'' (1856), by
Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres,
Musée d'Orsay, Paris.
19th century Between the end of the 18th century and the beginning of the 19th century, the foundations of
contemporary society were laid, marked in the political field by the end of absolutism and the establishment of democratic governments—an impulse initiated with the
French Revolution; and, in the economic field, by the
Industrial Revolution and the strengthening of
capitalism, which will have a response in
Marxism and the
class struggle. In the field of art, an evolutionary dynamic of styles began to unfold chronologically with increasing speed, culminating in the twentieth century with an atomization of styles and currents that coexist and oppose, influence and confront each other.
Modern art arises in opposition to
academic art, placing the artist at the forefront of humanity's cultural evolution. The nineteenth-century nude follows the guidelines for the representation of the nude set by previous styles, though reinterpreted in different ways depending on whether a greater realism or an idealism rooted in classical tradition is sought. In the 19th century, the female nude abounded more than ever—especially in the second half of the century—more than in any other period in the history of art. However, the female role changes to become a mere object of sexual desire, in a process of dehumanization of the female figure, subjected to the dictates of a predominantly
macho society. In these works, there is a strong dose of
voyeurism; the woman is surprised while sleeping or grooming, in intimate scenes, but open to the viewer, who can recreate in the contemplation of forbidden images, of stolen moments. It is not a premeditated nudity; it is not a model posing, but the recreation of scenes of everyday life, with an apparent naturalness, yet forced by the artist. In the words of Carlos Reyero, "we find ourselves with women not naked, but undressed".
Romanticism '' (1790), by
Johann Heinrich Füssli,
Tate Gallery, London. A movement of profound renewal in all
artistic genres, the Romantics paid special attention to the field of spirituality, imagination, fantasy, sentiment, dreamy evocation, love of nature, together with a darker element of irrationality, attraction to
occultism, madness, and dreams. Popular culture, the exotic, the return to underrated artistic forms of the past—especially medieval ones—were especially valued. The Romantics envisioned an art that arose spontaneously from the individual, emphasizing the figure of the "genius"—art as the expression of the artist's emotions. The romantic nude is more expressive, more importance is given to color than to the line of the figure—unlike in neoclassicism—with a more dramatic sense, in themes that vary from the exotic and the taste for
orientalism to the most purely romantic themes: dramas, tragedies, heroic and passionate acts, exacerbated feelings, songs to freedom, to the pure expression of the interior of the human being.
William Blake was a visionary artist, whose dreamlike output is matched only by the fantastic unreality of
surrealism. Artist and writer, he illustrated his own literary works, or classics such as
The Divine Comedy (1825–1827) or the
Book of Job (1823–1826), with a personal style that reveals his inner world, full of dreams and emotions, with evanescent figures that seem to float in a space not subject to physical laws, generally in nocturnal environments, with cold and liquid lights, with a profusion of
arabesques. Influenced by Michelangelo and Mannerism, his figures have the dynamic torsion of the Michelangelesque
Last Judgment, although sometimes they are based on classical canons, as in
The Dance of Albion (Glad Day) (1794–1796), whose posture is taken from a version of the
Vitruvian Man, that of
Vincenzo Scamozzi in ''Idea dell'architettura universale
. Other works of his are: Nebuchadnezzar
(1795), Newton
(1795), Europe Supported by Africa and America
(1796), Satan in his original glory
(1805), The Lover's Whirlwind.
Francesca da Rimini and Paolo Malatesta'' (1824–1827), etc. '' (1862), by
Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres,
Louvre Museum, Paris. Between neoclassicism and romanticism is the work of
Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres, whose figures are halfway between sensuality and concern for pure form, which he treated meticulously, almost obstinately. His female figures have a certain Gothic air (small breasts, prominent stomachs) and were subject to a small number of postural designs that the artist felt comfortable with and repeated throughout his career. One of these, for example, was that of a nude woman seated on her back, which he introduced in
The Valpinçon Bather (1808) and which is discernible, within a group scene, in
The Turkish Bath. Another is the standing figure of the
Venus Anadyomene (1848), with a Botticellian air, of which he made several versions, and which he later transformed into a young woman with a pitcher of water,
The Spring (1856). Other works are more personal, such as
Grande Odalisque (1814), which recalls the mannerism of the
School of Fontainebleau and initiated his fondness for orientalism and exotic figures and environments. In
The Golden Age (1840–1848), he painted a large mural composed entirely of nudes, a work which, however, remained unfinished.
The Turkish Bath (1862) is perhaps his most famous work, and the culmination of his lifelong study of the nude. He returned to Orientalism, with a scene set in a
harem, accentuating the curved and rounded forms of the models, who shamelessly show their prominent breasts and wide hips, with a sensuality unusual until then in Western art. Other works of his are:
The Envoys of Agamemnon (1801),
Oedipus and the Sphinx (1808–1825),
Jupiter and Thetis (1811),
The Dream of Ossian (1813),
Roger Freeing Angelica (1819),
Odalisque with Slave (1842), etc. His disciples were:
Antoine-Jean Gros, chronicler of the Napoleonic deeds, made in
Bonaparte visiting the plague victims of Jaffa (1804) some nudes of intense dramatism, showing with crudeness the effects of the disease; and
Théodore Chassériau, who tried to synthesize the line of Ingres with the colorfulness of Delacroix, although his work tends to academicism (
Venus Anadyomene, 1838;
Susanna and the Elders, 1839;
Diana surprised by Actaeon, 1840;
Andromeda chained to the rock by the Nereids, 1840;
The Toilette of Esther, 1841;
Sleeping Nymph, 1850;
The Tepidarium, 1853).
Théodore Géricault was influenced by Michelangelo, as can be seen in the central figure of
The Raft of the Medusa (1819), which is one of the athletes of the Sistine Chapel, while other figures are reminiscent of those in Raphael's
Transfiguration. For his studies of anatomy, Géricault frequently visited
morgues and even prisons where prisoners were executed. In his
Leda and the Swan (1822), he transposed the dynamic energy of classical athletes onto a female figure, and her posture recalls that of the
Ilyssus on the
Parthenon, exchanging athletic effort for sexual excitement. '' (1827), by
Eugène Delacroix,
Musée du Louvre, Paris.
Eugène Delacroix was one of the first artists to deviate from the official academic art, replacing the outlined contour drawing with a less precise and fluid line, dynamic and suggestive, and a chromatism of vibrant adjacent tones and an effectiveness based on a certain
divisionism of color. During his training, he made copies of the great masters exhibited at the Louvre, with a predilection for Rubens and Venetian artists. Already in his first works,
Dante and Virgil in Hell (1822),
The Massacre at Chios (1824) and
The Death of Sardanapalus (1827), he demonstrated his originality and inventive richness, along with a passionate and colorful style that would characterize him. In 1832, he made a trip to Morocco and Algeria, where he incorporated orientalist influences into his style, with a taste for the exotic and the richness of detail. In his numerous nude works the subject matter is very diverse, from the religious (
The Expulsion of Adam and Eve from Paradise, Christ at the column, Christ on the Cross, Christ resurrected, St. Sebastian Tended to by St. Irene and her Maid), the mythological (
Triumph of Apollo, Labors of Hercules, Achilles and the centaur, Anacreon and Love, Andromeda and Perseus, Ariadne and Theseus, Medea and her children), the historical and literary (
The Divine Comedy, Marphise, Jerusalem Liberated), to the genre scenes or the nude by itself (
Odalisque lying, Turkish Women Bathing, The Woman in Silk Stockings, Woman Combing Her Hair, Bathing Woman on Her Back, Sleeping Nymph, Woman Stroking a Parrot). For Delacroix, any pretext was good to show physical beauty, as in the allegory of
Liberty Leading the People (1830), where the heroine who leads the popular revolution appears with bare breasts. A great draughtsman, he also bequeathed numerous sketches and preliminary studies of nude figures. Followers of Delacroix were:
Narcisse-Virgile Díaz de la Peña, great landscape painter and author of nudes such as
The Fairy Pool, Venus and Adonis, Nymphs in the Forest and
Love Reproved and Disarmed;
Gustave Doré, who excelled mainly as a draftsman and illustrator of literary works, where he shows great imagination and formal mastery, as in the
Bible, The Divine Comedy, Orlando furioso, some
Shakespearean Dramas,
Goethe's Faust, etc.
Félix Trutat, whose ''Nude Girl on a Panther's Skin'' (1844) is reminiscent of
Goya's La maja desnuda and precedes
Manet's Olympia. In sculpture,
François Rude evolved from neoclassicism to romanticism, in works of great expressive force where the nude played a leading role, with colossal figures that translate in their anatomy the dynamism of the action, as can be seen in
Mercury fastening his heel wings (1827),
Young Neapolitan Fisherman playing with a turtle (1833),
Victorious Love (1855),
Hebe and the Eagle (1855), and his main work,
La Marseillaise (1833), at the
Arc de Triomphe in Paris.
Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux denoted the same stylistic process, from classical serenity to romantic feeling, with figures of intense dynamism, such as his
Flora of the
Tuileries Palace (1865),
Ugolino and His Sons (1863) or the group of
The Dance (1869), at the
Paris Opera House. In Italy, romanticism arrived with the Napoleonic conquest, with artists such as
Pelagio Palagi (
The betrothal of Cupid and Psyche, 1808) or
Francesco Hayez (
Penitent Magdalene, 1825). In sculpture,
Lorenzo Bartolini evolved from classicism to a naturalism inspired by the plastic models of the Florentine Quattrocento, as in
Trust in God (1835). Another exponent was
Giovanni Dupré (
The death of Abel, 1842). In Spain, Romanticism was impregnated with Goyaesque influence, as shown in the two
majas desnudas painted by
Eugenio Lucas, and in other works by artists such as
José Gutiérrez de la Vega (
La maja desnuda, 1840–1850),
Antonio María Esquivel (
Venus anadyomene, 1838;
Susanna and the Elders, 1840; ''Joseph and Potiphar's wife
, 1854), Víctor Manzano (Scene from the Inquisition
, 1860), etc. In sculpture, a Spaniard established in Mexico, Manuel Vilar, was the author of Jason
(1836) and Tlahuicole'' (1851), a sort of Mexican
Hercules.
Academicism '' (1885), by
Charles William Mitchell,
Laing Art Gallery,
Newcastle upon Tyne.
