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Reading into Picassos Les Demoiselles dAvignon

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Title: Reading into Picassos Les Demoiselles dAvignon


1
Reading into Picassos Les Demoiselles
dAvignon
  • By Catia Beja

2
(No Transcript)
3
A Revolutionary Cubist Work
  • Les Demoiselles dAvignon is regarded by many art
    historians and critics as a revolutionary work
    (Golding 156), the first cubist picture (Green
    1), and the painting that gave birth to the
    whole of modern art (Jones 1).
  • CUBISM (1907-1914)
  • One of the most influential art movements of the
    20th century.
  • Begun by Pablo Picasso (Spanish) and Georges
    Braque (French).
  • In Cubism, artists represent their subject from
    various angles at the same time. The subject is
    broken up, analyzed, and reassembled in an
    abstracted form using geometric shapes
    (http//www.artlex.com).
  • The Cubism of Picasso and Braque was to be
    essentially conceptualtheir paintings are not so
    much records of the sensory appearance of their
    subjects, as expressions in pictorial terms of
    their idea or knowledge of them (Golding 162).

4
My Thesis
  • According to Lakoff Johnson, we understand
    experience metaphorically when we use a gestalt
    from one domain of experience to structure
    experience in another domain (230).
  • Since cubist artwork uses geometric shapes to
    offer a conceptual image of its subject rather
    than a realistic representation of it, it offers
    us an essentially metaphorical aesthetic
    experience (Lakoff Johnson 235).

5
My Thesis Continued
  • In turn, we can understand other domains of
    experience in terms of such aesthetic
    experience, for like Lakoff and Turner say of
    poets, artists also use the same basic
    conceptual metaphors available to us all,
    although they may compose or elaborate or
    express them in new ways (Lakoff Turner 26).
  • Thus, while Picasso uses a new cubist style of
    artistic representation to create image mappings
    in Les Demoiselles dAvignon, his painting can
    ultimately be understood as an expression of
    anxiety over the physical and moral consequences
    of sexual sin, via the conventional metaphors his
    image mappings evoke.

6
Picassos Image Mappings
  • SOURCE DOMAIN TARGET DOMAIN
  • Sharp Geometrical Shapes Female Body Parts
  • African Masks Female Faces

7
Picassos Image Mappings
  • Our experience of sharp geometrical shapes
    (knives, sharp edged rocks or furniture) is that
    they can harm us physically. As a result, they
    are perceived as dangerous and threatening.
  • Picasso is said to have drawn inspiration from
    African masks (French Congo/Ivory Coast), which
    have traditionally been perceived in the West as
    primitive (Golding 158) or uncivilized art
    forms.

(http//www.eyeconart.net/history/cubism.htm)
8
The Conventional Metaphors They Evoke
  • Viewing nude women in seductive positions in
    terms of sharp geometrical shapes and African
    masks allows us to view female sexuality as
    dangerous, threatening, primitive and
    uncivilized.
  • Picassos image mappings are, therefore,
    instances of the conventional way we conceive of
    female and non-white sexuality given Western
    cultures extensions of
  • The Great Chain Metaphor
  • (Lakoff Turner 208)

9
The Extended Great Chain Metaphor
  • The Great Chain of Being is a cultural model
    that concerns kinds of beings and their
    properties and places them on a vertical scale
    with higher beings and properties above lower
    beings and properties (Lakoff Turner 166).
  • In the West each level of the chain was expanded
    to reflect the structure of the chain as a whole
    (Lakoff and Turner 209).
  • God
  • Humans
  • Animals
  • Plants
  • Inanimate objects

10
The Extended Great Chain Metaphor
  • Women and people from the third world are
    placed lower than men and people from the first
    world in Western cultures model of The Great
    Chain.
  • Thus, In Western Culture
  • men and white people are ordinarily characterized
    by higher properties aesthetic and moral
    sense, and rational capacity
  • women and racialized people are ordinarily
    characterized by lower properties physical
    characteristics, animal desires, and raw
    emotions
  • (Lakoff Turner 166-167)

11
The Extended Great Chain Metaphor
  • We find this in
  • THE BIBLE
  • God created man in his image (Genesis 127)
    God created woman from mans rib to be a fitting
    helper for man (Genesis 218-23)
  • Woman as the first to sin and tempt man to sin
    (Genesis 3)
  • wives, submit yourselves to your husbands as to
    the Lord. For a husband has authority over his
    wife just as Christ has authority over the
    church and Christ is himself the savior of the
    church, his body Men ought to love their wives
    just as they love their own bodies
  • (Ephesians 5 22-28)
  • WESTERN PHILOSOPHICAL THOUGHT
  • Feminist philosopher Genevieve Lloyd finds that
    in the work of Aristotle, Augustine, Descartes,
    Rousseau and Spinoza, reasonthe godlike, the
    spark of the divine in manis assigned to the
    male. The emotions, the imagination, the sensuous
    are assigned to women (Lloyd 117).

