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Issue 41 2005
Mystically Perverse
Towards a Queer Semiology of Breton Male Bodies
By JOHN POTVIN
| Note: Click on each
image to see an enlargement of it. |
Paintings are not mere illusions about the world but determined
and produced allusions to it. Art history must acknowledge these
complexities and work on these real social processes, significations
and their interactions and relations. Art history which is also
a practice of representation must provide complex accounts (Orton
and Pollock, 318).
[1] Between the collapse of the Ancien Régime and its systems of
representation and consumption, and the establishment of the July
Monarchy, the French Academy, the nationally sponsored institution
of official painting, had shifted its emphasis to the female body
as a visual strategy to satiate the expanding erotic needs of the
emergent bourgeois hetero-patriarchal society. As a result of the
displacement of the privileged position of both historical and mythological
genres from their former glory at the apogee of the artistic
hierarchy, the male body ostensibly no longer 'figured' within what
had become a new visual economy. Recounted both through
canonical theoretical art texts of the period and feminist revisionist
histories, the ensuing homogeneous understanding of the rise in
visual prominence of the female body elides a significant and rather
revelatory component of nineteenth-century French painting
the discursive potency of the male body. With the emergence of
strategies invested in overturning modernism's epistemological strongholds,
the male body, until recently, has been placed outside the once
'alternative' canons to accommodate political and ideologically
driven histories. The significance and predominance of the female
body(/ies) in the visual culture of late nineteenth-century France
is not being challenged here. Undeniable, however, is how the female
body remains the essential(izing) component to the unremitting canonical
heteronormativity of modernism.
[2] Populated by some of the most acclaimed modern artists, the
collective of Pont-Aven School, which centered around the mythic
figure of Gauguin in the small Breton town of the same name, occupies
a privileged position in the discourse, and yet there remains a
telling lacuna in the extant scholarship. Within the homosociability
of the artistic practice of the Pont-Aven colony, the male body
illustrates a decisive psychosexual leakage of sorts, whose morphology
contains within itself a potential to reveal dominant, marginal
and even subversive narratives. By constructing a distinct semiotic
lexicon, space, bodies and time became internal to one another in
an unconscious and conscious attempt on the part of these artists
to situate Brittany as an "embodied utopia"(Grosz). Further to Fred
Orton and Griselda Pollock's incisive interrogation of the infective
nature of the 'vanguard' as discursive formation, I specifically
examine here the work of Paul Gauguin, Charles Filiger and Jan Verkade
as a means towards a mise-en-abîme of how representations of both
corporeal abjection and desire through somatic mysticism formed
part of a queer visual culture. David Halperin's notion of queer
is useful here: "As the very word implies, 'queer' does not name
some natural kind or refer to some determinate object; it acquires
its meaning from its oppositional relation to the norm. Queer is
by definition whatever is at odds with the normal, the legitimate,
the dominant. There is nothing in particular to which it necessarily
refers. It is an identity without an essence" (Halperin, 62). Queer,
therefore, refers to a sort of sexual alterity, a revision, alteration
and/or ambiguation of sexual identity and representational codes
identified as heteronormative.
[3] In his exhaustive analysis of the intersecting structures that
enabled the codification of masculinity following the collapse of
the Ancien Régime historian Robert Nye repositions the importance
of 'sex' over what has become a highly politicized use of the term
'gender'. Nye writes that, "Our ability to think of sex as a constructed
identity therefore provides us with a valuable analytical tool for
understanding sex as a historical artefact furnishing individuals
with particular kinds of self-awareness and modes of social self-representation."
This allows us to avoid seeing sex as "an adamantine and transhistorical
category of being"(Nye, 4). Moreover, Nye's privileging of the
discursive signifier of sex in many respects echoes or in the very
least reinforces Judith Butler's critical inquiry into whether 'sex'
itself possesses a history, and if so what investments in objective
"natural facts" are guaranteed and "discursively produced by various
scientific discourses in the service of other political and social
interests?" (Butler, 7) Within this framework, the potential for
difference between what the body 'is' and what the sexed body can
achieve, namely through its (re)presentation within the scopic and
visual regime(s), needs to be problematized.
[4] The depictions of the male body, namely that of the adolescent,
must be considered within the parameters established in the emergent
science of sexology, which heavily problematized the male body as
a site of potential deviation, whereas the female body and her "sexuality
was taken for granted." As a result of this a priori assumption,
"far more space was devoted to the sexual dysfunction of men"(Nye,
68). Pathological degeneration and disease comprised the two great
preoccupations of the late nineteenth-century collective psychosexual
psyche. The signifiers of degenerate masculinity (read: non-masculine
'other'), understood within the medico-scientific community as residing
deep within the physiological and psychiatric fabric of the male,
legibly inscribed themselves on the surface of the body. "Genital
morphology, secondary sexual characteristics, potency, and 'moral'
behaviour were believed to be in rough correspondence with one another
[...] Any of the functional or physical qualities of hermaphrodites
impotence, effeminacy, untypical genitalia or body shape were
evidence of demasculinization" (Nye, 66). The seeming differences
between surface manifestation and depth of condition in the medico-scientific
discursive practices were not separate realities. It is precisely
these surface inscriptions that enable the embodiment of pathology
as it provides the visual index of degeneracy. The health of the
male body was firmly equated with the health of the nation, particularly
the French bourgeois nation state. Nye argues rather convincingly
that
The anxiety of health and numbers of population, the ideology
of the family, and the 'crisis' in masculinity, played large roles
in where the boundary between 'normal' and 'abnormal' male sexuality
was actually drawn...[Moreover] bourgeois ideals of masculine honor
were similarly influential in shaping the nature as well as the
social response to the perversions, in this instance through the
projection of keenly felt masculine anxieties onto the bodies
and minds of men who engaged in unconventional sexual behaviour
(Nye, 100).
[5] Expanding Nye's investigation of bourgeois ideological investments
in male gender and sexuality, questions arise as a result of the
normalizing narrative of sexual difference and its visual culture:
How have art history's epistemological and vested interests permitted
a discursive space in which questions concerning the representation
of the male body and sexual identity are purposefully and systematically
elided, questions which threaten the very 'authenticity' of disciplinary
claim(s) and truth(s)? What are the issues underlying representations
of male bodies in and out of landscapes? What structures have been
established that continuously disavow desire(s), pleasure(s) and
embodiment and queer readings of visual culture?
[6] Amidst the nationalistic fervor of the French Republic (1870-1940)
and its investment in the virile, strong male body, Paul Gauguin's
disavowal of his French bourgeois family and hetero-normative lifestyle,
a disgrace on par with homosexuality evokes the counter-discursive
aesthetic deployed by the artist in his representations of the male
body. The work of Gauguin has been intensely invested in art historical
signification and subsequently has been heavily commented and scrutinized.