Academic art is the art promoted since the 16th century by the
academies of
fine arts, which regulated the
pedagogical training of artists. Although in principle the academies were in tune with the art produced at the time, we can not speak of a distinct style. In the nineteenth century, when the evolutionary dynamics of the styles began to move away from the classical canons, academic art was corseted in a classicist style based on strict rules, so that today it is understood more as a period of the nineteenth century, receiving parallel various denominations, such as
art pompier in France. It was primarily aimed at a bourgeois public, so its status as "official" art, together with the frequent accusation of conservatism and lack of imagination—according to the romantic concept that art cannot be taught—caused academicism to acquire a pejorative sense at the end of the 19th century, as it was considered anchored in the past and a reproducer of stultified formulas. ,
Musée Fabre,
Montpellier. However, nowadays there is a tendency to revalue academic art and to consider it for its intrinsic qualities. It is usually accepted more as an artistic period than as a style. Academicism was stylistically based on Greco-Roman classicism, as well as on earlier classicist authors, such as
Raphael,
Poussin, and
Guido Reni. Technically, they were based on careful drawing, formal balance, perfect line, plastic purity, and careful detailing, together with realistic and harmonious coloring. Their works were based on erudite themes (history, mythology, academic literature), with an idealized concept of beauty. In academicism, the nude had a special relevance, considered the expression par excellence of the nobility of nature: in the words of
Paul Valéry, "what love was for storytellers and poets, the nude was for the artists of the form". The academic nude meant standardization on classical premises subject to strict thematic and formal rules, subordinated to the generally puritanical environment of nineteenth-century society. The nude was only accepted as an expression of ideal beauty, so it was a modest, aseptic nude, based strictly on anatomical study. The acceptance of the classical nude as an expression of an ideal of beauty led to the censorship of any deviation from the classicist canons: thus, at the
Great Exhibition in London in 1851, when the famous
Crystal Palace was decorated with a gallery of marble nudes, all were accepted except the
Greek Slave by
Hiram Powers, which, despite being a copy of the
Aphrodite of Cnidus, was criticized for appearing with her wrists handcuffed. However, the teaching practice exercised in the academies of life drawing allowed, in certain cases, the introduction of formal and stylistic novelties that rejuvenated the genre, giving it, at the same time, greater respectability as a product of intellectual elaboration. '' (1861), by
Jean-Léon Gérôme,
Hamburg Kunsthalle. A center of reference for the academic nude was the work of Ingres: according to
Winckelmann's theory that the male nude could only express character, while the female nude was the only one that could reflect beauty, since this is more clearly shown in soft and sinuous forms, Ingres' nudes reflected a continuity in the stroke that gave his figures a rounded form, smooth texture and soft contour. As a result, academic art focused more on the female nude than the male, with figures of smooth form and waxy texture. '' (1847), by
Auguste Clésinger,
Musée d'Orsay, Paris. One of the main representatives of academicism was
William-Adolphe Bouguereau, who produced a large number of nude works, generally on mythological themes, with figures of great anatomical perfection, pale, with long hair and a gestural elegance not without sensuality (
The Birth of Venus, 1879;
Dawn, 1881;
The Wave, 1896;
The Oreads, 1902). Another exponent was
Alexandre Cabanel, author of mythological and allegorical nudes that serve as a pretext to represent women of voluptuous, sensual beauty, such as his famous
The Birth of Venus (1863). The same is the case of
Eùgene Emmanuel Amaury-Duval, author of another
Birth of Venus (1862).
Jean-Léon Gérôme was one of the main representatives of academic orientalism, with works set in harems and Turkish baths in the purest Ingresian style, as well as mythological and historical themes (
Phryne before the Areopagus, 1861;
Moorish Bath, 1870;
Pool in a Harem, 1876;
Pygmalion and Galatea, 1890). Other artists were:
François-Léon Benouville (
The Wrath of Achilles, 1847),
Auguste Clésinger (
Woman Bitten by a Snake, 1847;
Leda and the Swan, 1864),
Paul Baudry (
The Pearl and the Wave, 1862),
Jules Joseph Lefebvre (
The Truth, 1870;
Mary Magdalene in the Cave, 1876),
Henri Gervex (
Rolla, 1878),
Édouard Debat-Ponsan (
Le massage au Hamam, 1883),
Alexandre Jacques Chantron (
Danae, 1891),
Gaston Bussière (
The Nereids, 1902),
Guillaume Seignac (
The Awakening of Psyche, 1904), etc. Its main exponent was
Gustave Courbet, an artist with a passionate and politically committed temperament, determined to overcome the "errors of the Romantics and classicists". Courbet's work introduced realism into the nude, which, although in previous times had had more or less naturalistic approaches, was generally subordinated to an idealizing conception of the human body. Courbet was the first to portray the body as he perceived it, without idealizing, contextualizing, or framing it within an iconographic theme, transcribing the forms he captured from nature. Generally, his models were of robust constitution, like
The Bathers (1853), the model of ''
The Painter's Studio (1855), Nude Woman Lying Down
(1862), Woman with a Parrot (1865), Lot and His Daughters
(1844), Two Bathers
(1858) and The Spring
(1867). Sometimes he was inspired by other artists, as in The Fountain
(1868)—a replica of the famous work by Ingres—or The Sleepers (1866), which recalls The Two Girl Friends
by Fragonard. One of his most famous works is The Origin of the World'' (1866), where he presents a female body without a head, showing the pubis in the foreground, in a radically novel vision that surprised and scandalized the public of the time. Another exponent was
Camille Corot, who was primarily a landscape painter, occasionally adding human figures to his landscapes, some of them nudes, in a type of landscapes with an
Arcadian air, with vaporous atmospheres and delicate tones, as in
Reclining Nymph (1855) and
Nymph on the Seashore (1860). Later, he dissociated the landscape from the human figure, and between 1865 and 1875, he produced numerous works focused on the female figure, such as
Interrupted Reading (1865–1870) and
Woman with a Pearl (1869). Other works of his are:
Marietta, the Roman Odalisque (1843),
Girl with the Pink Skirt (1853–1865),
The Bath of Diana (1855),
The Dance of the Nymphs (1857), etc. The sculptural equivalent of realism was
Constantin Meunier, who preferentially portrayed workers and laborers of the new industrial era, replacing the classical hero by the modern proletarian, in works where special relevance is given to the volumetric sense of the figure, as in
The Puddler (1885) and
The Elder, in the
Monument to Labor in
Brussels (1890–1905). Another notable sculptor was
Aimé-Jules Dalou, a disciple of Carpeaux, who despite his naturalism denotes a certain baroque influence, in works such as
Bacchanal (1891),
Bather Drying Her Foot (1895) and
The Triumph of Silenus (1898). The American settled in Europe,
John Singer Sargent, who was the most successful portraitist of his time, was also a talented painter of landscapes and a great draughtsman, leaving a large number of
academies. Influenced by
Velázquez,
Frans Hals,
Anthony van Dyck, and
Thomas Gainsborough, he had an elegant and virtuous style, which he also demonstrated in nudes such as
Nude Boy on the Beach (1878) and ''Nicola D'Inverno'' (1892). In Spain, realism also prevailed in the middle of the century:
Eduardo Rosales worked across numerous genres, and although he made few nudes (
Sleeping Woman, 1862;
After Bathingo, 1869), they merit attention for their quality. Of
Raimundo Madrazo, it is also worth mentioning a single work,
After the Bath (1895), of admirable design and compositional sense.
Mariano Fortuny, trained in
Nazarenism, made several works of oriental themes (
The Odalisque, 1861), along with genre scenes or nudes set in landscapes (
Idyll, 1868;
Choice of a Model, 1870–1874;
Nude Old Man in the Sun, 1871;
Carmen Bastian, 1871–1872;
Nude on the beach of Portici, 1874). Other artists were:
Casto Plasencia (
The Rape of the Sabine Women, 1874),
José Jiménez Aranda (
A Slave for Sale, 1897),
Enrique Simonet (
Anatomy of the heart, 1890;
The Judgment of Paris, 1904) and, as a sculptor,
Ricardo Bellver (
El ángel caído, 1877).
Impressionism Impressionism was a profoundly innovative movement that marked a break with
academic art and a transformation of artistic language, initiating the path towards
avant-garde movements. The Impressionists were inspired by nature, seeking to capture a visual "impression" —an instant on the canvas—under the influence of photography, using loose brushstrokes and clear, luminous tones, especially valuing light. The work of the Impressionists was of great rupture with the classical tradition, conceiving a new pictorial style that sought its inspiration in nature, away from all conventionalism and any classical or academic regulation. Thus,
Édouard Manet's ''
Le Déjeuner sur l'herbe (1863) was in its day a complete scandal, despite being clearly influenced by the classical contours of Raphael, although the controversy did not come from the nude itself, but from being an unjustified nude, an anonymous, contemporary woman. Another revolution promoted by Manet was his Olympia (1863), with a Caravaggesque air that gave it an aspect of delicate affectation, but whose appearance of verisimilitude caused a scandal in its time, which forced the author to leave Paris. Olympia'' is a real woman, flesh and blood—shamelessly real, since she represents a prostitute—and she is in a real setting, not in a bucolic forest or picturesque ruins. It is an intimate scene that shows the viewer the most private facet of the human being: his intimacy. On the other hand, the concrete and individualized features of the model give her an identity of her own, far from the idealized faces of the classical nude. Other authors continued the path initiated by Manet, such as
Edgar Degas, who, after some early Ingresian-influenced nudes, evolved to a personal style based on drawing design, essentially concerned with the transcription of movement, in scenes full of life and spontaneity. Degas voluntarily moved away from the conventional canons of beauty, opting for an undeveloped, adolescent body type, as seen in
Young Spartans (1860) and his depictions of dancers. On the other hand, his works have a marked character of snapshot, of moment captured spontaneously, influenced by photography and
Japanese prints, with a certain component of voyeurism (
Woman in the bath, 1880;
After the bath, 1883;
Woman drying her foot, 1886;
La toilette, 1886;
After the bath, woman drying her neck, 1895). Degas initiated a subgenre within the nude, that of the
toilette, women in the bathroom, performing their personal hygiene, which would have great development in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. In his
Series of nudes of women bathing, washing, drying themselves, combing their hair or being combed, presented at the last exhibition of the Impressionists, in 1886, he tried to offer a new vision of the nude, shown from the side or from behind, but not from the front, to emphasize the effect of a stolen instant, and so that it does not seem that they are presenting themselves to the public; in his own words: "until now the nude had been presented in postures that presupposed an audience. But my women are simple, honest people, who only take care of their physical grooming. Here is another one: she is washing her feet and it is as if I were looking at her through the keyhole". '' (1884–1887), by
Pierre-Auguste Renoir,
Philadelphia Museum of Art,
Philadelphia, US. But it was
Renoir who was one of the greatest interpreters of the female body, which he transcribed in a realistic manner, but with a certain degree of adoration that conferred an air of idealized perfection. In the
Baigneuse au griffon (1870), he was inspired by an engraving on the
Aphrodite of Cnidus, while the compositional concept is taken from Courbet. Renoir sought to synthesize the canonical classicist posture with an air of natural reality, in luminous and evocative environments that conveyed a serene and placid vision of nudity, an ideal of communion with nature. He strove to dilute the outlines of his figures, following the impressionist technique, by mottling space with patches of light and shadow, inspired by the Venetian school, to capture form through color, as seen in
Anna (1876) and
Torso (1876). Later, in an attempt to simplify the nude, he was inspired by the frescoes of Raphael's La Farnesina, as well as the paintings of Pompeii and Herculaneum, as is evident in
La Baigneuse blonde (1882). In the
Les Grandes baigneuses (1885–1887), he painted sculptural nudes, inspired by the
Fountain of the Nymphs of
Girardon (
Versailles), with fluid lines and a great sense of relief. In his last works he was influenced by
Alexandrian
Hellenism, Michelangelesque mannerism and the baroque style of Boucher and Clodion, with plump figures of exuberant appearance and natural attitude towards the body and the surrounding environment, generally rivers, lakes, forests and beaches (
Seated Bathing Girl, 1885;
Bathing Girl drying herself, 1895;
The Judgment of Paris, 1908–1910;
Bathers, 1916). '' (1886–1888), by
Georges Seurat,
Barnes Foundation,
Philadelphia. Heir to Impressionism was
Neo-Impressionism, a style based fundamentally on the
pointillist technique, the elaboration of paintings with colored dots. One of its main representatives was
Georges Seurat, who throughout his career showed a preference for various themes, such as seascapes, country scenes, the circus, the
music hall and the nude. His main work in this field was
Models (1886–1888), where he wanted to demonstrate that the pointillist technique was suitable for any genre, as he was often reproached for only knowing how to produce landscapes in this technique. In this work, he reinterpreted in a modern key the well-known theme of the three Graces, by means of drawing models located in the artist's own workshop, with a vision indebted in a certain way to the work of Ingres. ,
Barnes Foundation,
Philadelphia. Subsequently, the so-called
post-impressionists were a group of artists who, building on the new technical discoveries made by the impressionists, reinterpreted them in their own ways, opening new avenues of development of great importance for the evolution of art in the twentieth century. Thus, more than a certain style, post-impressionism was a way of grouping diverse artists of different signs.