12
  • WESTERN LITERATURE
  • In Shakespeares Othello, the black Othello is
    described in terms of uncivilized/animal desires
  • an old black ram / Is tupping your white ewe
    (1.1.89-90)
  • youll have your daughter covered with a Barbary
    horse (1.1.111-112)
  • lascivious moor (1.1.122), erring barbarian
    (1.3.350)
  • In Daniel Defoes Robinson Crusoe, Friday is
    described as irrational and savage (156)
  • EVERYDAY STEREOTYPES
  • Stereotype of the hyper sexual black male (once
    you go black you never go back) and black female
    (women often blamed for master-slave relations
    during slavery)
  • Large array of derogatory terms used to label
    loose women
  • Women objectified in advertisements to tempt men
    to buy products

13
Other Conventional Metaphors at work in Les
Demoiselles dAvignon
  • EYES ARE CONTAINERS FOR THE EMOTIONS
    (Lakoff Johnson 50)
  • Womens eyes stare out at the viewer to indicate
    passion/desire ( a lower property on The Great
    Chain).
  • DEPRAVITY IS DOWN (Lakoff and Johnson 16)
  • Woman squatting further emphasizes the
    threatening immorality of female/non-white
    sexuality.

14
CONCLUSION
  • In the end, the common interpretation of this
    painting as an expression of anxiety over the
    consequences of sexual sin is possible because,
    even though Picasso uses a revolutionary style
    of artistic representation, he uses the
    mechanisms of everyday thought (Lakoff Turner
    67), such as The Great Chain Metaphor, Eyes
    are the Containers of the Emotions and
    Depravity is Down.

15
THE END
  • THANK YOU!

16
Works Cited and Consulted
  • Berlin, Adele Marc Zvi Brettler Eds. The Jewish
    Study Bible. New York Oxford University Press,
    2004.
  • Daniel, Defoe. The Life and Adventures of
    Robinson Crusoe. Literature on line. ltwww.biblioma
    nia.com/Fiction/defoe/robin/index.htmlgt
  • Golding, John. The Demoiselles dAvignon. The
    Burlington Magazine. Vol. 13, No. 26, 1992.
    115-120. JSTOR 2 Jan. 2008. lthttp//www.library.yo
    rku.cagt
  • Green, Christopher. Review Les demoiselles
    dAvignon. Paris, Musee Picasso. The Burlington
    Magazine. Vol. 130, No. 1022, 1998. 391-392.
    JSTOR 2 Jan. 2008. lthttp//www.library.yorku.cagt
  • Johnson, Mark George Lakoff. Metaphors we live
    by. Chicago The University of Chicago Press,
    1980.
  • Jones, Jonathon. The Rift, the Break that
    divides past and future Les Demoiselles
    dAvignon. lthttp//arts.guardian.co.uk/criticgt
  • Lakoff, George Mark Turner. More Than Cool
    Reason. Chicago The University of Chicago
    Press, 1989.
  • Lloyd, Genevieve. The Man of Reason. Women,
    Knowledge and Reality Explorations in Feminist
    Philosophy. Eds. Ann Garry Marilyn Pearsall.
    Unwin Hyman, 1989. 111-128

17
Works Cited and Consulted Continued
  • Picasso, Pablo. Les Demoiselles dAvignon. 1907.
    Oil on canvas, 8' x 7' 8" (243.9 x 233.7 cm). On
    Display at The Museum of Modern Art, New York.
    lthttp///www. moma.org/collection/conservation/dem
    oiselles.htmlgt
  • Shakespeare, William. Othello. New York Oxford
    University Press, 1989.
  • The Good News Bible. Toronto Canadian Bible
    Society, 1976.
  • lthttp//www.artlex.com/Artles/c/cubism.htmlgt
  • lthttp//geocities.com/picassogt
  • lthttp//images.google.cagt
  • lthttp//www.eyeconart.net/history/cubism.htmgt
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