Natalie Frisinger
Lia Halloran
Advanced Painting
Project 3-
Historical Reference
For my historical reference project, I attempted to
incorporate a historical influence in a continuation of my previous analysis of
a distinctly feminine spirituality and expression of transcendentalism.
Building off of the depiction of a seeming beginning of physical ‘ascension’,
this piece attempts to create an image that depicts a figure that has
‘ascended’.
Predominantly influenced by Paul Gauguin and the larger
Symbolist movement of the late 19th century, my piece addresses the
subjugation of women in the expression of desire. The symbolist movement was to
the development of transcendental expression in art, what impressionism was to
the larger development of modernist trends. Thus making it a difficult
challenge to penetrate the trends (regarding the expression of one’s
spirituality and ‘inner-self) as a woman. At the movement’s core, symbolism was
a movement that rejected prior trends in naturalism in favor of the reflection
of emotion and idea; thus strongly opposing the quasi-scientific manner of
expression developed through impressionism. The core of the Symbolist era was one,
which expressed the themes of love, fear, aguish and sexual desires, often
depicting women in vulnerable, oppressed positions. Paul Gauguin’s work is a
body of work, which aptly depicts this notion. In addition, his expression of
said themes was done in a way that made the women he was painting, objects of
expression as opposed to subjects.
In my attempt to express a strictly feminine perception on
spiritual expression, I have created pseudo-religious deity-like figures,
placed in positions of power that suggest a reclamation of femininity, lost in
the symbolist movement. In revitalizing this, I also attempted to negate the
objectification of women, giving my figures a lively, energetic form that
suggests that they are more than a simple still image. Once again utilizing
negative space, my piece makes use of oppositional forces in a poignant
fashion, in drawing the viewer while also dwarfing him/her. The extremity of
the figure’s pose is one which supports a certain aggression in addressing
these issues.