Paul Cézanne structured the composition in geometric forms (
cylinder,
cone, and
sphere), in an analytical synthesis of reality, a precursor of
cubism. He treated the nude as a landscape or still life, as an expression of the relationship between volumes of color immersed in light, as in his
Bathers (1879–1882) of the Petit-Palais in Paris.
Paul Gauguin experimented with depth, giving new value to the pictorial plane through flat colors of symbolic character. After some beginnings in
pointillism (
Study of a Nude, 1880) and a stay in
Pont-Aven with the
Nabis (
The Yellow Christ, 1889), his stay in
Tahiti helped him to recreate a world of primitive placidity where nudity was contemplated naturally, as can be seen in
I Raro te Oviri (1891),
Loss of Innocence (1891),
Tahitian Eve (1892),
Two Tahitian Women on the Beach (1892),
Woman at Sea (1892),
Manao tupapau (1892),
The Moon and the Earth (1893),
Otahí or Solitude (1893),
Delicious Day (1896),
The Mango Woman (1896),
Where Do We Come From? What Are We? Where Are We Going? (1897),
Vairumati (1897),
Nevermore (1897),
And the gold of their bodies (1901), etc.
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, in contrast to the stylized nudes of the academic salons, studied the female figure in its most crude carnality, without ignoring the body's own imperfections, with a preference for
circus and
music hall scenes, or bohemian and brothel environments:
Fat Marie (1884),
Woman Pulling Up Her Stockings (1894),
The Medical Inspection (1894),
The Two Friends (1894–1895),
La Toilette (1896),
Woman Lifting Her Shirt (1901), etc.
Vincent van Gogh was the author of works of strong drama and interior exploration, with sinuous, dense brushstrokes, intense color, and a distortion of reality that gave him a dreamlike air. He painted a few nudes, most of them in Paris in 1887:
Female nude lying down, Female nude on a bed, Female nude seen from the back. '' (1886–1890), one of the scenes from
The Kiss, by
Auguste Rodin,
Musée Rodin, Paris. In the field of sculpture,
Auguste Rodin was a great innovator, not only in the physical plane but also in thematic innovation, more focused on the ordinary human being of his time and his environment, far from mythology and religion. He had a profound knowledge of the human body, which he treated with intimate care, with a strong component of psychological introspection. Michelangelo and Delacroix influenced him, but in essence, his work was innovative, introducing new typologies of the nude. For this, he used models who he let roam freely in his studio, adopting all kinds of forms, which Rodin captured with a mastery that immortalized the spontaneity of any moment and any posture. His figures tend toward dramatism, tragic tension, and the expression of the artist's concept of man's struggle against destiny. Thus, for more than thirty years he was working on figures for an unfinished project,
The Gates of Hell (1880–1917) for the
Museé des Arts Décoratifs in Paris—now in the
Rodin Museum—from which project several works were detached that remained as independent figures, such as
The Thinker (1880–1900), for which he was inspired by Carpeaux's
Ugolino, or
The Kiss (1886–1890), which represents the love of Paolo and Francesca narrated in
The Divine Comedy. Other works of his were
The Age of Bronze (1877),
Saint John the Baptist (1878),
Eve (1881),
The Winter (or
La Belle Heaulmière, 1884–1885),
The Martyr (1885),
The Torso (1889),
The Muse (1896),
The Three Shades (1899),
Danaid (1901), etc. Following in Rodin's wake were sculptors such as
Antoine Bourdelle (
Hercules the Archer, 1909),
Camille Claudel (
The Implorer, 1894–1905;
The Age of Maturity, 1899–1913),
Joseph Bernard (
The Young Woman with the Cauldron, 1910) and
Charles Despiau (
Eve, 1925). The Swede
Anders Zorn made unabashedly voluptuous and healthy nudes, usually in landscapes, with vibrant light effects on the skin, in bright brushstrokes of great color, as in
In the Open Air (1888),
The Bathers (1888),
Women Bathing in the Sauna (1906),
Girl Sunbathing (1913),
Helga (1917),
Studio Idyll (1918). In Spain, the work of
Joaquín Sorolla stood out, who interpreted impressionism in a personal way, with a loose technique and vigorous brushstroke, with a bright and sensitive coloring, where light is especially important, the luminous atmosphere that surrounds his scenes of Mediterranean themes, on beaches and seascapes where children play, society ladies stroll or fishermen are engaged in their tasks. His work includes some nudes, such as
Sad Inheritance (1899),
Desnudo de mujer (1902), ''The Horse's Bath
(1909), Children on the beach
(1910), After the Bath
(1911), etc. His disciples were: his son-in-law Francisco Pons Arnau (Composición
), Ignacio Pinazo (Desnudo de frente
, 1872–1879), Rigoberto Soler (Nineta, Después del baño
) and Julio Moisés (Eva, Pili'').
Symbolism ,
Musée d'Orsay, Paris.
Symbolism was a fantastic and dreamlike style, which emerged as a reaction to the naturalism of the realist and impressionist currents, placing special emphasis on the world of dreams, as well as on
satanic and terrifying aspects, sex, and
perversion. A main characteristic of symbolism was
aestheticism, a reaction to the prevailing utilitarianism of the time and to the ugliness and materialism of the industrial era. Against this, a tendency arose that granted art and beauty an autonomy of their own, synthesized in
Théophile Gautier's formula
''l'art pour l'art'' ("art for art's sake"), even going so far as to speak of "aesthetic religion". This position sought to isolate the artist from society, autonomously seeking his own inspiration and letting himself be driven solely by an individual search for beauty. One of the characteristics of symbolism is the dark attraction to the perverse woman, the
femme fatale, the Eve turned into
Lilith, the enigmatic and distant, disturbing woman, the woman that
Manuel Machado defined as "brittle, vicious and mystical, pre-Raphaelite virgin and Parisian cat". She is a woman loved and hated, adored and vilified, exalted and repudiated, virtuous and sinful, who will adopt numerous symbolic and allegorical forms, such as
sphinx,
mermaid,
chimera,
medusa, winged genie, etc. An artificial and
androgynous, ambiguous type of beauty became fashionable, a type of
leonardesque beauty, with undefined features, which will have a symbolic equivalent in flowers such as the lily or animals such as the
swan and the
peacock. ,
Musée d'Orsay, Paris. Symbolism developed especially in France, being one of its initiators,
Gustave Moreau, an artist heir to romanticism, while he felt a great devotion to the masters of the Italian Quattrocento. His works are of a fantastic and ornamental style, with variegated compositions densely populated with all kinds of objects and plant elements, with a suggestive eroticism that reflects his fears and obsessions, with a prototype of an ambiguous woman, between innocence and perversity:
Oedipus and the Sphinx (1864),
Orpheus (1865),
Jason and Medea (1865),
Leda (1865–1875),
The Chimera (1867),
Prometheus (1868),
The Rape of Europa (1869),
The Sirens (1872),
The Apparition (1874–1876),
Salome (1876),
Hercules and the Hydra of Lerna (1876),
Galatea (1880),
Jupiter and Semele (1894–1896). Following in his footsteps were artists such as
Pierre Puvis de Chavannes, who created large mural decorations in which he returned to linearity after the Impressionist experiments, with melancholic landscapes where the nude figure abounds, as in
The Work (1863),
Autumn (1865),
Hope (1872),
Young Girls by the Seashore (1879),
The Sacred Grove, Beloved of the Arts and Muses (1884–1889), etc.
Odilon Redon developed a work of strong oneiric content, finding in dreams an inexhaustible source of inspiration, with a style based on a soft drawing and a coloring of phosphorescent aspect (
The Cyclops, 1898–1900).
Aristide Maillol began in painting, with great interest in the female figure in nature (
Mediterranean, 1898;
The Wave, 1898;
Two Nudes in a Landscape, 1900), to move later to sculpture, where he found his most suitable means of expression:
The Night (1902–1909),
Mediterranean (1902–1923),
Chained Action (1906),
Young Cyclist (1908),
Bathing Girl Drying (1921),
Venus with a Necklace (1930),
The Three Nymphs (1930–1937),
The Mountain (1937),
The River (1938–1943),
The Air (1939). . A group of artists known as
Nabis, influenced by Gauguin and concerned with the expressive use of color, met in
Pont-Aven. Among its members were:
Félix Vallotton, who developed an ironic style with connotations of black humor, with an unabashed eroticism, where the bodies have a flat, Japanese-influenced constitution, with faces that look like masks (
Bathing on a Summer Afternoon, 1892);
Pierre Bonnard, who painted nudes under different types of light, both natural and artificial, generally in intimate scenes, bedroom and
boudoir, with a taste for reflections in mirrors, often based on photographs (
Woman reclining on a bed, 1899;
The nap, 1900;
Man and Woman, 1900;
Nude Against the Light, 1907;
Mirror Effect, 1909;
Dressing Table with Mirror, 1913;
Nude in the Bucket, 1916); and
Charles Filiger, who developed a medieval-inspired style—especially from Gothic stained glass—of flat colors with black outlines, as in
The Recumbent Christ (1895), inspired by
Holbein's
The Corpse of Christ in the Tomb, reduced to simple and pure forms, showing a symbolic candor that turns Christ into a transcendental, evocative figure, of a naivety that suggests purity. . In Belgium,
Félicien Rops was also inspired by the world of the fantastic and the supernatural, with an inclination towards the satanic and references to death, with an eroticism that reflects the dark and perverted aspect of love:
The Cold Devils (1860),
The Temptations of St. Anthony (1878),
Pornokrates (1878),
The Sacrifice (1882).
Jean Delville was interested in occultism, showing in his work secret obsessions, where his figures are a mixture of flesh and spirit:
The idol of perversity (1891),
The treasures of Satan (1895),
The school of Plato (1898),
The love of souls (1900). In sculpture,
George Minne was the author of the
Fountain with Kneeling Youths (1898–1906), where the same figure of a naked young man is repeated five times around a pond, like
Narcissus contemplating his image reflected in the water, leading the gaze into the inner space in search of the solution to the anguish they reflect. In the Netherlands,
Jan Toorop stood out as the author of
The Three Brides (1893), which shows the influence of the Chinese shadow figures of
Java—where he was born—with figures with long arms and delicate silhouettes.