The extant scholarship on the 'godfather' of the nebulous Pont-Aven
school has attended almost exclusively to the artist's pioneering
vanguard style as well as his masculinist depictions of the female
body, while it adumbrates any importance that his earlier depictions
of male bodies may have played in his oeuvre. By far the least
expensive of options, Brittany served as the first and perhaps most
significant 'exotic' and 'primitive' location in which Gauguin,
having first settled there in 1886, could establish his reputation
as a vanguard artist and subversive radical. Feminist scholars
in particular have attempted to locate Gauguin's psychosexual makeup
strictly within his images of female and androgynous Tahitian bodies,
naturally and correctly positioning Gauguin in what was a rather
problematic and dynamic period in French colonial history. These
authors collectively elide the discursive function of bourgeois
constructs of sex as an agency toward power. In any discussion of
Gauguin (the man and artistic persona), as well as his artistic
production can we legitimately speak of 'sexual identity' or is
sexual difference more appropriate? Purposefully contrary to the
scientifically established and socio-politically motivated archetype,
Gauguin challenged and subverted his own masculinity, while simultaneously
attempting to locate a subjective position within a restrictive
social structure. The notion of body as agency is critical as the
artist also deployed the (re)presentations of abject male bodies
as axiomatic of affective oppositionality.
[7] Gauguin's deliberate recalcitrant status and alternative sexual
identity marked a subjectivity established long before the 'events'
in Tahiti and Martinique. Gauguin began to create an identity as
a 'savage' as early as his first sojourn in the Breton town of Pont-Aven
(see also Solomon-Godeau). With its ideal conditions (cheap, easy
access, thriving established folkloric traditions) Brittany was
the symbolic site for locating and situating the artist's own primitivism.
By the time of his first trip, Gauguin had already developed, theorized
and set in motion what had been conceived of an aesthetic program
of the primitive rooted in the discreet yet now inseparable traditions
of cloisonnisme (usually a decorative practice transformed here
into painting which divides colors into separately defined, segmented
areas), Japonisme (a love for all things Japanese) and French popular
imagery. What the region did offer, nonetheless, were motifs, distinctly
mystical and religious in origin. Art critic, apologist for the
Symbolist movement and Gauguin supporter Albert Aurier is worth
a brief mention as his influence and impact on Paris-centered artists
who would eventually find themselves in Pont-Aven can be clearly
identified.
[8] Aurier's conservative and anti-neo-impressionist critique vociferously
championed an aesthetic of anti-naturalism and anti-materialism,
the two theoretical staples underscoring the very nature of those
who considered themselves, even loosely, as symbolists. His disdain
for naturalism was rooted in his repugnance for contemporary bourgeois
society's love affair with objective science. According to the
critic, the slavish copying of nature was not the goal, but rather
it was in mysticism that critics and artists alike would find true
inspiration. In what was ostensibly a call-to-arms against the insidiousness
of science, Aurier theorized art as a powerful antidote. Aurier
wrote that,
Yes, without a doubt, it is a matter of mysticism, and it is
mysticism that is needed today, and it is mysticism alone that
can save our society from brutishness, sensualism and utilitarianism.
The most noble faculties of our soul are in the process of atrophying.
In a hundred years we will be brutes whose only ideal will be
the commodious appeasement of bodily functions. We will have
returned, through positive science, to a pure and simple bestiality.
We must react. We must recultivate in ourselves the superior
qualities of the soul. We must become mystics again. We must
learn to love again, the source of all understanding (Aurier,
201-2, translation mine).
As this passage suggests, locations like Brittany can be seen as
a place, or more aptly, a space in which the artists in Pont-Aven
could negotiate a world far removed from the industrial, capitalist,
restrictive, normative and corrupt life of bourgeois Paris as a
means towards fulfilling their aesthetic program. Brittany, as
construct, assumed a vanguard status (despite its conservatism,
traditionalism, Catholicism) as the quintessential oppositional
space for Gauguin and his compatriot's quest towards a politics
and aesthetics of alternative identity-formation.
[9] Gauguin's desire to unify with a primordial sex-less being,
noted in his autobiographical novel Noa Noa (1893-97),
was presaged in a letter of 1888 to Madeleine Bernard, in which
Gauguin exposes a desire to engender a freedom through Christian
asceticism. He writes,
If ... you want to be someone, to find happiness solely in your
independence and your conscience... you must regard yourself as
Androgyne, without sex. By that I mean that heart and soul, in
short all that is divine, must not be slave of matter, that is,
of the body ... crush all vanity, which is the hallmark of mediocrity,
and above all, the vanity of money (in Eisenman, 116).
The archetype of the androgyne (or more exactly the ambivalent
adolescent male) figured as a corporeal signifier and mystical conduit
to attain a state of transcendence a utopia. Gauguin's remarks
also elicit a counter-discourse, fashioned to circumvent the materialism
of bourgeois experience, which he eschewed in pursuit of his art
and ideal. Although Gauguin himself often fell victim to the politics
of the male/female dichotomy, his statement cited above allows for
a positive, or more poignantly, a utopian interpretation of the
androgyne (Jirat-Wasiutynski, 146).
[10] Access to bodies also factored into this ideal representation
of an androgynous Breton male body. As artists had difficulty procuring
mature male models for their nude and semi-nude images, Gauguin
had to content himself with gazing and glancing at the young boys
who regularly swam in the Aven River. Gauguin was fortunate to
witness a purported spontaneous act of true masculine virility when
two young boys began to wrestle, as depicted in Young
Boys Wrestling (1888), a reworking of a theme he studied in
1886 (Delouche,
130). Gauguin characterized the image when he wrote to Schuffenecker
as "[T]wo boys wrestling beside the river, thoroughly Japanese,
but seen through the eyes of a Peruvian savage"(Gauguin, 36). This
brief extract highlights two important insights into the construction
of identity and the manner in which Gauguin approached his art of
the period. The latter bears mention first as it relates to another,
more celebrated work by the artist, the Vision after the Sermon
(1888). Not only does the style of the picture allude to Gauguin's
distinct, nascent Breton aesthetic, but it is also obliquely reminiscent
of the work of the famed Japanese artist Katsushika Hokusai (1760-1849),
whose 1815 sketches of wrestlers were exhibited at the Paris exhibition
of 1867. The referencing of Japanese imagery allowed Gauguin to
access an entirely foreign and exotic stylistic language, one rooted
in a very different conceptualization and valorization of two-dimensional
space as well as richer, more vibrant coloration, equally antithetical
to Parisian academic dictates.
[11] In Young Boys Wrestling, the chance encounter of the
viewer who witnesses a moment of masculine play and exercise in
virile display, coupled with the upward tilt of the picture plane,
unabashedly refocuses the relationship of the viewer to the figured
objects in the image. Compositional simplification as well as a
general reduction of the palette furthers this meaningful technical
and conceptual spatialization. The two wrestling boys personify
at once both a highly prized and contested regional activity. This
Breton male sport played an important socio-cultural role and through
its performance guaranteed for its participants a distinctly provincial
brand of virile masculinity. Isolated and seemingly weak, the boy
off to the right does not participate within this socially prescribed
homosocial activity of masculine bonding; as such he serves as 'other',
removed, distanced, 'outside' the domain(s) of a masculine socio-cultural
political-economy. The heap of clothing in the foreground, closest
to the viewer, emerges as a redundant sartorial signifier for the
viewer's 'oblique access to the bodies' and emphasizes the flesh,
the nakedness of these two boys.
