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Programme 13: Beautiful People?
The Art Works
Title: Standing by the Rags
Artist: Lucian Freud
Medium: Oil on canvas
Date: 1988–9
A naked woman is standing slumped next to a pile of rags with
one of her arms resting on it. She has not been flattered; the
flesh is pale and lumpy, and indeed the artist, Lucian Freud (born
1922), has often been accused of treating his models like lumps of
meat. Freud would have used the rags to wipe paint from his
paintbrush, and this enhances the feeling that the model is almost
part of his studio equipment rather than a living person. But
however it might appear, he is very much interested in people as
individuals and what they actually look like, rather than trying to
flatter them and show an idealised image that he does not see. He
is a master at distinguishing different textures, and here excels
in the description of the rags, the flesh, the hair and the wooden
floor.
Title: Condition of Woman I
Artist: Arman
Medium: Mixed media, metal, wood and glass
Date: 1960
In this work Arman (born 1928) has created a portrait of his
wife not by showing us an image of her, but by showing us what she
has used. It is often said of us that we are what we eat, but the
things we do and the things we use also define our characters
clearly. All of the objects in the glass case have been used by his
wife – they were the contents of a wastepaper bin in her
bathroom. They could help to give us an image of what she is like,
even if it is not what she looks like. As this is rubbish (quite
literally – they are after all things she has thrown away)
this may not seem like a flattering portrait.
Title: Self-Portrait (Frieze No2, Four Panels)
Artist: John Coplans
Medium: Photograph on paper
Date: 1994
John Coplans (born 1920) uses photographs of himself to confront
what has been termed ‘body fascism’ – the idea
that in order to be happy we have to have the perfect body: young,
slim, smooth and toned. The majority of the population are just not
like that. He creates almost sculptural forms by contorting his
body into weird shapes. By photographing these postures he allows
us to look at the body from this unusual point of view, thinking in
terms of the shapes it makes rather than in terms of its function.
In the four panels of the frieze his poses deliberately echo
classical sculpture in order to create an ironic comment on its
idealised forms.
© 2000 Channel Four Television
Corporation
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