Piet Mondrian, before reaching the
neoplasticist abstraction, made some symbolist works, generated by his interest in
esotericism:
Evolution (1910–1911) is a
triptych showing three naked figures completely spiritualized, symbolizing the access to knowledge and mystical light. '' (1896), by
John William Waterhouse, City Art Galleries,
Manchester. In Great Britain, the school of the
Pre-Raphaelites emerged, who were inspired—as their name indicates—by Italian painters before
Raphael, as well as by the recently emerged photography. Although their subject matter was of lyrical and religious preferences, they also tackled the nude, such as
Dante Gabriel Rossetti (
Venus Verticordia, 1868),
Edward Burne-Jones (the
Pygmalion series, 1868–1870;
The Garden of Pan, 1876;
The Wheel of Fortune, 1883;
The Three Graces, 1890),
John Everett Millais (
The Knight Errant, 1870),
John William Waterhouse (
Hylas and the Nymphs, 1896), etc. Between Pre-Raphaelite symbolism and
modernist decorativism was the work of the illustrator
Aubrey Beardsley, who produced numerous works of an erotic nature (such as his illustrations for
Lysistrata and
Oscar Wilde's
Salome), with a great satirical and irreverent sense, with a style based on a highly stylized line and large black and white surfaces. ,
Ateneum, Helsinki. The German
Franz von Stuck developed a decorative style close to modernism, although its subject matter is more symbolist, with an eroticism of torrid sensuality that reflects a concept of woman as the personification of perversity:
Sin (1893),
The Kiss of the Sphinx (1895),
Air, Water, Fire (1913). In Austria,
Gustav Klimt recreated a fantasy world with a strong erotic component, with a classicist composition of ornamental style, where sex and death are intertwined, dealing without taboos with sexuality in aspects such as pregnancy,
lesbianism, or
masturbation. In
Nuda Veritas (1899), he moved away from the iconographic symbolism of the female nude, becoming a self-referential symbol; the woman is no longer an allegory but an image of herself and her sexuality. Other works of his are:
Agitated Water (1898),
Judith I (1901), the
Beethoven Frieze (1902),
Hope I (1903),
The Three Ages of Woman (1905),
Danae (1907),
Judith II (Salome) (1909),
The Girlfriends (1917),
Adam and Eve (1917–1918), etc.
Alfred Kubin was above all a draftsman, expressing in his drawings a terrifying world of loneliness and despair, populated by monsters, skeletons, insects and hideous animals, with explicit references to sex, where the female presence plays an evil and disturbing role, as evidenced in works such as
Lubricity (1901–1902), where a priapic dog harasses a young woman huddled in a corner; or
Somersault (1901–1902), where a small homunculus jumps as if in a swimming pool over a huge female vulva. ,
Kunstmuseum,
Bern. In Switzerland,
Ferdinand Hodler was influenced by Dürer, Holbein and Raphael, with a style based on parallelism, repeating lines, colors and volumes:
Night (1890),
Rise in Space (1892),
Day (1900),
Sensation (1901–1902),
Young Man Admired by Women (1903),
Truth (1903).
Arnold Böcklin was heir to
Friedrich's romanticism, with an allegorical style based on legends and imaginary characters, set in a fantastic, obsessive atmosphere, as in
Venus Genitrix (1895). The Czech
František Kupka was also interested in occultism, going through a symbolist phase before reaching abstraction:
Money (1899),
Ballad of Epona (The Joys) (1900),
The Wave (1902). In Russia,
Kazimir Malevich, future founder of
suprematism, had in its beginnings a symbolist phase, characterized by eroticism combined with a certain esoteric mysticism, with a style tending to monochrome, with a predominance of red and yellow:
Woman picking flowers (1908),
Oak and Dryads (1908). Linked to symbolism was also the so-called
naïf art, whose authors were
self-taught, with a somewhat naive and unstructured composition, instinctive, with a certain primitivism, although fully conscious and expressive. Its greatest exponent was
Henri Rousseau, who, starting from academicism, developed an innovative body of work, of great freshness and simplicity, with humorous and fantastic touches and a predilection for the exotic jungle landscape. He made some nudes, such as
The Snake Charmer (1907),
Eve (1907) and
The Dream (1910).
20th century ,
Columbia University Library, New York City The
art of the 20th century underwent a profound transformation: in a more
materialistic, more
consumerist society, art addresses the senses rather than the intellect. Likewise, the concept of fashion has gained particular relevance, a product of the speed of communication and the consumerist aspect of today's civilization. Thus, the
avant-garde movements arose, which sought to integrate art into society, aiming for a greater interrelationship between artist and spectator, since it is the latter who interprets the work and can discover meanings the artist did not even know. The latest artistic trends have even lost interest in the
artistic object: traditional art was an art of the object, the current art of the
concept. There is a revaluation of active art, of action, of spontaneous,
ephemeral manifestations, of non-commercial art (
conceptual art,
happening,
environment). In the twentieth century, the nude has gained increasing prominence, especially thanks to the mass media, which have enabled its wider dissemination, particularly in film, photography, and comics, and, more recently, the Internet. It has also proliferated to a great extent in advertising, due to its increasing social acceptance and its great appeal to people. Nudity no longer has the negative connotation it had in previous times, mainly due to the increase of
secularism among society, which perceives nudity as something more natural and not morally objectionable. In this sense,
nudism and
naturism have been gaining followers in recent years, and no one is scandalized to see another person naked on a beach. It is also worth noting the growing cult of the body, with practices such as
bodybuilding,
fitness, and
aerobics, which allow the body to be shaped to standards considered aesthetically pleasing.
Vanguardism , Art Gallery of
New South Wales. In the early years of the 20th century the foundations of the so-called
avant-garde art were forged: the concept of reality was questioned by new scientific theories (
Bergson's
subjectivity of time,
Einstein's relativity,
quantum mechanics);
Freud's theory of
psychoanalysis also had an influence. On the other hand, new technologies changed art's function, since photography and cinema were already responsible for capturing reality. Thanks to the
ethnographic collections promoted by European
colonialism, artists had contact with the art of other civilizations (
African,
Asian,
Oceanic), which brought a more subjective and emotional vision of art. All these factors brought about a change in sensibility that led the artist to search for new forms of expression. Artistic avant-gardism aimed to breathe new life into art, to return to the natural roots of design and artistic composition, for which they rebelled against academic art, which they saw as subject to rules that seemed to these new artists to nullify creativity and artistic inspiration. Two of the first works that represented a revolution in art at the beginning of the century were nudes:
Matisse's
Blue Nude and
Picasso's ''
Les Demoiselles d'Avignon,'' both from 1907. In these works, the nude becomes a symbolic, conceptual element, a reference to the purity of life without rules, without constrictions, a return to nature, to the subjective perception of art. The reduction of the human figure to basic, schematic forms initiated in these two works the path towards the
abstraction of form, which will be reduced to basic lines and geometric structures, such as
Constantine Brâncuşi's
Nude, where a female torso is reduced to a simple cylindrical shape.
Fauvism (1905–1908) ,
Kunstmuseum,
Basel.
Fauvism is considered the first avant-garde movement. The Fauves dispensed with perspective, modeling and chiaroscuro, experimenting with color, which is conceived in a subjective and personal way, applying emotional and expressive values, independent of nature. Its main representative was
Henri Matisse, a disciple of
Gustave Moreau, who opened the doors to the independence of color with respect to the subject, organizing space according to color planes and seeking new sensations through the striking effect of violent areas of strident colors. Despite his modernizing zeal, Matisse preserved classical elements, such as the nude: in 1898, he began his personal style with
Nude at the Window, where he began to apply color in an arbitrary, non-imitative way; the painting recreates a different reality, in which color is autonomous from form. In
Luxury, Calm and Pleasure (1905), he applied basic colors (red, yellow, blue) and complementary colors (violet, orange, green), arranged by zones and structured by geometric figures. With the
Blue Nude (1906–1907) he began a simplification of the human form in search of a perfect synthesis of the structure of the body; this process that would obsess him for many years and that would culminate in the
Pink Nude (1935). In
The Luxury (1907) he focused on the human figure, with a triangular composition and arbitrary colors, emphasizing the movement of the figure, and with schematic faces.
Luxury II (1907) is a second, more precise version, with pure, flat spots of color, highlighting the flesh of salmon pink, which would be typical of Matisse.
Bathers with a Turtle (1908) has an austere, abstract background of colored stripes, creating space by the distinction of colors.
Nude, Black and Gold (1908) is influenced by black-African carvings, with a tone close to wood and almond-shaped eyes.
The Dance (1910) is a study of the human figure in movement, with an exaggerated schematism and great austerity of color, reduced to red and blue—he made two large murals on
The Dance, one in Moscow (1910) and another in
Philadelphia (1931).
Odalisque in Red (1924) is influenced by
Modigliani, softened with a certain Renaissance air. In
Figure on an Ornamental Background (1925), he recovered Moreau's influence, with great decorativism and
horror vacui. In
Pink Nude (1935), the influence of
Mondrian is evident, with abstract figures and a gridded background rendered in black and white. Other works of his are:
The Joy of Life (1906),
Standing Nude (1907),
Game of Bowls (1908),
Two Black Women (1908),
Still Life with Dance (1909),
Nude in Sunlit Landscape (1909),
Red Fish and Sculpture (1911),
Nude Spanish Carpet (1919),
The Hindu Pose (1923),
Nude with Blue Cushion (1924),
Odalisque with Red Pants (1924–1925),
Sleeping Nude on Red Background (1926),
Reclining Nude (1935),
A Nude Lying on Her Back (1944), etc. Artists such as
André Derain followed in Matisse's footsteps, whose work shows the influence of primitive art: in
The Golden Age (1905), he practiced a certain
macropointillism, showing the influence of Matisse's
Luxury, Calm and Pleasure.
Maurice de Vlaminck had a predilection for pure colors, with a Cézannian volume: in
Reclining Nude (1905) and
Women Bathing (1908), he made a Matissean treatment of the female nude.
Albert Marquet had a more naturalistic style, with a predilection for landscape, although he painted nudes such as:
Fauvist Nude (1898),
Backlit Nude (1909–1911), and
Nude on a Blue Background (1913).
Kees van Dongen was a passionate nude painter, counting on countless models from Parisian high society, where he was very fashionable in the
interwar period. His works include:
The Jeweled Woman (1905),
Anita (1905),
Naked Girl (1907), etc.