[12]The significance of play and sport cannot be undervalued within
the social and regional identity in which Gauguin navigated. In
the wake of the Third Republic's purported democratizing efforts
and nationalizing attempts to colonize these people, all provincial
sports such as wrestling, quickly became contested activities as
these performed vital roles "in the construction of Regional identities
in France" (Dine, 112). So intent was the Republic to suppress
any pro-monarchist and neo-Catholic fervor that activities identified
as regional, and hence contrary to the national best interest, were
systematically suppressed. "Ar gouren" (Breton wrestling) was
the most decidedly Celtic of sports whose origins in the region
date as far back as the arrival of the Celts in the Armorican peninsula
between the fourth- and seventh-centuries. The sport soon became
the signifier par excellence not only of Breton masculinity, but
Breton identity itself. As a consequence of the Republic's campaign
to promote 'modern recreations' such as cycling and football, wrestling
became one of the many identifiably Breton cultural activities ethnographers
attempted to 'record'. An integral part to 'pardons' (religious
ritual celebrations of forgiveness), which Gauguin himself depicted
in his much celebrated and discussed Vision after the Sermon
(1888), wrestling by 1903 was banned altogether (Dine, 117-8).
In Young Boys Wrestling Gauguin depicted a moment of Breton male intimacy and further reinforced a distance between the
Parisian viewer and his rural subject matter.
[13] Male intimacy at once takes on both an erotic yet sickly undertone
in the artist's depiction of the awkward and angular Nude Breton
Boy of 1889 .
The implication of a voyeuristic gaze, which avails itself of the
intimacy of this innocent, 'natural' adolescence, renders the body
of the boy emphatically and perversely erotic. The body appears
sickly due in large to its putrid coloration and seeming submissiveness
and isolation. Because the adolescent stood at the threshold of
potential deviant sexuality, corruption and contagion, "the child
[as] its own sexual category [...] standing in juxtaposition to adult
sexuality [...] it is a danger as well as an attraction" (Gilman,
273). The medico-scientific culture of sexology established that
pre-pubescent bodies were implicated, by association, to "various
forms of pathology" and as such became "even more oppressively a
sign of disease" and simultaneously of sexuality under the scrutinizing
lens of science (Gilman, 263). The perverse beauty of the Nude
Breton Boy further played into notions of the primitive that
circulated throughout Paris. Silhouetted by an assumed (only by
way of the title) primitive Breton landscape, Gauguin's figure is
one on which socio-political, racial and sexual tensions are inscribed.
The flattened picture plane and the boy's awkwardly contorted limbs
make the body more accessible to a distanced scrutinizing gaze.
The primitivism, exoticism, unhealthy complexion and thus, the abhorrent
eroticisation of this body through its objectification cohere within
the visual economy of the Parisian bourgeoisie. The putative bourgeois
gaze, removed from this otherness, was distanced only spatially
within the composition as well as morally in its precarious relationship
with Brittany and contagion. In Nude Breton Boy, however,
Gauguin challenges and re-organizes this relationship. The perversely
powerful and blatantly unsettling voyeurism of the 'other' provides
the quintessential oppositional relationship between the abject
as object and the subjective positionality of the 'I' performing
the viewing (Kristeva, 1).
[14] By migrating from the nascent suburbs to the countryside,
the Parisian bourgeoisie sought to capture a type of illusive primordial
essence personified by open skies and expansive green spaces. Terms
such as "health, wholesomeness, and security" were soon attached
to these idyllic lush, environs; (Greene, 37) the landscape could
no longer be viewed the same way. What surrounds this pubescent
figure is an ironic abundance of fertile land. The figure, as if
antithetical to this surrounding fecundity, lies on the ground,
reiterating the identical pose (bent torso and downward stretched
elongated left arm) of the dead Christ figure in the renowned The
Breton Calvary of the same year. In Nude Breton Boy,
the body is imbued with a similar pathos and mystical intensity
given its primitivized association with Brittany. While the elongated
and attenuated arm of the adolescent, much like the singular, isolated
male figure in the far right corner of Young Boys Wrestling
could simply refer to Gauguin's 'modernist' vanguard style, a corporeal
'sign' referring to a limp, dead effete body. The artist's symbolist
anti-naturalism should perhaps be changed to an 'un-natural-ism'.
[15] What then of the figure's masculinity, which is suddenly and
significantly called into question? How does the topos of the abject
male body produce an aesthetic record of the natural and Breton
environment as depicted in an image such as Nude Breton Boy?
The androgyne, sexless, as a perverse 'sane nuditas' type (blameless
nudity) within Gauguin's visual lexicon, was certainly not conceived
of as problematic, but rather as natural, at one with nature, a
pose which also referred to the body's victimization, his sacrifice
and more poignantly his mystical potentiality. Is Gauguin referring
to culture's (namely science and medicine) limits and imposition
of nature's abundantly varied bodies, a nexus clearly threatened
by the adolescent's blurred contours? Whether or not we can claim
Gauguin's figure as a hermaphrodite, the figure underscores the
increased interest and public debate. By the 1880s the subject reached
a dizzying climax with numerous articles published all over the
country and generated an anxiety in regards to the public display
of the male body and representation of masculine sexuality.
[16] Nude Breton Boy stands as emblematic of the difficulties
of analyzing Gauguin's depictions of the adolescent male figure.
However, it is precisely because it is not a mature virile male
that is the object of depiction, but rather an adolescent with the
potential for contagion and perversion that renders the body threatening.
The significance of the androgynous and the sexually perverse body
lies in its ability to usurp power through and from the contemporary
normative signifier and signified of sex; it subverts and unsettles
the multitudinous boundaries established by bourgeois heteropatriarchal
discourse. Julia Kristeva's prescient theoretical definition of
the abject is useful here as it designates that which is rejected
from the body from the 'self' through a conscious and unconscious
process of distancing from all that has the potential to elicit
contagion, disease and impurity. This 'othering' alienates and
expels, while also being able to contain and circumscribe. The
otherness of the abject allows and assists in the process of consolidating
control over identities through its power to adjudicate normative,
and perverse sex and sexuality. The androgyne, like the hermaphrodite,
possesses a dangerous power to blur and cross boundaries as both
passive/active, penetrating/penetrated. Kristeva insists that the
abject can never really be entirely obliterated because,
while releasing a hold, it does not radically cut off the subject
from what threatens it on the contrary, abjection acknowledges
it to be in perpetual danger. But also because abjection itself
is a composite of judgment and affect, of condemnation and yearning,
of signs and drives. Abjection preserves what existed in the
archaism of pre-objectal relationship, in the immemorial violence
with which a body becomes separated from another body in order
to be (Kristeva, 9-10).
