
O’Keeffe’s declaration of independence from her dominating husband. It moreover
existed as a central unifying force in the later years of O’Keeffe and Stieglitz
during a period of marital discord. Their collaboration on these photographs
brought them closer in spite of his affair with Dorothy Norman and their disagreement
over her commission for the Radio City Music Hall mural.
[12] BERELOWITZ: You seem to be at least partly in agreement with art historians
like Anna Chave who view O’Keeffe as subjected to a process of sexualization
by Stieglitz, especially in his early series of erotic photographs
of her. Reading your book and thinking about the issues you engage
with prompts me to explore another – and alternative – hypothesis.
Might we not argue that O’Keeffe (who collaborated with Stieglitz
in the production of these images) was actively working through
these images to project herself as sexual, subscribing thereby to
the revolt against convention that was so much a part of modernism?
Could we not also argue that by posing and then acquiescing in the
exhibition of the photographs, O’Keeffe was working to disrupt the
relegation of women to the private (domestic) sphere; that what
she was doing via these images was, precisely, refusing the invisibility
to which women were consigned by modernism, which so focused on
the heroic avant-garde male artist; that what she was presenting
here was the avant-garde woman/woman-artist? While O’Keeffe was
the "model," she was also, clearly, the "model-who-is-also-an-artist"
– as the many images of her with her work attest. Can we perhaps
understand these images as constituting a statement by O’Keeffe
about the empowering force of her own sexuality? For what OK does
here – or collaborates in doing – is dislocate dominant ideas of
femininity and women’s proper role. I think it is fair to assume
that O’Keeffe would have been familiar with the photography of the
Photo-Secession movement, in which Stieglitz played a leading role.
In these photographs women were usually presented in the language
of Symbolism - as embodiments of a mysterious female principle,
but always according to a somewhat conventional notion of femininity:
passivity, domesticity, sexual innocence, purity. Could we not argue
that Stieglitz’s photographs of O’Keeffe were, at least in part,
a mobilization by her to shift the conception of women, to capture
and represent the changed situation of women in the modern world?
Might she not have intended these photographs to serve as a contrast
to the idiom of the Photo-Secession?
I pose these questions because it seems to me that these images which Chave
essentially places within the genre of the artist-with-his-subjugated-model
don’t quite fit there. There is, after all, a world of difference between
Stieglitz’s images of O’Keeffe and Degas’s of the poor working class women
whom he drew and painted. Here, particularly in the images which you have
included in the book, O’Keeffe manipulates her breasts, or opens her gown
to reveal a breast, or (dressed in a chemise) raises her arms (showing an
unshaved armpit) against one of her own drawings. You note (125) that critics
such as Mumford commented on the "absence of shame" in O’Keeffe’s work. What
I am suggesting is that we might read her posing for Stieglitz as manifesting
an "absence of shame" that is consistent with other radical positions she
took. And of course, as you note, these are always images of O’Keeffe – her
identity is always unquestionable. So – might these images constitute a subversion
of the patriarchal order rather than a perpetuation of it?