Expressionism (1905–1923) . Emerging as a reaction to
Impressionism, the Expressionists defended a more personal and intuitive art, where the artist's inner vision—the "expression"—predominated over the representation of reality—the "impression"—reflecting in their works a personal and intimate theme with a taste for the fantastic, deforming reality to accentuate the expressive character of the work. In Germany, his main centers of diffusion were organized around two groups:
Die Brücke (founded in 1905) and
Der Blaue Reiter (founded in 1911), although some artists did not belong to either group. The members of
Die Brücke were interested in a type of subject matter centered on life and nature, reflected spontaneously and instinctively, so their main themes were the nude—whether indoors or outdoors—as well as
circus and
music hall scenes, where they found the maximum intensity they could extract from life. This subject matter was synthesized in works about bathers that its members made during their stays in the lakes near
Dresden between 1909 and 1911: Alsen, Dangast, Nidden, Fehmarn, Hiddensee, Moritzburg, etc. They are works in which they express an unabashed
naturism—in line with the
Wandervögel, life in the countryside stripped of taboos and prejudices—an almost
pantheistic feeling of communion with nature, while technically refining their palette, in a process of subjective deformation of form and color, which acquires a symbolic meaning. In
Kirchner's words, his objective was "to study the nude, the foundation of all the plastic arts, in a natural way". . A precursor of expressionism was
Edvard Munch: influenced in his beginnings by impressionism and symbolism, he soon drifted towards a personal style that would be a faithful reflection of his obsessive and tortured interior, with scenes of oppressive and enigmatic atmosphere—centered on sex, illness and death—characterized by the sinuosity of the composition and a strong and arbitrary coloring. In
Madonna (1895–1904) he presented a female figure with a naked torso, in an ambiguous attitude, while the body suggests sensuality, the face with closed eyes turned upwards gives a sense of mysticism, of introspection; in the frame is a
fetus, which together with a line of
sperm suggest the artist's rejection of the traditional attitude of men towards women. In
Puberty (1914), he portrayed an adolescent girl with a languid look, reflecting in her countenance the meditative and perplexed state that marks the passage from girl to woman, whose deep psychological introspection the artist has masterfully recreated with pure colors and distorting lines. It belongs to a series of works made between 1890 and 1908, with which Munch intended to develop a "frieze of human life", determined to analyze all the problems arising from loneliness, illness, addictions, unsatisfied love, and the anguish of age—especially in adolescence and old age. These works denote a great psychological analysis, but they reveal a certain morbid and disturbing component, exploring without qualms the deepest depths of man's interior. The work of
Emil Nolde was also an antecedent: at the beginning of the century, he used the
divisionist technique, with very thick impasto and short brushstrokes, and with strong chromatic discharge, of post-impressionist influence. Later, he abandoned the imitation of reality, denoting in his work an inner restlessness, a vital tension, a tension reflected in the work's internal pulse. This can be seen in nudes such as:
Dance around the Golden Calf (1910),
Still Life with Dancers (1914), and
The Enthusiast (1919). Another reference was
Lovis Corinth: trained in impressionism—of which he was one of the main figures in Germany along with
Max Liebermann and
Max Slevogt—he drifted in his maturity towards expressionism with a series of works of psychological introspection, with a theme centered on the erotic and macabre. Although he remained anchored in the optical impression as a method of creating his works, the expressiveness became increasingly important, culminating in
The Red Christ (1922), a religious scene of remarkable anguish, close to the visions of Nolde. Other works of his are
Reclining nude (1895) and
Salome (1899). Among the members of
Die Brücke,
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner stood out: a great draughtsman, since his visit to an exhibition of
Dürer's
woodcuts in 1898 he began to make woodcuts, material in which he also made carvings of African influence, with an irregular, unpolished finish, highlighting the sexual components (
Ballerina, 1911). As a painter, he used primary colors, like the Fauvists, with a certain influence of Matisse, but with broken, violent lines—unlike Matisse's rounded ones—in closed, acute angles, with stylized figures, with an elongation of Gothic influence. Among his works it is worth mentioning:
Couple on the Sofa (1908),
Young Woman under a Japanese Umbrella (1909),
Marzella (1909–1910),
Bathers in the room (1909–1920),
Bathers in Moritzburg (1909–1926),
Reclining Nude in Front of a Mirror (1910),
Nudes in the Sun (1910–1920),
Nudes in the Country (1910–1920),
Two Nudes with Bathtube and Oven (1911),
Nude with a Black Hat (1911–1912),
The Judgment of Paris (1912),
Three Bathers (1913), etc. Other members of
Die Brücke were:
Erich Heckel, who, between 1906 and 1907, made a series of paintings with a Van Goghian composition, short brushstrokes, and intense colors—predominantly yellow—with dense paste. Later he evolved to more expressionist themes, such as sex, loneliness and isolation:
Bathers in the Reeds (1909),
Female Nudes by the Pond (1910),
Seaside Scene (Bathing Women) (1912),
The Crystalline Day (1913).
Karl Schmidt-Rottluff practiced
macropointillism in his beginnings, to move on to an expressionism of schematic figures and sharp faces, with loose brushstrokes and intense colors:
Woman in Tub (1912),
After Swimming (1912),
Four Bathers on the Beach (1913).
Max Pechstein made a trip to Oceania in 1914, receiving as many other artists of the time the influence of primitive and exotic art:
Woman and Indian on a carpet (1909),
Outdoors (Bathers in Moritzburg) (1910),
Three nudes in a landscape (1911),
Sunrise (1911),
The Dance, dancers and bathers in the forest pond (1912),
Triptych of Palau (1917).
Otto Mueller made works on landscapes and nudes with schematic and angular forms where the influence of Cézanne and Picasso can be perceived. His nudes are usually set in natural landscapes, showing the influence of Gauguin's exotic nature. His slender figures are inspired by
Cranach, of whose Venus he had a reproduction in his studio. They are nudes of great simplicity and naturalness, without traits of provocation or sensuality, expressing an ideal perfection, the nostalgia of a lost paradise, in which the human being lived in communion with nature:
Three nudes in the forest (1911),
Girls sitting by the water (1913),
Bathing Girls in the Forest Pond (1915),
Young woman in the rose bushes (1918),
Two girls sitting in the dunes (1922),
Two girls in the grass (1926). Outside the main expressionist groups was the work of
Paula Modersohn-Becker: in some visits to Paris between 1900 and 1906 she was influenced by Cézanne, Gauguin and Maillol, combining in a personal way the three-dimensional forms of Cézanne and the linear designs of Gauguin, mainly in portraits and maternal scenes, as well as nudes, evocative of a new conception in the relationship of the body with nature, as in
Mother Kneeling with Child (1907). In
Vienna,
Egon Schiele, a disciple of Klimt, stood out, whose work revolved around a theme based on sexuality, loneliness and isolation, with a certain air of
voyeurism, with very explicit works for which he was even imprisoned, accused of pornography. Dedicated mainly to drawing, he gave the line an essential role, on which he based his compositions, with stylized figures immersed in an oppressive, tense space. He recreated a reiterative human typology, with an elongated, schematic canon, far from naturalism, with vivid, exalted colors, emphasizing the linear character, the contour. Some of his works among his extensive production are:
Nude young woman with her arms on her chest (1910),
Nude lying down with her arms backwards (1911),
Two girls (1911),
Seated female nude (1914),
Two women embracing (1915),
Nude lying down (1917),
The embrace (1917), etc. In sculpture,
Georg Kolbe stood out, especially dedicated to the nude, with dynamic figures, in rhythmic movements close to ballet, with a vitalist, cheerful, and healthy attitude. His most famous work was
Morning, exhibited in the
German Pavilion built by
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe for the 1929
Barcelona International Exposition. On the other hand, the
Norwegian Gustav Vigeland made between 1924 and 1942 an extraordinary sculptural ensemble in the
Frogner Park in Oslo, called the Vigeland installation, with more than a hundred naked figures, representing human life analyzed in the various stages and ages of life, from childhood to old age, with a serene and confident style, healthy and optimistic, expressing without prejudice or moralizing the full and natural meaning of life. '' (1917), by
Amedeo Modigliani, Gianni Mattioli Collection,
Milan. In France, the so-called
School of Paris was formed, a heterodox group of artists who worked in the
interwar period, linked to various artistic styles such as post-impressionism, expressionism, cubism, and surrealism. One of its main exponents was
Amedeo Modigliani, an artist of bohemian life, immersed in sex, drugs, and alcohol. He received classical training, influenced by Mannerism and the Venetian school. In 1902, he studied at the Scuola Libera di Nuodo in
Florence, dedicated especially to the nude. In his works he strongly emphasized the outline, with fluid lines, heirs of the modernist
arabesque, while the space was formed by juxtaposition of color planes, with elongated figures inspired by the Italian masters of the
Cinquecento. Among his works are:
Painful Nude (1908),
Seated Nude (1910),
Caryatid (1913–1914),
Red Nude (1917),
Nude Sitting on a Divan (1917),
Nude with Necklace (1917),
Nude Lying on a Blue Cushion (1917),
Nude Lying on Her Back (1917),
Reclining Nude (1919), etc. Other members of the School of Paris were:
Marc Chagall, who made works of a dreamlike character, close to a certain surrealism, distorting reality at his whim, in scenes that are in an unreal space, outside the rules of perspective or scale, in a world where he evokes his childhood memories, mixed with the world of dreams, music and poetry:
Nude over Vitebsk (1933),
To my wife (1933),
White Crucifixion (1938).
Georges Rouault was initially linked to symbolism (
Stella matutina, 1895) and Fauvism, but his moral themes—centered on religion—and his dark colors brought him closer to expressionism. His most emblematic works are those of female nudes, which have a bitter, unpleasant air, with languid, whitish figures (
Odaliscas, 1907). Between 1903 and 1904, he executed several paintings of naked prostitutes where he recreates the depravity of their trade, reflecting the materiality of the flesh horrendously, stripped of any ideal or moral component, with a sense of denunciation of the decadence of society coming from his neo-Catholic ideology, in an expressionist style of quick strokes and basic lines. His works are:
Nude in the Mirror (1906),
Young Woman (1906) and
Autumn (1936).
Jules Pascin expressed in his work the rootlessness and alienation of the exiled, as well as the sexual obsessions that marked him since his adolescence. He had a delicate technique, with a finely suggested line and a color of iridescent tones, showing in his nudes a languid and evanescent air, with a certain
Degasian influence:
Manolita (1929). We should also remember
Marcel Gromaire, author of nudes of sensual and vigorous forms, with a predominance of ocher and yellow colors (
Nude with an Oriental Tapestry, 1926;
Blond Nude, 1926;
Nude with Coat, 1929); and
Tsuguharu Foujita, who made a synthesis of the Japanese and Western traditions, with precise graphics and a glossy finish, as if it were
lacquer (
The Salon of Montparnasse, 1928).
Cubism (1907–1914) ,
Israel Museum,
Jerusalem. This movement was based on the deformation of reality through the destruction of the spatial
perspective of Renaissance origin, organizing space according to a geometric grid, with simultaneous vision of objects, a range of cold and muted colors, and a new conception of the work of art, with the introduction of
collage. Its main exponent was
Pablo Picasso: of academic training (
Female nude from back, 1899;
Seated female nude, 1899), he went through several periods before ending up in Cubism, of which it is worth remembering for the theme of the nude his "pink period", of a classicism influenced by Ingres, with themes set in the world of the circus and the Impressionist
toilette:
Saltimbanquis (1904), ''Harlequin's Family
(1905), Dutchess with a Coif
(1905), Boy Leading a Horse
(1905), Woman, Fernande Olivier
(1905), Two Nudes
(1906), The Harem
(1906), The Two Brothers
(1906), Nude
Wringing Her Hair
(1906), Nude with Joined Hands
(1906). In 1907, he painted The Young Ladies of Avignon'', which was a total break with traditional art, making a plea against conventional beauty, beauty based on rules and proportions. Already, the chosen theme—a brothel—is symptomatic of protest and rebellion, but also of the treatment of the figures, deformed and reduced to simple geometric bodies (cube, cylinder), which denotes his desire to demystify the classical concept of beauty. In this work, Picasso shows a strong influence of African sculpture, with stylized forms and simple lines of geometric construction, a more intuitive than realistic sense of the body's representation, and a style that evokes the soul's presence more than physical corporeality. However, the dismemberment of the bodies is not random, but subject to laws of refraction, framed in sharp contours and concave planes taken from the spatiality of African art. ,
Bilbao Fine Arts Museum.