The image of the pubescent Breton male body with its elided penis
and phallus disavows the potentiality of purging the abject from
the body. As a consequence, the body itself passes through the process
of abjection; after all an infant's sexuality was percieved as polymorphously
perverse.
[17] The representation of the 'other', or more appropriately,
the abject is both threatening and repugnant and becomes a necessary
and contingent typology in the classification and normalization
of healthy sex and indexical masculinity. The surface of the normalized
body as well as the social body is required to be impermeable, a
surface, which disallows the penetration into its depths foreign,
alien or impure substances, while expunging from within, those substances
deemed vile, grotesque, abject. Masculinity, as codified and regularized
by French medical discourse and assigned a corporeal outline and
contour, requires the passing of semen from the male body in reproductive
coitus as a biological sign of male-ness. Thus, the absence of
the phallus at once denies the adolescent boy's currency in the
economy of biological and hence social reproduction of bourgeois
society. The knowledge and social currency ascribed to surface
and depth of the adolescent body possesses both a hope and a threat,
whose future has as yet not been determined.
[18] Gauguin's letter to Schuffenecker in which the artist briefly
discusses Brittany reveals a deep-seated need or desire to construct
himself as the savage. Within Gauguin's visual 'lexicon of difference'
the savage occupied a position of gender and sexual ambiguity and
was closest to animals in their inherent dissolution of sexual difference.
Gauguin was complicit with normative discourse by attempting to
create for himself a perverse subjectivity as a means to circumvent,
subvert and transcend the normalizing gaze. His attempts to locate
resistance in and on the body is entirely rooted in the aestheticized
morphology of that body, a body that he consciously and unconsciously
positioned as 'other' and whose boundary ambiguously lay between
the sexual and the aesthetic. The artist's deployment of inscriptive
surfaces towards descriptive depth extends this theoretical transubstantiation
into a discussion of desire, not in terms of lack, but rather in
terms of desire as productive and generative—a way to achieve primordial
harmony. Abigail Solomon-Godeau has noted that during his lifetime
Gauguin had gained his reputation as a man who had fled and abandoned
his bourgeois existence and all that it entailed in order to fulfill
yet another predominantly western white male "quest for an elusive
object whose very condition of desirability resides in some form
of distance and difference, whether temporal or geographical" (Solomon-Godeau,
314). However, Gauguin cannot be entirely singled out for his all-consuming
utopian quest for spiritual release and wholeness through 'otherness'.
Two members of the Pont-Aven brotherhood, Charles Filiger and Jan
Verkade, whose painting styles differed radically from Gauguin's,
also sought to attain an analogous state of grace for similar and
yet entirely different reasons.
[19] The malaise felt by many in the decades leading up to the
fin-de-siècle provided the emotional, psychical and socio-cultural
groundwork for the re-emergence of mysticism, through which the
specificity of one's own time and locality were subsumed in an apparent
communal, trans-historical union with God. It was the figure of
Christ that ultimately fulfilled the ideal of redemption, love and
desire dissolving the barriers of sin and evil, social conflict
and constructed divisions. The impact of the return to religiosity
by French vanguard painters is evinced in the work of Alsatian born
Charles Filiger, whose depictions of primarily male saints, martyrs,
young peasant boys and more significantly the dying/dead figure
of Christ were vital to the manifestation of homoerotic, mystical
desire. I would contend that it was not by chance that Filiger left
his native Alsace-Lorraine to pursue his artistic studies and career
in Brittany (Gibson, 170). Apart from his obvious relationship
with vanguard artists such as Gauguin, both Alsace-Lorraine and
Brittany were considered the two most deeply and fervently Catholic
regions in the country. It is also worth noting that Alsace-Lorraine
become German in 1870, which may have also precipitated the artist's
migration.
[20] How and what sort of space was enabled or facilitated between
Catholicism and homoerotic desire within the conservative precinct
of Brittany at the fin de siècle? Couched in a visual rhetoric
of mysticism, whose theological and visual precedents date as far
back as the Middle Ages, the image of the beautiful, yet dead Christ
(Fig. 3) is the means by which to claim at once a position contrary
to the dominant positivism of science and at the same time a visualization
of personal desire through the abject body. These realities cannot
be understood as mutually exclusive or antithetical to one another.
Informed and formed by intersecting discourses, the contemporary
conceptualizations of hysteria, homosexuality and mysticism were
theorized and reduced to identical terms. One need only turn to
the work of critic and cultural commentator Max Nordau who, in his
polemical text Degeneration, equated mysticism with the hysterical
the "principal characteristic of degeneration" (Nordau, 45).
Accordingly, it was the brain and its failure that was the essential
core of the degenerate. Nordau wrote that, "Untended and unrestrained
by attention, the brain activity of the degenerate and hysterical
is capricious, and without aim or purpose" (Nordau, 56). In his
autobiography, Yesterdays of an Artist-Monk, Jan Verkade
described his once close friend and colleague Filiger in parallel
terms when he wrote the following:
His was a very complex nature. He was a native of Alsace-Lorraine,
and one of those unfortunate men who sometimes, through inherited
weakness, cannot resist doing that which, being done, grieves
and disgusts them unspeakably. More and more discourages and
embittered by their weakness, they finally take revenge upon themselves
and society, commit the most frightful excesses, and try to drag
others also with them down to ruin, with ever-increasing torment
to themselves. They are men who suffer terribly, but to no purpose,
for their self-love and pride remain unbroken (Verkade, 110).
Verkade's harsh moralizing tone for someone whose problems he shared
but purportedly overcame is couched in the prevalent medico-scientific
discourse and underscores the common assumption that men like Filiger
suffered from a congenital condition that could lead to the depravity
of others.
[21] The quest for an elusive utopia through symbolism and mysticism
was not without its critics. Steeped in medico-moral rhetoric,
Nordau's criticism emerged as perhaps the most strident attack against
the symbolists' spiritualizing program. For Nordau the symbolist
movement, imbued with neo-Catholic mysticism and contrary to the
positivist program of the natural sciences, was deemed degenerate:
The Symbolists are a remarkable example of that group-forming
tendency which we have learnt to know as a peculiarity of 'degenerates.'
They had in common all the signs of degeneracy and imbecility:
overweening vanity and self-conceit, strong emotionalism, confused
disconnected thoughts, garrulity (the 'logorrhea' of mental therapeutics),
and complete incapacity for serious sustained work (Nordau, 101).
Once again, Verkade echoes Nordau's condemnatory diatribes, specifically
relating them to Filiger:
[His] views indeed went, perhaps unconsciously to him, so far
as to venerate art as a kind of divinity, of whom one thinks day
and night, for whom one, occasionally at least, works oneself
to death and suffers hunger, sleeplessness and self-torment, but
a divinity who, in return for this devotion, gives one carte blanche
to indulge in every sort of dissipation, even in positive debaucheries,
and in such vices as were the appearance of virtue, as when one
condemns the suppression of the passions [...] (Verkade, 153).
