Sherrie Levine, After Courbet 1–18, 2010

Nov 9, 2011

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Sherrie Levine, After Courbet 1–18, 2010

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Johanna Burton: After Courbet from 2010 is made up of 18 postcards.

Narrator: They present a painting by Gustave Courbet from 1866, which he called Origin of the World. Johanna Burton.

Johanna Burton: In the image, of course, you see the genitals, stomach, and breasts of an anonymous woman, a framing of the nude body that truncates and pretty much just shows these particular elements.

Narrator: In a move utilized by other nineteenth- and twentieth-century modernists, Courbet played with the idea that artist’s creativity was a life-giving power rivaling female sexual reproduction. In this image he both presented the female body as an erotic object and as an explicit metaphor.

Johanna Burton: Of course, the notion of the origin, both in terms of authorship, but also in terms of biological imperatives for reproduction, are interesting when one thinks about Levine's own place as a woman artist in relationship to this image. She both sort of renders this idea of reproduction and originality moot, but also seems to multiply its implications.


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