The Young Ladies of Avignon began the so-called "black period" of Picasso, a brief period until his fully cubist stage, in which he also made
Nude with Cloths (1907),
Three Women (1908), and
The Dryad (Nude in the Forest) (1908). From the fully cubist period,
Nude (1910) and
Woman in a Shirt (1913) stand out, although at this stage he did not dedicate himself especially to the nude. Later, after a visit to
Pompeii in 1917, he rediscovered the freshness and the vital component of primitive classical art. In his drawing of the
Bathers that year, he composed more naturalistic forms, though stylized and treated with the artistic freedom of his original creativity. During the early 1920s, he made nudes in a more classical vein, as in his illustrations of
Ovid and
Aristophanes. Still, they were nudes of a voluntary objectivity that deprived them of vitality, which would be reaffirmed when he later returned to the deformation of his figures, as in his
Nude Woman in a Red Armchair of 1929, whose distortion seems deliberately cruel and demystifying. This work is no longer an attempt against the classical nude, but against the contemporary nude, since the setting where the figure is located is reminiscent of Matisse's
Odalisques painted a few years earlier. Here we can perceive the rebellious,
iconoclastic Picasso, always in search of new paths and against all conventionalism, whether of the past or the present. In this sense, he made several versions of classic works of art history, such as ''Parody of Manet's "Olympia"
(1901–1903), The Venus in the Mirror
(1932) and Le Déjeuner sur l'herbe
(1961). From here Picasso began an increasingly abstracted path of the human figure, subjected to an increasingly distorting process, as can be seen in the series of lithographs Les Deux Femmes nues
(1945–1946), which presents a sleeping figure lying down and another sitting awake—perhaps an allusion to the myth of Cupid and Psyche—which in successive phases is shown from naturalistic forms to almost abstraction. Other works of his are: Seated Bathing Girl
(1930), Nude
(1932), The Muse
(1935), Figures on the Beach
(1937), Woman Combing Her Hair
(1940), Massacre in Korea
(1951), Women of Algiers (1955), Women Grooming
(1956), Nude under a Pine Tree'' (1959), etc. Other representatives of Cubism were:
Georges Braque, initiator of the style with Picasso, whose
Large Nude (1908) has a great parallelism with
The Young Ladies of Avignon, with African influence and a certain
totemic air, with a rhythmic movement.
Fernand Léger recreated in his works a volumetric structure of form based on tubes—which is why his style was called "tubism":
Nude in the Forest (1910),
Nude Model in the Studio (1912–1913),
Three Women at Breakfast (1921),
Nudes on a Red Background (1923),
The Three Women on a Red Background (1927),
Two Women Holding Flowers (1954).
Robert Delaunay made in
The City of Paris (1910) a curious mixture of figuration and geometric abstraction, with a space structured into blocks, and a nuanced chromaticism that blurs the forms in the surrounding environment.
Joan Miró went through Fauvism and Cubism before arriving at Surrealism, his best known stage:
Seated Nude Holding a Flower (1917),
Nude with a Mirror (1919),
Standing Nude (1921). In sculpture,
Alexander Archipenko was the creator of "construction", the sculptural variant of collage. In
Woman Walking (1912), he introduced a new analysis of the human figure, broken down into geometric forms and perforated at certain points with holes that create a contrast between the solid and the hollow, in a new way of understanding matter. In
Woman Combing Her Hair (1915) he followed the cubistic criteria of
The Young Ladies of Avignon, and in
Seated Woman (1916) he experimented with concave space, while in
Female Torso (1922) he accentuated the stylization of the figure, a process that culminated in
Torso in Space (1935).
Julio González used iron plates in his sculpture to simulate the
epidermis, in parts of the human body that denote the absence of what would be the body as a whole, an effect accentuated by the emptiness of the work (
Female Bust, 1934;
Torso, 1936).
Henri Laurens worked in a variety of materials, from wood and metal to
papiers collés and
tableaux-
objets, mixed methods and
assemblages, often painted afterwards (
sculpto-peintures). Along with other works, the female figure was one of his greatest sources of inspiration, as in
Woman with a Fan (1921),
Squatting Woman (1922), and
Nude with Mirror (1922).
Futurism (1909–1930) '' (1913), by
Umberto Boccioni,
Museum of Modern Art (MoMA),
New York. An Italian movement that exalted the values of the technical and industrial progress of the 20th century, highlighting aspects of reality such as movement, speed, and simultaneity of action, Futurism aspired to transform the world, to change life, and to show an idealistic, somewhat utopian concept of art as the engine of society. Although the Futurists were not particularly dedicated to the nude, it is worth remembering
Umberto Boccioni and his
Unique Forms of Continuity in Space (1913), a modern version of the classical "
heroic nudity", with which he sought "the abolition of the finite line and the closed statue", giving his figure a centrifugal force. With this sculpture, Boccioni sought to go beyond the impression of movement, exploring the notion of speed and force in sculpture, seeking to assign luminous values to the carved surface. The sculpture exceeds the corporeal limits of the human being and resembles a flag waving in the wind. It seems that the body represented meanders, struggling against an invisible force. Although the (physical) result is a three-dimensional portrait, the moving body introduces a fourth dimension, time.
Dadaism (1916–1922) In response to the disasters of
World War I, Dadaism meant a radical approach to art that rejected any component based on logic or reason, claiming doubt, chance, and the absurdity of existence. This translates into a subversive language, where both the themes and the traditional techniques of art are questioned, experimenting with new materials and new forms of composition, such as
collage,
photomontage and
ready-made. Its main factor was
Marcel Duchamp, who after a Fauvist phase (
Nude with Black Stockings, 1910;
Young Girl and Man in Spring, 1911;
The Thicket, 1910–1911), realized in
Nude Descending a Staircase (1911) a synthesis between Cubism and Futurism, where the body has been decomposed into geometric volumes and serialized in various superimposed movements. In this work, Duchamp distances himself from reality, where the nude has no significance; it is only a means of experimentation. In
The King and Queen with Swift Nudes (1912), he represented the human figure as
chess pieces. One of his most famous works is
The Large Glass (or
The Bride Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors, Even, 1915–1923), abstract nude formed by two sheets of glass joined by a lead frame, and placed in a glass box, installed in the
Philadelphia Museum of Art. According to the instruction book left by the author, the bride undresses to excite the bachelors who court he. However,h their physical separation prevents them from consummating their love, thereby conveying a clear message of the futility of human passions and how the human being transits through life in solitude. Another emblematic work of his was
Given: 1. The Waterfall, 2. The Illuminating Gas (1944–1966), an installation with various materials (a
wooden door, a
gas lamp,
bricks, leather,
firewood,
plexiglass), which presents a woman's body lying on some bushes, seen through a hole in the door, in reference to woman as something inaccessible, enigmatic. Other exponents of Dadaism were:
Francis Picabia, a subversive artist with a strong individualistic temperament, author of nudes such as
Woman and Idol (1940),
The brunette and blonde (1941),
Two Nudes (1941),
Nudes (1942), and
Five Women (1942).
Man Ray was a painter, sculptor, and photographer, one of the most original of the movement, with an overflowing creative fantasy. One of his most famous sculptures is
Venus Restored (1936), a woman's torso reminiscent of a Greek Venus, bound by ropes that encircle her entire body.
Surrealism (1924–1955) , Singapore. Surrealism placed special emphasis on imagination, fantasy, and the world of dreams, with a strong influence of
psychoanalysis, as can be seen in its concept of "
automatic writing", by which they try to express themselves by freeing their minds from any rational bondage, to show the purity of the unconscious. One of his precursors was
Giorgio de Chirico, initiator of the so-called
metaphysical painting, with works of disturbing atmosphere, with empty spaces and strange perspectives, and anthropoid figures resembling mannequins:
Perseus and Andromeda (1910),
Ariana, The Silent Statue (1913),
Roman Women (1926),
Nude Woman (1929),
Nude Self-Portrait (1942),
School of Gladiators (1953).
Salvador Dalí was one of the great geniuses of 20th-century art, with a
megalomaniac and histrionic personality that turned him into a media figure, extolling him as a paradigm of the eccentric artist. He had an academic education, and his first works of adolescence were close to pointillist impressionism (
The Picnic, 1921;
Muse of Cadaqués, 1921;
Nude in a Landscape, 1922–1923;
Bathers of La Costa Brava, 1923). Later, he quickly went through various phases related to avant-garde movements, from Fauvism and Cubism to Futurism and metaphysical painting (
Cubist Composition, 1923, inspired by Matisse's
The Dance;
Female Nude, 1925;
Venus with Cupids, 1925). In 1928, he settled in Paris, where he entered surrealism, of which he would be one of its main representatives, and the following year, he met
Gala Éluard, who would be his great muse, and whom he portrayed on numerous occasions, some of them nude. At that time, he began to show interest in
Freudian psychoanalysis, inventing a method of dream interpretation that he called the "paranoiac-critical method". Much of his psychological reflections center on sex, a recurring theme in his work, which revolves around the Freudian struggle between the principle of pleasure and the principle of reality. Most of his works are from the surrealist phase:
The Great Masturbator (1929),
The Bleeding Roses (1930),
Untitled (William Tell and Gradiva) (1931),
Masochistic Instrument (1933–1934),''The Dream places a Hand on a Man's Shoulder
(1936), The Golden Age – Family of Marsupial Centaurs
(1940–1941), Costume for a Nude with a Codfish Tail
(1941), Honey is Sweeter than Blood
(1941), Dream Caused by the Flight of a Bee Around a Pomegranate a Second Before Awakening (1944), Galarina'' (1944–1945, inspired by Raphael's
La Fornarina),
The Apotheosis of Homer (1944–1945),
My Wife, Naked, Looking at her own Body (1945),
The temptation of Saint Anthony (1946), etc. Between 1940 and 1955, he lived in the United States, where, from 1947, he became interested in religious mysticism,
atomic physics, and perspectives based on the
golden section. From this period are works such as:
Leda Atomica (1949, on the myth of Leda and the swan, where Leda is his wife, Gala),
The Judgment of Paris (1950),
Crucifixion (Corpus Hypercubus) (1954),
Dalí, nude (1954),
Two Adolescents (1954). He later returned to Spain, where he devoted himself to the task of founding a museum, the
Dalí Theater-Museum in
Figueres, while continuing to work:
Gala Nude From Behind Looking in an Invisible Mirror (1960),
Untitled (St. John) (1964),
Tuna Fishing (1966–1967),
The Hallucinogenic Toreador (1968–1970),
Three Hyper-Realist Graces (1973),
Standing Female Nude (1974),
Gala Contemplating the Mediterranean Sea Which at Twenty Meters Becomes the Portrait of Abraham Lincoln – Homage to Rothko (1974–1975),''Dalí's Hand Drawing Back the Golden Fleece in the Form of a Cloud to Show Gala the Dawn, Completely Nude, Very, Very Far Away Behind the Sun'' (1977, inspired by Claude Lorrain's
Landscape with St Paula of Rome Embarking at Ostia),
Imperial Monument to the Child Woman (1977, based on
Bouguereau's
Les Oréades). Dalí was also a sculptor (
The Bust of a Retrospective Woman, 1933;
Hysterical and Aerodynamic, Nude – Woman on the Rock, 1934;
Venus de Milo with Drawers, 1936; ''Michelin's Slave'', 1964, with Michelangelo's
Dying Slave pierced by a Michelin wheel;
Homage to Newton, 1969;
Christ Twisted, 1976), and collaborated with photographer
Philippe Halsman on several photographic compositions:
Cosmic Dali (1948), ''Human Skull Consisting of Seven Naked Women's Bodies'' (1951).
Paul Delvaux was framed in a type of figurative painting, but strangely disturbing, where figures that seem to sleepwalk wander through architectural or landscape spaces of perfect artistry, influenced by
Piero della Francesca and Renaissance perspective, and where naked women coexist with men who look at them with avid voyeurism, or with skeletons reminiscent of the Baroque genre of
vanitas, managing to recreate an atmosphere of nightmarish eroticism. Delvaux conveys a pessimistic vision of love, often relating it to death, in a conjunction of
Eros and
Thanatos. Thus, in
The Sleeping City (1938), he presents a nocturnal city, with classical architecture, where naked women wander like sleepwalkers, representing the myth of the dream woman, unattainable, while a man watches them helplessly. In
Pygmalion (1939), he reverses the roles, with a naked woman embracing a male statue.