[22] Filiger's personal mystical aesthetic was greatly influenced
by the overpowering character of Sar Joséphin Peladan whose initial
Salon de la Rose + Croix of 1892 was one of many Parisian venues
to exhibit Filiger's work. Peladan, whom Nordau considered to be
the most diabolical amongst this group of degenerates, first burst
onto the Parisian artistic scene with his initial mystico-erotic
novel Le Vice Suprême (1884). His most significant contribution
was the influence he exerted over those artists who exhibited with
him in the first Rosicrucian Salon exhibition. The dogmatic and
strict requirements for selection to the Salon reveal the distinct
trajectory of the works exhibited. Among Peladan's rules was the
steadfast rejection of certain genres and subject matter, namely
history, patriotic and military themes, portraiture, genre scenes
of contemporary life, all landscapes and 'merely picturesque Orientals."
Whereas among those subjects welcomed was "the nude made sublime"(reprinted
in Pincus-Witten, Appendix II).
[23] The use of Brittany as an ideal, primitive landscape inevitably
entailed a mapping of a corporeal and temporal 'other' formed via
a matrix of experiences predicated on unconscious and collective
desires for utopia. These representations of landscapes form what
I would posit as a 'cartography of becoming' in which bodies and
objects were situated in specific relationships to ideals of temporality
and spatiality. In Filiger's Christ with Breton Youth (1895),
the stock figure of the Breton male stands beside that of the Crucified
Christ in a simplified generic Breton landscape, both figures occupying
an unsettling and precarious proximity to the viewer.
In this picture Filiger positions the Breton male as a pious devotee,
Christ-like in his faith affording the contemporary Breton viewer
entry into this sacred historical moment. The Breton, in his rustic
simplicity, stands as personification of region and a sign of the
signifying timeless and potentially universal state of Christian
grace. For artists like Filiger, as well as for the Catholic Revivalists,
the country peasant embodied a romanticized ideal of "conservativism,
piety, and respect for a hierarchal social order based on the pillars
of traditional society of pre-capitalist epochs, the Church and
the land"(Orton and Pollock, 328). In essence, the body of the peasant
of Brittany was both temporally removed and spatially distant. Variously
achieved through horizontal and diagonal distinct gradations, the
highly regulated separations of space and color allows for the viewer
to navigate the image eventually leading to the distant ship on
the horizon a steadfast symbol of the coastal region.
[24] Although the male body figures prominently in Filiger's depictions
of Brittany, his focus on the male body reveals more about his own
relationship to desire than the dominant fiction ascribed to the
region, the reality of contemporary religious practice or the specificity
of the Breton landscape. In contrast to his devout young
man who stands near the crucified Christ, male participation in
the Catholic Church had decreased significantly by the latter half
of the nineteenth century. The conceptualization of Brittany as
feminine was in part a result of the province's stereotype. To counter-balance
bourgeois masculinist Parisian urban life it also served to reinforce
the region's perceived folkloric and 'irrational' mysticism, a decidedly
female characteristic: it was primarily women who populated churches
at the time of ritual celebrations. The "feminization of Catholicism"
influenced developments in France in the latter half of the nineteenth
century and paved the way for the rise of the ultramontane, with
its "emphasis on affectivity, sentimentalism, and a rather saccharine
taste in iconography"(Gibson, 182). This marked gendered experience
of Catholicism caused regional religious and government authorities
to safeguard the sanctity of the Breton way of life, its traditions,
its religion and more exactly its autonomy by targeting Breton women
in their campaigns (McDonald, 244). Filiger's utilization of the
male body as embodiment of Breton spirituality belies the reality
of the experiences of those living in the region as it inscribed
an identifiably personal signification of desire.
[25] At the center of Filiger's oeuvre is the male body, youthful,
beautiful, spiritual, desiring and desirable. The figure of Christ,
such as the one in his Christ Entombed (c.1890s), holds a
very special place amidst the artist's work .
Christ's body functions as the conduit of legitimizing a union with
the divine. Through representation and ritual the body of Christ,
within the Catholic symbolic order and more exactly the universalized
experience of it, lies at the nexus of many negotiations. First,
the viewer's (centered, masculine-identified, male and Catholic)
unidirectional apprehension of the viewed (Breton, peasant and primitive)
reinforces the socio-political hegemony between center and periphery.
Second, the medico-scientific and dominant Parisian-centered nationalism
vied equally with vanguard artistic practices to inscribe signification
on the corporeal landscape of Brittany. Third, religious desire
and erotic pleasures commingle in the figure of the divine male
body. These highly complex matrices at play in the production of
meaning encoded mysticism as at once universal and individualistic
(Beckwith, 9).
[26] In Christ Entombed Filiger depicts the Christ alone,
semi-nude; his halo does not adhere to conventional style, but rather
is informed by Breton folk craft. In addition, the landscape visible
through the window stylistically references the geo-social signification
of Brittany as an intrinsically and deeply religious space. The
stylized sensual simplification reiterates and reinforces the link
between the body of Christ and the landscape. Brittany was understood
to be the last, remaining bastion of Catholic zeal and fervor in
France and was characterized not only by its mysticism, but also
by its apparent 'obsession with death'. Within the collective Breton
experience, unlike that of the rational modernity of Paris, there
were no psychical and socio-cultural boundaries between the realm
of the living and the dead, as the latter played a significant part
in the mundane existence of the region's people (Gibson, 176-7).
After all, Christian death guaranteed eternal life in Christ's promised
land. While the body of Christ (crucified or dead) may have offered
an expressive role in the at times pessimistic visual lexicon of
Filiger, it was integral to Breton tradition and worship. The interpenetrating
relationship between the erotic and the mystical, as it refers to
Filiger's work is best understood in terms of the complexity of
Brittany's identity, created by truth claims and perpetuated through
fiction.
[27] Poignant is how Filiger merges a folkloric and purposefully
archaicized rendering with a past pan-European tradition. Here
the figure of Christ becomes a type of 'Christus pudicus'. The
prototypical depiction represents the Christ post-mortem, with lifeless
hands cupping his genitals referencing his loss of vitality and
his humanity, alone to be gazed upon in singular contemplation.
The motif alludes to Christ's humanity and was often an integral
component in the depiction of the deposition in Medieval and Renaissance
visual culture (Steinberg). The visual allusion to Christ's vitalism
and (male) human-form by way of his elongated arms and the slight
fabric covering his groin area also supports an erotic investment
in the body and person of Christ. Situated in a contemporary Breton
milieu, Christ is made flesh, and through Filiger's idiosyncratic
style this divine figure, like the male bodies believed to populate
the Breton landscape, is humble, simple and decidedly sensuous.