[13] FRYD: I intended to argue precisely what you point out"that O’Keeffe,
like Jo Hopper, both acted as the passive model for the active, patriarchal
male artist and as an active agent in her own subjectivity as a means to challenge
the patriarchal order as it existed in Stieglitz’s gallery and in the art
world. If this argument is not clearly stated, then I appreciate the opportunity
to do so within the context of your interview. I agree that Stieglitz’s photographs
of O’Keeffe countered the types of nudes represented in the soft-focus photographs
that he and others had produced in which the
female nude is an object of desire for the masculine gaze. These artists perpetuated
the traditional connection between woman and nature that prevailed at the
turn of the century, reassuringly associating femininity with dependence,
passivity, ornamentality, sexual innocence, and purity during a period of
transformation in gender roles and identities. I have elaborated on this issue
in an article that I have just submitted for publication in which I argue
that soft focus or pictorial photography with its diffuse, atmospheric haze,
tactile textures, and "Whistlerian cast" were gendered as feminine in the
United States and were condemned by many critics in this country as degenerate
and perverse. The pictorialist photographers themselves had been identified
as effeminate, deviant, and eccentric charlatans who threatened American culture
and morality. Edward Steichen, Paul Strand, and Stieglitz, among other men
who had worked in the soft focus idiom turned to sharp focus or Straight photography,
with its tight contours, precise details, deep shadows, and clearly defined
forms, by the first decade of the twentieth century partly to resist critical
condemnation and to remove the art photographer from an association with the
feminine. Sharp focus photography, manifest in Stieglitz’s Georgia O’Keeffe"A
Portrait, became the style of the "manly" man who abhorred darkroom manipulation,
a process also gendered as feminine and deceptive. By using this style in
his extensive portrait of his wife, Stieglitz asserted his own virility and
masculinity, which O’Keeffe resisted especially in The Radiator Building,
a topic that I explore in chapter 6. In this work, as in the twenty some paintings
that she painted of New York City skyscrapers, O’Keeffe appropriated techniques
perfected by her husband in his medium of photography to reject the public
perception of images of the skyscraper as a masculine art form. In so doing,
however, she worked within the precisionist idiom of clear contours, little
modulation in color, smooth, slick surfaces, solid shadows that emulated straight
photography. O’Keeffe thus worked within a masculine painting style of these
masculine subjects as a means to resist critical assessment of her art as
feminine.
[14] BERELOWITZ: I was very interested in your application of Joan Riviere’s
discussion of the "mask of femininity" to O’Keeffe. You make the point that
within the context of Riviere’s theories "we might see O’Keeffe in Stieglitz’s
photographs assuming ‘the mask of femininity’ to demonstrate her womanliness,
thereby countering what were perceived as her (and her paintings’) ‘masculine’
ambitions." Riviere is, admittedly, useful here for articulating an hypothesis
about O’Keeffe and "masquerade." What your discussion prompted me to wonder
about is the possible fruitfulness of applying Lacanian theory to the representation
of O’Keeffe in Stieglitz’s photographs. Lacan theorizes the inherent variability
of identities formed through concrete discursive interaction, arguing that
the identity that the "I" immediately experiences as its own derives from
external images of wholeness and autonomy. I would be curious to hear your
thoughts about Stieglitz’s images functioning as a kind of "mirror stage"
for O’Keeffe.
[15] FRYD: I employed Joan Riviere’s discussion of the "mask of femininity"
because she is a contemporary of O’Keeffe and Stieglitz. I thereby think that
she provides one way through which a peer considered how women masked their
"masculine" ambitions that is part of the zeitgeist, if you will, and
hence an appropriate concept to examine O’Keeffe and her art. If you are suggesting
that Lacan’s "mirror stage" in which a child recognizes himself or herself
as separate from his/her mother, then perhaps this can be applied to O’Keeffe
to suggest that she employed the photographs as a means to separate herself
from her "Father," i.e. Stieglitz, to create her own subjectivity. But this
would be a shift in Lacanian theory in terms of my understanding of it.
[16] BERELOWITZ: I’d like to turn to your discussion of Riviere’s theories
in relation to Jo Hopper. You write (150) that Jo "also appropriated a masquerade
of femininity for her husband’s paintings" and suggest that "Jo assumed a
mask not to reassure her husband of her non threatening position as an artist,
but to assert her own sexual desirability. . ." Your assumption seems to
be that Jo played an active role in determining the representations that were
made of her – that it was she who engineered her transformation from a conservative
and unremarkable-looking wife to the provocative and highly-sexed woman in
such images as Girlie Show. Was Jo an active agent in such representations,
or was she merely the scaffolding for Hopper’s construction of a more sexualized
woman?