The Congress (1941), despite the realism of the image, recreates a disturbing atmosphere, where naked women walk among a group of men who discuss their affairs without noticing them. In
The public road (1948), he presents a reclining Venus reminiscent of those by Giorgione or Titian, but set in the middle of the street, in front of a streetcar advancing towards her. Other works of his are:
The Joy of Life (1929),
Crisis (1930),
Nymphs Bathing (1938),
The Visit (1939),
Entry into the City (1940),
Mermaid in Moonlight (1940),
Wedding (1941),
Venus Sleeping (1944),
The Conversation (1944),
Woman before the Mirror (1945),
The Enigma (1946),
Mermaids (1947),
Leda (1948),
Dryads (1966), etc.
René Magritte developed a body of work in which the ordinary and banal coexist with the fantastic and strange, often with strong erotic connotations, in disturbing atmospheres with a recurring iconography, thereby highlighting the ambiguity of the objects he portrays. In ''The Magician's Accomplices
(1927), despite the realistic figuration, the artist creates a dreamlike atmosphere, leaving interpretation open to the imagination. In Delusions of Grandeur
(1961), he elaborated a female torso sectioned into three parts, which narrow as they ascend, creating a ziggurat shape, like the famous Tower of Babel. Rape
(1934) is a face where a naked torso replaces the face, the eyes being the breasts and the mouth the pubis. Other works of his are: Dangerous Liaisons
(1926), The Forest
(1926), Polar Light
(1927), The gigantic days
(1928), Collective Invention
(1934), Bathing between Light and Darkness
(1935), Flowers of the Devil
(1946), Sea of Flames
(1946), Olympia
(1947), The Freedom of the Spirit
(1948), The Dress of the Night'' (1954), etc.
Óscar Domínguez made automatic associations of objects, where figures elongate and acquire a
gelatinous consistency, combining humor and desire as motors of human activity. In
The electro-sexual sewing machine (1935) he shows a dreamlike delirium where the sexual component is combined with the mechanicity of the industrial era, through a naked woman's body lying face down, with a carnivorous plant devouring her feet and a stream of blood falling on her back through a funnel coming from a
bull's head. It is a representation of
sadistic eroticism, where sex is mixed with death. The bull represents the primitive, the struggle between life and death, while the machine represents the rational, the triumph of man's will over the surrounding environment. Other surrealists who practiced the nude were:
Max Ernst, who used to work in
collage because of his Dadaist training, and who showed a great interest in irrationality and art made by the insane:
The Great Lover (1926),
Young Nudes (1926),
Attirement of the Bride (1940); and
André Masson, interested in the automatic way (free association of ideas), with a gesturalist, aggressive work, with interest in
sadomasochism:
Mathematical Nude (1928), influenced by
Miró. ,
Fitzwilliam Museum,
Cambridge. In sculpture,
Constantin Brâncuşi carried out a process of reduction of the human figure towards the strictest simplicity, close to abstraction (
Sleeping Muse, 1911).
Alberto Giacometti followed in his wake, with figures reduced to simple filaments, which he called "transparent constructions", very elongated and emaciated, showing the isolation of man:
Standing Nude (1953),
Tall Woman (1960).
Hans Bellmer practiced a sadomasochistic eroticism, with articulated mannequins in various postures, such as
The Doll (1934).
Henry Moore was inspired by the human body in many of his works, which feature an abstraction of form in which the body is outlined by simple, dynamic, undulating lines that suggest rather than describe its basic shape. Some of his works, such as
Lying Figure (1938) and
Reclining Figure (1951), are vaguely reminiscent of
Parthenon figures such as
Ilyissus and
Dionysus, but schematized into elongated, flowing forms with meandering lines that evoke the erosion of the sea on a rock.
Frida Kahlo's otherwise personal and unclassifiable work is related to surrealism, reflecting in her canvases her life tormented by an accident that destroyed her
spine and her husband's infidelities. One of her first nudes was
Desnudo de Mujer India (1929), in which she already shows her style: fantastic figuration and intense chromatism, with an abundance of anecdotal elements. In
Unos cuantos piquetitos (1935) she represented a brutal real murder that had occurred shortly before, committed out of jealousy, where the murderer defended himself by saying "but it was only a few
piquetitos!", a scene in which the author projects her pain for her husband's infidelity with her little sister, a fact corroborated by the stab wounds she inflicted on the work as soon as she finished it. In
Two Nudes in a Forest (1939) two naked women appear, one with lighter skin and the other with darker skin, reclining one on top of the other, and observed by a monkey, symbol of sin, in a scene that can have two interpretations: the first would be that of lesbian love, while the second would be a double self-portrait of Frida, capturing her two natures, the European and the Mexican.
The Broken Column (1944) is a self-portrait that shows the steel
corset she had to wear for a while because of the accident that had destroyed her spine, represented by an
Ionic column, while her whole body is pierced with nails, in an image of intense drama; in this painting she initially appeared nude, but finally only her breasts were exposed.
Art Deco (1925–1945) Art Deco was a movement that emerged in France in the mid-1920s and was a revolution in interior design and the
graphic and
industrial arts. Aimed mainly at a
bourgeois public—that of the so-called
Belle Époque—it stood out for ostentation and luxury. It developedd notably in advertising illustration (
Erté) and
poster design (
Cassandre). In painting, the work of
Tamara de Lempicka stood out: she trained with the nabí
Maurice Denis and the cubist
André Lhote, while she felt a great fascination for Ingres, which earned her work the nickname "Ingresian cubism". Later, she had a surrealist phase and then moved towards a certain neoclassicism. Her nudes present women who are a product of their time, elegant and sophisticated, luxurious and
glamorous, as if they were out of a fashion magazine, but subjected to the dictates of a macho society, from which they sometimes seem to rebel, becoming modern heroines whose bodies reveal a vibrant inner power. In contrast to the classical dichotomy between the heavenly Venus and the worldly Venus, Lempicka creates a third type of woman, neither divine nor unapproachable, but neither vulgar nor vilifiable, a modern woman who assumes her sexuality without hindrance, and who is admired and respected by men, a woman of high society who follows the dictates of fashion. Among her works stand out:
The Two Friends (1923),
Perspective (1923),
Sleeping Girl (1923),
Seated Nude (1923),
Rhythm (1924),
Nude on a Terrace (1925),
The Model (1925),
Group of Four Female Nudes (1925),
The Dream (1927),
Andromeda (1927),
The Pink Shirt (1927),
The Beautiful Rafaela (1927),
Women Bathing (1929),
Two Friends (1930),
Nude with Buildings (1930),
Adam and Eve (1932),
Susanna in the Bath (1938), etc.
Spain '' (1913), by
Julio Romero de Torres,
Bilbao Fine Arts Museum. In Spain, the artistic avant-garde developed more slowly, although many Spanish artists were pioneers of the international avant-garde (Picasso, Dalí, Miró). At the beginning of the century, the Spanish artistic scene was still dominated by
academicism, coexisting to a lesser extent with
impressionism and
modernism (especially in
Catalonia), which was replaced in the 1910s by
noucentisme, a classicist movement of Mediterranean inspiration. Even so, little by little, the new currents were introduced, especially cubism, expressionism, and surrealism. In this environment, the nude was a much more frequent theme than in all the previous art practiced in the peninsula, and many Spanish artists competed in international competitions with nude works. Thus, for example,
Julio Romero de Torres owed much of his fame to his academic nudes, but with a certain Leonardesque influence—in his beginnings he was tempted by pointillism, as in
Vividoras del amor (1906), but he soon abandoned it—tinged with a dramatic and sensualist feeling typical of his
Cordovan origin, as can be seen in
The Gypsy Muse (1908),
The Altarpiece of Love (1910),
The Sin (1913),
Venus of Poetry (1913),
The Grace (1915),
Rivalry (1925–1926),
A Present to the Bullfighting Art (1929),
Cante Jondo (1929), ''Trini's granddaughter
(1929), etc. Ignacio Zuloaga was influenced by Toulouse-Lautrec, but his work is nourished by the masters of the Prado, with works in a costumbrist style, including The Italian
, the Nude of the Mantilla and the Carnation
(1915), and La Oterito
(1936). Other outstanding artists are: José Gutiérrez Solana (Las chicas de la Claudia
, 1929), Marceliano Santa María (Angélica y Medoro
, 1910; Figuras de romance
, 1934), Fernando Álvarez de Sotomayor (Orfeo atacado por las bacantes
, 1904; El rapto de Europa
, 1907; Leda y el cisne
, 1918), Francisco Soria Aedo (Pasión
, Fauno galante
, Fruto de amor
, Juventud de Baco
), Gabriel Morcillo (Alegoría a Baco
, Fantasía morisca
), Eduardo Chicharro (Los amores de Armida y Reinaldo
, 1904; Las tentaciones de Buda
, 1922), Eugenio Hermoso (El baño de las zagalas
, 1923; Tierra, Fauna y Flora
, 1923; Melancolía
, 1926; Madreselvas
, 1926), Roberto Fernández Balbuena (Desnudo de espaldas
, 1926; Desnudo Pittsburgh
, 1926; Desnudos luz sombra
, 1929), Néstor Martín-Fernández de la Torre (Adagio
, 1903; Calma
, Pleamar
y Borrasca
de la serie Poema del Atlántico
, 1918–1924), Juan de Echevarría (La mestiza desnuda
, 1923), Francisco Iturrino (Mujeres en el campo
, Mujeres en la playa
), Hermenegildo Anglada Camarasa (Gitana bajo una parra
, 1909), Joaquim Sunyer (Pastoral
, 1911; Paisaje con cuatro desnudos
, 1915; Desnudo en el campo
, 1925), Aurelio Arteta (Bañistas
, 1930; Hombres del mar
, 1932), Josep Maria Sert (Francisco de Vitoria Room at the Palais des Nations in Geneva), Rafael Zabaleta (Nocturno del desnudo
, 1954), etc. In the sculptural field, we could mention: Mariano Benlliure (Maja desnuda
, 1902), Enric Clarasó (Eva
, 1904), Josep Llimona (Desconsuelo
, 1907), Miguel Blay (Eclosión
, 1908), Mateo Inurria (Deseo
, 1914; Forma
, 1920), Josep Clarà (El Crepúsculo
, 1907–1910; La Diosa
, 1909; Ritmo
, 1910; Juventud
, 1928), Julio Antonio (Venus Mediterránea
, 1914), Victorio Macho (Monument to Santiago Ramón y Cajal
, 1926), Pablo Gargallo (Gran bailarina
, 1929; El profeta'', 1933), etc.
Latest trends ,
St. Petersburg, Florida. Since
World War II, art has undergone a vertiginous evolutionary dynamic, with styles and movements that have followed each other more and more rapidly over time. The modern project originated with the historical avant-gardes. It culminated in various anti-material styles that emphasized the intellectual origins of art over its material realization, such as action art and
conceptual art. Once this level of analytical prospection of art was reached, the inverse effect was produced—as is usual in the history of art, where different styles confront and oppose each other, the rigor of some succeeding the excess of others, and vice versa—returning to the classical forms of art, accepting its material and esthetic component, and renouncing its revolutionary and society-transforming character. This is how
postmodern art emerged: the artist shamelessly transitions between different techniques and styles, without a vindictive character, returning to artisanal work as the essence of the artist. Finally, at the end of the century, new techniques and supports appeared in the field of art: video,
computing, internet,
laser,
holography, etc.