This fluid relationship between eroticism and symbolism was once
again a charge advanced by Nordau:
Hence it comes that in most cases mysticism distinctly takes
on a decidedly erotic colouring, and the mystic, for he interprets
his inchoate liminal presentations, always tends to ascribe to
them an erotic import. The mixture of super-sensuousness and
sensuality, of religious and amorous rapture, which characterizes
mystic thought, has been noticed even by those observers who do
not understand in what it is brought about (Nordau, 61).
[28] Scopophilia is not merely an 'erotics of looking,' but is
contingent on the object/recipient of that gaze symbolically located
at the figure's genitals whether through concealment or display.
It is strictly within the symbolic order that genitalia function
as a crucial source of knowledge towards the psychosexual development
and identification of 'self' and desire. There is, in essence, what
I would posit as an 'erotics of visual foreplay' at work here, predicated
on the concealment of the body through the civilizing forces of
morality, social proscription, religiosity and excitation. Concealment
acts at once as a moral imperative, whilst highlighting the body's
erotic currency in the visual economy of desire. The curvilinear
and attenuated, decidedly youthful beauty of the semi-nude saint
in Filiger's Saint aux Pleureuses (c.1890s) obliquely references
the perceived feminine nature of religious devotion, but also more
emphatically emphasizes the erotic nature of much of his Christian
iconography.
Turning his back on the two weeping women in the background who
form a part of the landscape, the reclined and semi-nude male saint
sensuously returns the gaze of both the artist and the putative
male viewer. The gaze is, therefore, a mystico-erotic one as the
semi-nude body functions as an embodied threshold, between this
world and the next, illicit desire and licit contemplation. Unlike
Gauguin's sickly adolescent body, grounded by/to the landscape that
surrounds it, Filiger's attenuated, curvilinear saintly male bodies
seemingly bring the celestial paradise closer to home. In these
terms, the Christianizing zeal of Filiger's aesthetic program is
invariably attached to the perverse, to 'otherness'. In the context
of contemporary popular culture a young male involved in pederasty
was characterized by a submissiveness and effeminacy. The pederast's
genital morphology was "placed near the hermaphrodite" where the
male and female sex characteristics commingle to create a decidedly
ambiguous and ambivalent corporeality (Nye, 108). Significantly,
the morphology of the passive male partner in same-sex sexual exchanges
was routinely characterized by way of curvilinear contours identical
to that of a woman.
[29] The highly decorative drapery visually parallels the body
of the saint and intersects it at the groin area allowing for the
semblance of chastity and creates a psychosexual search for knowledge
inevitably the body is essentialized as an object of heightened
desire. The penis, the knowing and knowable object, as well as the
socially constructed and culturally determined phallus, is thus
conveniently concealed and is fundamentally a homoerotic object
of desire. This concealment coupled with the decidedly ephebic body,
as non-masculine signifier, not unlike Gauguin's defilement of the
Nude Breton Boy ,
abrogates a bourgeois notion of sex as well as normative masculinity
in these works. At the heart of perverse identities and bodies was
not a "lack of cleanliness or health that causes abjection but what
disturbs identity, systems, order. What does not respect borders,
positions, rules. The in-between, the ambiguous, the composite"
(Kristeva, 4). Filiger's pictures are themselves objects of and
for devotion. Catholic contemplation provides a surreptitious venue,
an avenue for a desiring gaze, which is at once mystical and erotic.
[30] In terms of a mystico-eroticism, the second coming of Christ
is the return of the lover, the attainment of the Christian ideal.
The resurrection at the time of the second coming is the decisive
moment in which the re-unification of the body and soul is achieved.
In his diptych oddly titled The Last Judgment (c.1890s),
Filiger depicts his utopia not as a place, but rather in the form
of a desirable nude adolescent body, here positioned directly in
the center of the host of saints.
Within Filiger's conceptualization, judgment is replaced by a heavenly
ideal of (male) beauty, and aesthetic celestial perfection. The
figure of the adolescent male succors a duplicitous, narcissistic
role that is, "to love a boy and be a boy"(Vicinus, 91). In contradistinction
to Filiger's emancipatory 'Second Coming', the clergy used the Last
Judgment as part of the Church's fear induced notion of sexuality
a discourse interwoven with death and damnation. The stock oval-shaped
faced saintly figures of the Last Judgment (devoid of depictions
of hell and damnation), are garbed in what are identifiably Byzantine
vestments. Filiger's use of Byzantine motifs and iconographic tradition
in its own distinct way signaled an entirely foreign, exotic, sumptuous,
sensuous and transgressive visual vocabulary.
[31] The neo-Catholicism of the late nineteenth century provided
a legitimate venue for mystical desire, a lengthy aesthetic tradition,
an anti-bourgeois sentimentality and a visual language for a new
artistic vanguard. Within myriad negotiations between the reality
and experiences of Paris and the rural social and moral codes in
Brittany, we must ask ourselves whether "homosexual," as a historically
contingent discursive formation existed in the regions, and specifically
in Brittany? While no hard evidence has yet surfaced, noteworthy
is that, between 1860 and 1870 32.3 per cent of the pederasts arrested
in the French capital were born in Paris, whilst 58.5 per cent came
from the provinces, and the remainder from other countries (Sibalis,
12-3). In contradistinction to this apparent migratory pattern,
Filiger fled Paris in 1890 due to an "affaire de moeurs," (Pincus-Witten,
125) and apparently to rid himself of the debauchery of urban, metropolitan
life. Beyond the confines of male codes, artists in general and
specifically Filiger attempted to create a heterotopia (a space
within a space) in which to live and sustain cultural production
(See Foucault). Traveling counter to the dominant currents of contemporary
geo-cultural dynamics, Filiger wrote in 1904 that he journeyed "without
ever finding one's native land"(Musée Departmental du Prieuré, 16),
longing for a type of religious, spiritual or in keeping with contemporary
discourse, mystical union with the (male) divine.
[32] In the context of the Third Republic, many Catholic revivalist
artists and writers navigated a rather precarious space and by default,
through religious affiliation, assumed a self-imposed avant-gardist
and counter-hegemonic subjectivity. Two such figures were the writer
Joris-Karl Huysmans and the artist Jan Verkade. Huysmans' famed
novel A Rebours, with which Verkade was very familiar, featured
as its protagonist the young des Esseintes, "the perfect type of
exhausted and degenerate aristocrat, a last anaemic shot from a
once-vigorous warrior stock"(Nye, 119). Huysmans' archetype referenced
the overwhelming fin-de-siècle topos of the ephebic submissive male
who does not possess the virile, warrior qualities so coveted
by the elite bourgeoisie. Huysmans' life in many ways resembled
that of the Dutch artist and much like des Esseintes paralleled
the Christian figure of St. Sebastian. Verkade formed part of the
decadent symbolist movement that was the Nabis in Paris, while gradually
moving to an aesthetic deeply rooted in Catholic pathos, precipitated
by his conversion on 26 August 1892, to Catholicism (the same year
as Huysmans). Among the many suspicions arising from Verkade's conversion
was the idea that his newfound religiosity was to satisfy his "aesthetic
needs, and that the beauty of the Catholic ritual had fascinated"
him (Verkade, 168). Both Huysmans and Verkade, through highly aestheticized
programs, found a level of comfort and solace from the materialism
of French society in the precinct of a Benedictine monastery a
move which, in itself, was counter-normative given the re-emergence
in the 1890s of an extreme anti-clericalism and anti-monasticism
in the Republic.