[17] FRYD: I argue that Jo was an active agent in her representations of
herself as model for Hopper’s provocative and highly-sexualized paintings
of women. She delighted, for example, in the increased sexualization of her
figure in Office at Night. In preliminary drawings for this work for
which Jo modeled, the secretary underwent a process of increased voluptuousness
as her body became more curvaceous due to her tight fitting dress and her
more visible make up. Jo noted in her diary about this painting: "I’m to pose
for the same female [fishing in a filing cabinet] tonight in a tight skirt
short to show legs"Nice I have good legs and up and coming stockings." In
her record book about Hopper’s art, she emphasized this woman’s up-to-date
overt sexuality in terms of dress and make-up, writing that she wears "a blue
dress, white collar, flesh stockings, black pumps & black hair & plenty
of lipstick." Jo and her husband, in fact, worked together to create personas
for the women in his paintings. As Jo explained, all the women in Hopper’s
paintings have names that they invented. They called the woman in the theater
in Intermission, "Norah," while the secretary in Office at Night
was identified as "Shirley," and the couple in Sea Watchers show "Sheila
and Adam, Irish girl [and] Yankee clam digger." Jo delighted in assisting
her husband in constructing the fictional identities and likenesses of his
various painted women that project a specific type, a type that is always
sexualized and eroticized.
[18] BERELOWITZ: You make the interesting point that Hopper’s work addresses
sites of visibility for women that were hotly contested: strip shows and offices.
These would not have been sites that Jo frequented. What was it, then, that
led him to situate his wife in these contexts?
[19] FRYD: One could argue that Hopper’s sketches and descriptions
of the strip club and offices, sites that Jo never visited, would
have enabled Jo to visualize herself in these locations. I consider
it more significant, however, that in these paintings — in
particular his Girlie Show and Office at Night —
the power struggles between the Hoppers become visualized, becoming
one more battleground within their troubled marriage. Rather than
merely reflecting these conflicts, these works become active agents
in a dialectic between husband and wife, artist and model, beholder
and subject, male and female, and painter and manager. In these
paintings more than any others, Edward silences Jo, and she in turn
silences him.
[20] BERELOWITZ: You comment at the end of the book (202) that after the
deaths of their husbands, both women, by exerting control over the dissemination
of their husband’s estates, to some extent reversed the control that their
husbands had exerted over their bodies. Yet Stieglitz’s inscription of O’Keeffe
as a woman who "paints from her womb" and Hopper’s relegation of Jo to wife
and model still prevail. Could you address this?
[21] FRYD: Not everyone looking at Hopper’s paintings recognizes
that his wife modeled for his paintings. His painted fantasies,
then, enabled a greater distance between model and painting. I would
not agree that he "relegated" her to the roles of wife and model
since she willingly participated in these roles, empowering herself
as his model while simultaneously acting as his spokesman, secretary,
and manager. She continued her role of his manager by donating his
estate to the Whitney Museum, which positioned him as one of the
giants of American painting. O’Keeffe struggled throughout her life
to define her own reputation apart from her husband’s sexualization
of her art. She would not allow her good friend Anita Pollitzer
to publish her autobiography, complaining that facts were muddled
and wrong and that her idea of O’Keeffe as an artist was a mere
dream. She failed to approve of Laurie Lisle’s unauthorized biography
and instead wrote her own in 1976 in the midst of the feminist movement
when many artists and art historians insisted on her entry into
the canon as an artist who represented vaginal iconography. She
made it clear that only she could interpret her art with authority
and establish her own reputation free from Stieglitz’s and feminists’
insistence that her art embodied women’s feelings, emotions, and
body parts. She thus selected Juan Hamilton and Sarah Greenough
to compile her letters (under her guidance), contributed to Perry
Miller Adato’s famous documentary, and assisted Greenough in mounting
a major retrospective of Stieglitz’s photographs, significantly
eliminating those of Dorothy Norman, his mistress. O’Keeffe, in
other words, worked hard to re-construct her own reputation separate
from the sexualization of her and her art. Whether or not she succeeded
in this, I cannot say, but she clearly challenged the idea that
she painted from her womb, leading to debates about her intentions
and the meanings of the art works.
[22] BERELOWITZ: What do you see as your next project? Do you see yourself
continuing to work with gender issues?
[23] FRYD: I have already begun working on my next book project:
Rape and Incest: Imaging and Imagining Sexual Violence in American
Art. It considers art, gender, sexuality, religion, politics,
and race in an effort to increase awareness of and end the silence
about sexual violence and rape, a topic in the United States that
is a source and product of cultural anxiety, contradiction, and
censorship. The resulting book will be an analysis of particular
post-1970 artworks by feminist artists who overtly address the sexism
involved in sexual violence and rape against women and who thus
mark a radical turn from earlier, sanitized representations of the
subject primarily by male artists. These earlier images represent
sexual violence as natural, acceptable, and inevitable. The book
also addresses male rape, a topic first given prominence by a few
psychologists and some men’s groups in the 1980s, and one of increasing
concern given the current sex-abuse scandal in the Catholic Church.
