The Nude in Baroque and Later Art

When academic ideals faced challenges in the later nineteenth century, the delicate status of the nude was quickly exposed and subverted.
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Farnese Hercules, Hendrick Goltzius  Netherlandish, Engraving
Hendrick Goltzius
ca. 1592, dated 1617
Samson Captured by the Philistines, Guercino (Giovanni Francesco Barbieri)  Italian, Oil on canvas
Guercino (Giovanni Francesco Barbieri)
1619
Perseus with the Head of Medusa, Antonio Canova  Italian, Marble, Italian, Rome
Antonio Canova
Count Jan and Countess Valeria Tarnowski
1804–6
Diana and Actaeon (Diana Surprised in Her Bath), Camille Corot  French, Oil on canvas
Camille Corot
1836
Ugolino and His Sons, Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux  French, Saint-Béat marble, French, Paris
Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux
1865–67
Marcantonio Pasqualini (1614–1691) Crowned by Apollo, Andrea Sacchi  Italian, Oil on canvas
Andrea Sacchi
1641
Venus and Adonis, Peter Paul Rubens  Flemish, Oil on canvas
Peter Paul Rubens
probably mid-1630s
Woman with a Parrot, Gustave Courbet  French, Oil on canvas
Gustave Courbet
1866
Adam, Auguste Rodin  French, Bronze, French, Paris
Auguste Rodin
modeled 1880 or 1881, cast 1910
Seated Female Nude (recto); Standing Male Nude (verso), Pierre Paul Prud'hon  French, Black and white chalk, stumped, on blue paper
Pierre Paul Prud'hon
probably between 1810–20
Seated Male Nude, Louis Lagrenée  French, Red chalk
Louis Lagrenée
n.d.
The Birth of Venus, Alexandre Cabanel  French, Oil on canvas
Alexandre Cabanel
1875
Nude in Front of a Mantel, Balthus (Balthasar Klossowski)  French, Oil on canvas
Balthus (Balthasar Klossowski)
1955
Young Girl Bathing, Auguste Renoir  French, Oil on canvas
Auguste Renoir
1892
Woman Bathing in a Shallow Tub, Edgar Degas  French, Charcoal and pastel on light green wove paper, now discolored to warm gray, laid down on silk bolting
Edgar Degas
1885

Since the Renaissance, the nude has remained an essential focus of Western art. Whether embracing or refashioning classical ideals, artists from the seventeenth century to the present have privileged the nude form and made it an endlessly compelling means of creative expression.

In Baroque art, the continuing fascination with classical antiquity pressed artists to renew their approach to the nude and the antique tradition. Thus Hendrick Goltzius’ remarkable view of the Farnese Hercules from behind and below () alters the muscular texture of a revered ancient statue, while Andrea Sacchi’s portrait of Marcantonio Pasqualini (), a highly esteemed singer of his day, inflates the status of the sitter by including two nudes representing the mythic musicians Apollo and Marsyas. Other nudes help to heighten the drama of narrative works, such as Guercino’s painting of Samson captured (), in which the decision to represent the hero as the lone nude, muscular but powerless in the midst of armed adversaries, highlights his present weakness as well as his former strength. The female nude took on fresh meaning in the art of Rubens, who with evident delight painted women of generous figure and radiant flesh (). The Baroque taste for allegories based on classical metaphors also favored undraped figures, which were used to personify concepts such as the Graces and Truth.

In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, as esteem for classical culture ran high, so too did the prestige of the nude. The academies of the period directed young artists to develop their skills by drawing the naked form of ancient sculpture as well as live models, and many successful artists continued such exercises long after their student days (); (). Nudes are ubiquitous in the ambitious history paintings of the period as well as sculpture and decorative schemes. Proponents of the Neoclassical style made nudes closely based on ancient examples, like Canova’s Perseus (), which repeats the pose and body type of the widely admired Apollo Belvedere. Artists associated with the Romantic movement assumed a freer attitude to the nude and to antique subject matter more generally. Camille Corot, for instance, included mythological tales in some of his landscapes; an early example () represents the woodland spring where the goddess Diana among bathing nymphs prepares to punish Actaeon for catching sight of her naked. So as not to offend nineteenth-century morals, artists tended to depict naked figures within contexts removed from the everyday, such as mythology or the imagined Orient, and yet the careful constraints imposed on the nude somehow heighten its eroticism, as in Alexandre Cabanel’s Birth of Venus ().

When academic ideals faced challenges in the later nineteenth century, the delicate status of the nude was quickly exposed and subverted. Édouard Manet shocked the public of his time by painting nude women in contemporary situations in Le Déjeuner sur l’herbe and Olympia (1863 and 1865; both Musée d’Orsay, Paris), and Gustave Courbet earned bitter criticism for portraying in Woman with a Parrot () a naked prostitute without vestige of goddess or nymph. In sculpture, artists sought new proportions and narrative coherence for the male nude as well as the female. Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux pointed to the dramatic contrast between powerful physique and desperate situation in his group of nudes representing Ugolino with his sons (), and Auguste Rodin challenged classical canons of idealization in his expressively distorted Adam ().

Although the classical tradition lost its cultural supremacy in the twentieth century, the appeal of the nude remains strong in modern and contemporary art. The rejection of academic manners in pursuit of a new form of truth reduced the appeal of Venus but promoted the unadorned nudes of private life. The innocent bathers of Renoir‘s late career (), Degas’ artless-looking scenes of women washing and dressing (), and Balthus’ straightforward girl looking in the mirror () are formally unlike the idealized nudes of earlier art, yet in their undisguised humanity they are kin to the nudes of antiquity.


Contributors

Jean Sorabella
Independent Scholar

January 2008


Further Reading

Bonfante, Larissa. "Nudity as a Costume in Classical Art." American Journal of Archaeology 93 (1989), pp. 543–70.

Clark, Kenneth. The Nude: A Study in Ideal Form. New York: Pantheon, 1956.

Saunders, Gill. The Nude: A New Perspective. Cambridge, Mass.: Harper & Row, 1989.

Steinberg, Leo. The Sexuality of Christ in Renaissance Art and in Modern Oblivion. New York: Pantheon, 1983.


Citation

View Citations

Sorabella, Jean. “The Nude in Baroque and Later Art.” In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–. http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/nuba/hd_nuba.htm (January 2008)