[33] Trained in the Dutch capital, Verkade was familiar with the
most significant artistic developments occurring in other European
artistic capitals, visiting among others the important exhibition
of Les XX in Brussels in which Filiger exhibited some works. Influenced
by the recently published A Rebours, Verkade moved
to Paris in 1890 where he came into contact with the leading figures
of the Nabis and those associated with the Pont-Aven School. It
was with Mogens Ballin, a fellow artist whom he had met at Gauguin's
farewell party in 1891, that Verkade traveled to Pont-Aven, returning
to Paris one last time in 1892. On his return to Brittany later
that year, to the remote town of Le Pouldu where Filiger had moved,
Verkade converted to Catholicism.
[34] Verkade's representations of St. Sebastian, mark a site on
which a desire for the 'other' is re-produced.
The hagiography of St. Sebastian is one of youthful conversion and
martyrdom. The mythology surrounding the saint that has attached
itself to the morphology of the represented body of Sebastian, possesses
a symbolic potency denoting erotic submission and abandon. It was
in large part due to the Aesthetic movement, which drew from the
deep theoretic well of 'l'art pour l'art', that artists were
influenced by the work of Pater, Wilde, Proust and Addington Symonds,
all of whom embraced the Roman martyr as patron saint of embodied
homoeroticism. For the celibate monk or Christian recluse the saint
was conjured as icon, object of devotion, symbolic conduit through
which desire is passed and projected onto another world. As Michael
Hatt has argued, "the male nude has to be validated by a description
that refutes any eroticism; for a male viewer to find pleasure in
a male body, he has to find a response that effaces desire. The
homoerotic functions by concealing itself"(Hatt, 12). Celibacy is
thus maintained and eroticism neatly subsumed in a rhetoric of spiritual
devotion through aestheticization.
[35] In the images of martyrs and Christ, and in particular in
the representations of St. Sebastian the viewer is made to become
complicit. Through what is a morbid complicity, the viewer is at
once the subject of the gaze and voyeur; one designates power, while
the other illicit desire and pleasure. The arrows piercing the
young, supple skin of St. Sebastian are difficult to locate visually,
almost as if they are secondary to the narrative unfolding; this
ambiguity reinforces the erotic nature of the body. Sebastian,
no longer really a saint serving a purely iconographical purpose,
is transformed into a visual embodiment of the calamite, the passive
partner in the economy of homoeroticism. Both the curvilinear contour
of the body as well as the stance is not unlike those of previous
reclining figures meant for contemplation that slip rather easily
under the gaze of illicit desire.
[36] In a discussion of Ganymede, equally relevant to Catholic
hagiography, Martha Vicinus asserts that, "masquerade, duplicity,
and concealment seem to go hand in hand with violence," a topos
which served decadent artists and writers well on either side of
the channel. The re-fashioning of a Christian classical past was
in keeping with the Pont Aven brotherhood's contempt for the purported
insidious and rampant materialism of the day (Vicinus, 93). The
works of Filiger and Verkade, informed by Rosicrucian symbolism,
provide a prototype for depicting the beauty of youth, the unattainable
object of desire the body itself maintained as an ideal and
kept at a distance through the death of their subjects. The ephebic
St. Sebastian elides the figure's history as a soldier. The facile
penetration of the flesh by the arrows illustrates a level of submissiveness
of this archetypal Christian saint. Notwithstanding the decidedly
eroticized absence of the saint's penis, the body is penetrated
by the arrow(s) as phallus, re-enacting the signifier of pederasty.
He stands as victim, submissive, penetrated.
[37] The figure of St. Sebastian (as a counter-discursive corporeal
type) is a saintly exemplar of contagion in an era of intense fetishization
of sexual and social hygiene. The method of Sebastian's martyrdom,
allowing for the commingling of arrow/wound/blood, masculinized
waste/femininized disease, followed by the throwing of his body
into a sewer, the quintessential 'carrier' of disease, reinforce
the abjection of the saint's body. The phallic penetration is achieved
at the level of the symbolic, which designates wounds as an entry
or opening and as such blur the rigid contours of an ideal, virile
male body within the contemporary bourgeois imaginary. In what
was a representational system utilizing a synthetic, decadent visual
vocabulary, images such as these of the saint standing alone without
any sign of his executioners is stripped of all references to a
hagiographic narrative. As purely decorative devices, arrows assist
in rendering the body more femininized than its predecessors. In
the context of the final decade of the nineteenth century, the bound
St. Sebastian stood at the threshold of this life and the next,
erotica and Catholic piety, pure and impure, absence and presence,
titillation and contemplation, masculine and feminine, inner and
outer.
[38] As the frontispiece for an article by J. Jorgensen devoted
to the much-celebrated Breton mystic Ernest Hello, Verkade's final
depiction of the saint was
published in the Danish journal Taarnet (1894). Unlike
three earlier depictions he produced of the saint, which offered
a stylized and highly decorative flora as a symbol of growth and
posthumous rebirth, here the visual iconography is far more sinister.
Not only are the pubescent genitalia made visible, but the figure
is now bound, eyes downcast, as if forsaking or unaware of his divine
predestination. Striking is the unusual inclusion of the diabolic
serpent and forbidden fruit, indexical of evil and temptation and
reminiscent of the fall of Adam (feminine in origin). The nude and
semi-nude male, as an embodied utopia and a renewal of a primordial
Adam, fulfills a transcendental ideal detached from and devoid of
spatial specificity. The body of the adolescent ephebic male possesses
a "locality, a form of ambience, and a perceptual surround" (Hirsch,
23). While Brittany may have provided an idyllic Edenic topography,
it is the central representation of the nude and semi-nude adolescent
male whose various depictions challenged the taken-as-given normalized
understanding of sex categories that provided an ideal universal
corporeal manifestation of desire, homo-erotic or otherwise.
[39] The representation of abject identity inscribed on the adolescent
male body in Brittany functions as an embodied utopia; that is the
conceptual and mystical locus for desire-production. This identity
enlivened through geography and space marks a quest for utopia.
It is this concept of utopia as it related to the artist colonies
in Brittany that stands at the confluence of bodies, space and time.