I have completed two chapters The first examines the anti-rape movement
of the 1970s and Suzanne Lacy’s role as a performance artist in
that movement. She created what Lacy called New Genre Public Art
in which the art is framed as expanded public pedagogy, combining
activism, performance art, political statement, and mass media theory
to insert the subject of sexual violence against women in the public
consciousness and to advocate reforms. The second completed chapter
discusses At Home: A Kentucky Project with Judy Chicago and
Donald Woodman, a site installation created by students at Western
Kentucky University who renovated a house in 2002, revisiting the
subject of the home as a domestic space that Chicago along with
Miriam Shapiro had earlier explored in Womanhouse (1971).
Three spaces in this home address a number of taboo subjects concerning
sexual violence in the middle-class American home: Abuse Closet,
which addresses domestic violence; Nighmare Nursery, which
exposes incest; and Rape Garage, which condemns the role
of pornography in creating a culture that endorses sexual violence
against women and which addresses female-on-male rape, another taboo
subject. Connected to the book is an article that I am writing about
Harriet Hosmer’s Beatrice Cenci (1853-5), which examines
its incest narrative within the context of Victorian attitudes towards
gender and sexuality, arguing that Hosmer "ghosted" the subject.
In the term "ghosting" to discuss incest, I borrow from Terry Castle,
who asserts that same-sex female relationships have been "ghosted"--or
made to seem invisible by culture itself. I thus apply the term
to Hosmer’s Beatrice Cenci to show that the statue "ghosts"
another silenced past and taboo: incest. I thus argue that Beatrice
Cenci creates a "ghosted" incest narrative, a narrative that
did not fully and clearly enter American culture until the 1970s.
Hosmer selected a subject that addresses the ambiguity, denial,
and horror that many Americans felt about the subject of incest
during the Victorian era. This article will form a chapter in yet
a second book in which I examine earlier American images from the
nineteenth century to the 1950s that do not name the subjects of
rape or incest but instead represent them as natural, acceptable,
and inevitable. I argue that these earlier works participated in
the same cultural myths found in juridical, diplomatic, political,
and literary discourses that rationalize rape as an ingrained behavior.
WORKS CITED:
Anderson, Sherwood. Poor White. (New York:
B.W. Huebsch, 1920). Reprint, New York: New Directions, 1993.
Bal, Mieke, and Norman Bryson. "Semiotics and art
History." The Art Bulletin 73 (June 1991): 174-208.
Corn, Wanda. The Great American Thing: Modern
Art and National Identity, 1915-1935. (Berkeley and Los Angeles: University
of California Press, 1999).
Dos Passos, John. Big Money. (Amereon Ltd.
1940).
Green-Fryd, Vivien. Art and Empire: The Politics
of Ethnicity in the U.S. Capitol. (Yale University Press, 1992).
Groth, Paul. Living Downtown: The History of
Residential Hotels in the U.S. (University of California Press, 1994).
Pollock, Griselda. "Agency and the Avant-Garde:
Studies in Authorship and History by way of Van Gogh." In Avant-Gardes
and Partisans Reviewed, edited by Fred Orton and Griselda Pollock. (Manchester:
Manchester University Press. 1996).
Riviere, Joan. "Womanliness as Masquerade." In Psychoanalysis
and Female Sexuality, edited by Hendrik M. Ruitenbeek, 209-20. (New Haven,
Conn.: College and University Press, 1966). First published in International
Journal of Psychoanalysis 9, (1929): 303-13
Contributor’s Note.
JO-ANNE BERELOWITZ is an Associate Professor of
Art History at San Diego State University. She publishes on museums
and on art along the U.S.-Mexico border. Her most recent article,
“Border Art Since 1965” was published in Postborder
City: Cultural Spaces of Bajalta California, edited by Michael Dear
and Gustavo Leclerc, Routledge, 2003.
|
Copyright
©2003
Ann Kibbey.
Back to:






|