As Elizabeth Grosz has recently noted, 'Ou', meaning not,
and 'topos', meaning place, constitute the term utopia in its etymological
origins. In its totality a utopia simply and complexly signifies
'no place'. However, Grosz also notes the ironic interplay at work
within the Greek term. 'Ou' is paralleled with 'Eu', which means
happy, good and fortune. The pun established by this parallel is
one which positions a good place as no place, no place as a good
place (Grosz, 135). Thus, we must evaluate utopias logically, naturally
and even purposefully as non-existent, pure phantasmagorical projections
of desire—otherwordly. Because utopias cannot be 'built' in the
conventional sense of the term, what is created is a spatialization
of a purported personal and communal memory through the projection
of fantasy; an architecture, which controls not only the environment
(read space), but time and bodies. It is the projection of the
future based on the past, which is the ideal: a 'history of the
past' is unavoidably a 'history of the present'. Separately, collectively
and in varying ways Gauguin, Filiger and Verkade projected onto
Brittany a vision for the future, a reworked version of a primordial
past and/or a reinvestment of Christian grace, a state of being
mired by their contestations of the contemporary state of affairs
of the bourgeois nation state. Brittany is converted and transformed
to a universal sacred space, both primordial and atavistic. The
landscape of Brittany as counter-site mirrors, inverts, exposes,
constructs (even), references, designates, validates and queers
the site of normativity. Brittany is both real and unreal, but,
within both of these, it is first and foremost constructed.
[40] The artists who arrived from Paris and abroad found the structures,
landscape and people to be ideally rustic, delightfully simple and
charmingly disarming. Tourism within the local Breton economy activated
the socio-cultural avenue by which city (urban) and province (rural)
colluded producing representations that (in)directly referenced
this often precarious relationship. Brittany, as a definable and
yet nebulous venue, mirrored the imbrication of socio-political
and cultural identities and exposed how the male body was a site
of multiple tensions, consolidations and layers within contemporary
France. Abjection has as an attendant effect the blurring between
the object and the subject, the real and the unreal, here and there:
a simultaneous unification and dissolution of sorts. The appropriation
of the region by these artists provided a, or rather the,
decisive embodied manifestation of modern ambiguity and ambivalence
and formed an aesthetic genealogy rooted in a queer form of resistance,
desire and pleasure. The very stability of enforced boundaries
is thus threatened both in the 'self' and within the socio-cultural
structure. The vanguard corporeal landscape of Brittany re-constructed,
re-imagined and re-imaged, served as the cultural milieu through
and upon which historically specific power relations, tensions and
signification were, at least on the surface, rendered idyllic, pastoral,
and first and foremost ... mystical.
Acknowledgements
I am grateful to Milijana Mladjan, Ann Kibbey and the anonymous
readers of Genders for reading my text and for making insightful
suggestions. In particular, I would also like to thank Vojtech Jirat-Waiustynski
for our discussions and for his support of this project. Every effort
has been made to trace the copyright holders for the illustrations
accompanying this article.
Works Cited
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Beckwith, Sarah. Christ's Body: Identity, Culture and Society
in Late Medieval Writings. London and New York: Routledge,1983.
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of Identity. New York: Routledge, 1990.
Delouche, Denise. Les Peintres et le Paysan Breton. Baille,
France: Ursa-Le Chasse-Marée, 1988.
Dine, Philip. "Sporting Assimilation and Cultural Confusion in
Brittany." Sporting in the Making of Celtic Culture. Ed.
Grant Jarvie. London and New York: Leicester University Press, 1999.
112-30.
Eisenman, Stephen F. Gauguin's Skirt. London: Thames and
Hudson, 1997.
Foucault, Michel. "Of Other Spaces." Visual Culture Reader.
Ed. Nicholas Mirzoeff. London and New York: Routledge, 1998. 238-44.
Gauguin, Paul. The Search for Paradise: Letters from Brittany
and the South Seas. New York: Collins and Brown, 1992.
Gibson, Ralph. A Social History of French Catholicism, 1789-1914.
New York: Routledge, 1989.
Gilman, Sander. Sexuality: An Illustrated History. New York:
Wiley, 1989.
Greene, Nicholas. "Looking at the Landscape: Class Formation and
the Visual." Anthropology of Landscape: Perspectives on Place
and Space. Eds. Eric Hirsch and Michael O'Hanlon. New York:
Clarendon Press, 1995. 31-42.
Grosz, Elizabeth. Architecture from the Outside: Essays in Virtual
and Real Space. Cambridge, Mass. and London: MIT Press, 2001.
Halperin, David. Saint Foucault: Towards A Gay Hagiography.
Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 1995.
Hatt, Michael. "The Male Body in Another Frame." Journal of
Philosophy and the Visual Arts (1993): 8-21.
Hirsch, Eric. "Introduction: Landscape: Between Place and Space."
Anthropology of Landscape: Perspectives on Place and Space.
Eds. Eric Hirsch and Michael O'Hanlon. New York: Clarendon Press,
1995. 1-30
Jirat-Wasiutynski, Vojtech. Paul Gauguin in the Context of Symbolism.
New York: GarlandPub, 1978.
Kristeva, Julia. The Powers of Horror: An Essay on Abjection.
New York: Columbia University Press, 1982.
McDonald, Maryon. "We are not French": Language, Culture and
Identity in Brittany. London: Routledge, 1989.
Museé Départmental du Prieuré. Filiger: Dessins-Gouaches-Acquerlles.
St. Germain: 1981.
Nye, Robert A. Masculinity and Male Codes of Honor in Modern
France. New York: Oxford University Press, 1993.
Nordau, Max. Degeneration. 2nd edition. London:
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Orton, Fred and Griselda Pollock. "Les Données Bretonnantes: La
Prairie." Art History vol.3, no.3 (September 1980): 314-44.
Pincus-Witten, Robert. Occult Symbolism in France: Joséphin
Peladan and the Salons de la Rose + Croix. New York: GarlandPub,
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Sibalis, Michael D. "Paris." Queer Sites: Gay Urban Histories
since 1600. Ed. David Higgs. London and New York: Routledge,
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Solomon-Godeau, Abigail. "Going Native: Paul Gauguin and the Invention
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Steinberg, Leo. The Sexuality of Christ in Renaissance Art and
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Verkade, Dom Willibord. Yesterdays of an Artist-Monk. New
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Contributor's Note
JOHN POTVIN is Lecturer at the Centre for Visual and Media
Studies, University of Toronto, and is completing a dissertation,
"Looking Beyond Male Bonding: The New Chivalry
and the Boundaries of Same-Sex Corporeal Intimacy in Turn-of-the-Century
Britain," at Queens University, Kingston, Canada. He
is a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council Fellow and
recently received the Bader Fellowship in Art History (2002-03).
His most recent and forthcoming publications include, "Warriors,
Slave Traders, and Religious Fanatics: Reporting the
Spectacle of Islamic Male Bodies in the Illustrated London News,
1890-1900," appeared in Inge Boer (ed.). After Orientalism.
(Rodopi, 2003) and "Vapour and Steam: The Victorian Bath, Homosocial
Health, and Male Bodies on Display" is forthcoming in the Journal
of Design History.
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Copyright
©2005
Ann Kibbey.
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