Informalism (1945–1960) Informalism is a group of tendencies that emphasize the artist's expressiveness, renouncing any rational aspect of art (structure, composition, or preconceived application of color). It is an eminently abstract art, although some artists retain figuration, in which the material support of the work becomes relevant and assumes the leading role over any theme or composition. It includes various currents such as
tachisme,
art brut,
matter painting or
abstract expressionism in the United States. Informalist artists have experienced first hand the horrors of war, so their work is imbued with pessimism, with a vital despair that translates into aggressive works, where the human figure is mutilated, deformed, crushed, highlighting the fragility and vulnerability of the human being, as seen in the work of artists like
Dubuffet, who crushes the figures, opening them up like an
ox;
Fautrier, who disfigures the human form, reducing it to a formless nudity; or
Antonio Saura, who creates monsters in black and white, even of beauties like
Brigitte Bardot. These authors seek to destroy the idea of Beauty, Nude, Harmony, all those ideals that academic art treated with capital letters. They distance themselves from Western culture, which has engendered these horrors, returning to primitivism, to the infancy of humanity. To do so, they also use new materials considered dirty, detritic, and unworthy, such as mud, plaster, sacks, etc. Instead of using brushes, they even use their hands to scratch the canvas, emphasizing the gestural effect.
Jean Fautrier made nudes where the figure is deformed, made from different color textures, on paper supports, treated with plaster and glue, on which he applies a raw substance, made with inks and powders, on which he draws or scratches, until he achieves the desired image.
Jean Dubuffet began in 1950 his series of
Bodies of a Lady—an
antinomian title, since it contrasts the materiality of the body with the spirituality of the meaning of "lady", which gives a high dignity to women—made with raw materials, drawing the figure with scratches, and treating the body as a mass that is crushed on the support, as in a butcher's board.
Willem de Kooning made female nudes, but distorted to the maximum, with great color. His
Women series (1945–1950) is halfway between figuration and abstraction, in which the female figure is reduced to spots of color, applied aggressively and expressively, with contours that evoke prehistoric fertility goddesses as well as obscene street paintings.
Antoni Tàpies is basically an abstract painter, although in his works he sometimes introduces parts of the human body, especially the genitals, in schematic forms, often with the appearance of deterioration; the body appears torn, assaulted, pierced. This can be seen in
The inner fire (1953), a human torso in the form of a
burlap cloth decomposed by burns;
Ochre and pink relief (1965), a kneeling female figure;
Matter in the form of an armpit (1968), in which he adds real hair to the figure of a torso showing the armpit;
Body (1986) reflects a recumbent figure, evocative of death—which is accentuated by the word "
Tartaros", the Greek hell; in
Days of Water I (1987) we see a body submerged in waves of gray paint, evoking the legend of
Hero and Leander. Other works of his are:
Two Figures (1947),
Varnish Nude (1980),
Torso (1985),
Prajna = Dhyana (1993),
Man (2002),
Black Jersey (2008), etc.
New figuration (1945–1960) In response to informalist abstraction, a movement arose that recovered figuration, with a certain expressionist influence and a total freedom of composition. Although it was based on figuration, this did not mean it was realistic; it could be deformed or schematized to the artist's taste. The
existentialist philosophy and its pessimistic vision of the human being had a decisive influence on the genesis of this style, and it was linked to the
beat movement and the
angry young men. One of its main exponents was
Francis Bacon, an artist with a personal, solitary trajectory, alien to the avant-garde—in the 1930s, when he began to paint, he was rejected for not being a surrealist or abstract artist. In 1944, he destroyed all his previous work. He began his most personal style with
Three Studies of Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion, where he used a traditional medium, the
triptych, to expose figures whose nudity is deformed, vulnerable, mocked, framed in unreal spaces, which resemble boxes that enclose the figures in an oppressive, anguished atmosphere. His nudes, both male and female, look like lumps of amorphous flesh, writhing and fighting a desperate struggle for existence. They have an oily consistency and a cadaverous pallor, accentuated by the artificial,
bulb-like light, resembling butcher's meat rather than human flesh. A great lover of art—he often visited the
Museo del Prado—he made versions of many works by Velázquez or Rembrandt. Other works of his are:
Study for Crouching Nude (1952),
Nude (1960),
Reclining Figure (1966), etc. For
Lucian Freud the nude was one of his main themes, which he treated in a realistic, stark, detailed way, without omitting any detail, from veins and muscles to wrinkles and any imperfection of the skin. They are raw, epidermal, expressive, intimate nudes, the human being stripped of any accessory, pure and free as he comes into the world. They are somewhat distressing nudes, as they reflect the vulnerability of mortal flesh, the loneliness of our worldly transit, and they remind us of the perishability of life. His first nudes have an academic tone, still idealized, like his
Sleeping Nude (1950), but little by little they become more expressive, with loose brushstrokes and a more intense chromatism, as in
MNaked girl laughing (1963), which is one of his daughters. Between the 1960s and 1970s he reaches his definitive style, with figures in intimate, carefree postures, in frames reminiscent of photography, with a linear drawing and marked contours, with an intense light and a strong chromaticism where the carnal tones stand out, arranged in colored spots:
Naked girl sleeping (1968),
Naked man with a rat (1977–1978),
Rose (1979),
Seated figure (1980–82),
Naked man on a bed (1987),
Naked man seen from behind (1992),
Two women (1992),
And the groom (1993),
Painter at work, reflection (1993, self-portrait of the artist nude),
Flora with blue toenails (2000–2001)
, The Painter Surprised by a Naked Admirer (2005).
Balthus was a painter obsessed by a theme, the sexual awakening of young adolescents, which he used to represent in interiors of languid appearance and intense illumination, with a somewhat naive eroticism, but denoting a certain air of perversity:
The Guitar Lesson (1934),
The Living Room (1941–1943),
Girl Sleeping (1943),
The Bedroom (1947),
The Room (1952),
Nude Before the Mirror (1955),
Young Woman Preparing for the Bath (1958),
Cat in the Mirror (1977–1980),
Nude Lying Down (1983),
Latent (1995).
Ivan Albright was framed in the so-called
magical realism, with a meticulously detailed style, portraying with rigorous precision the decadence, corruption and spoils of age, with great emotional intensity (
And Man Created God in His Own Image, 1929–1930). In sculpture,
Germaine Richier, who followed in the footsteps of Giacometti in stylized figures with elongated limbs, resembling insects, with a lacerated and tattered appearance, as if in decomposition, giving equal importance to emptiness and matter (
Shepherd on the Landes, 1951); and
Fernando Botero, author of large figures that resemble swollen dolls (
Female Torso (La Gorda), 1987;
Woman with Mirror, 1987;
The Rape of Europe, 1994). '
Pop-art
(1955–1970)' It emerged in Great Britain and the United States as a movement to reject
abstract expressionism, encompassing a series of authors who returned to figuration, with a marked popular component, drawing on images from advertising, photography, comics, and mass media.
Pop-art assumed sex as something natural, unabashedly, within the framework of the sexual liberation of the 1960s advocated by the
hippie movement. The first work considered pop art was
Richard Hamilton's ''Just What is It That Makes Today's Homes So Different, so Appealing?
(1956), which was the poster for the This is Tomorrow'' exhibition at the White Chapel Art Gallery in London; it was a
photomontage, which exalted
consumerism as a modernizing element, where everyday objects become works of art, and where a
bodybuilder and a half-naked woman appeared as objects in the scene.
Tom Wesselmann made in the series
Great American Nudes (1960s) a set of works where the nude is shown as a consumer product, with an advertising aesthetic and close to
Playboy-type erotic magazines, accentuated by the flatness of the works and the simplification of colors with Matissian roots, highlighting the most "objectual" body parts (red lips, white teeth, blond hair, prominent breasts), along with various decorative objects, fruits or flowers. The bodies have a cold, artificial consistency, like inflatable dolls, and usually present the typical white areas left by
bikinis in contrast with the rest of the more tanned body. In the series
Bathrooms (1963), he moved into three-dimensionality, in which his typical nude paintings appeared with real objects such as curtains, towels, detergents, or nail polish, or were seen through a half-open door, thereby emphasizing the voyeuristic effect. In
Still Life (1963), a nude woman appears with a concave ashtray—symbol of the female sex—and a cigarette—phallic symbol—in a somewhat
kitsch environment, with pure colors.
Mel Ramos produced works of a more evident eroticism, close to pornography, with female figures that look like
Pin-Ups, as in
Miss Corn-Flakes (1964) or
Philip Morris. Tobacco Rose (1965).
Roy Lichtenstein specialized in images similar to those of comics, even highlighting the characteristic stippling of the printing processes. Between 1993 and 1994, he made his series of
Nudes: Nude Thinking, Two Nudes, Nude with Blue Hair. New Realism (1958–1970) French movement inspired by the world of surrounding reality,
consumerism and industrial society, from which they extract—unlike
pop-art—its most unpleasant aspects, with a special predilection for harmful materials. One of its main exponents was
Yves Klein, a revolutionary artist who was a precursor of conceptual and action art. During his "blue period", when he painted monochromatic paintings in an intense ultramarine blue—which he baptized as
International Klein Blue (IKB), a registered trademark—he made several nude sculptures inspired by the classical Venus, but dyed blue, as well as a version of Michelangelo's
Dying Slave. He also made several plaster casts of his friends, all nude and painted blue, such as
Relief Portrait of Claude Pascal (1962) and
Relief Portrait of Arman (1962). In 1958 he began his "
anthropometries", where a nude model—which he called his "living brushes"—smeared with paint, lay down on a canvas, leaving the imprint of her body painted on the canvas, in various imprints that varied according to the position of the body, or according to the movement, as he sometimes rotated the models on the canvas. Sometimes, he also made "negative anthropometries", that is, by placing the model in front of the canvas and spraying paint, thus marking her silhouette. These experiences mark the point of origin of
body-art, at the same time that they prelude the
happenings, because of the staging that Klein conferred to these realizations, often developed in galleries in front of the public, in evenings with music and tasting an aperitif.
Action art (since 1960) , in an exhibition at the Casa de los Tiros in
Granada. These are diverse tendencies in artistic creation, where the important thing is not the work itself but the creative process, in which, in addition to the artist, the public often intervenes, with a large component of improvisation. It encompasses various artistic manifestations such as
happening,
performance,
environment,
installation, etc. The members of the
Gutai group in Japan could be considered pioneers:
Katsuō Shiraga performed in
Back to the Mud, an action in which he submerged himself naked in the
mud, as an idea of death, of the return to the primordial matter. These artists were very marked by the experience of the
Second World War. In Europe, the
Fluxus group and artists like
Wolf Vostell stood out, who made several
happenings where he intervened the nude: in
Disasters (Vagina cement formwork) (1972) he immobilized a train carriage and a naked woman with reinforced concrete for 24 hours; in
Fandango (1975) he made a "concert for two violins, operator and model": while he played the violin, the operator with a mountain chain cut car doors, and the naked model listened with her eyes covered. Vostell's actions had a strong political component, denouncing social injustice, the destruction of nature, the arms race, discrimination against women, and other similar causes.
Hyperrealism (from 1965) As a reaction to the
minimalism in vogue in the 1950s and 1960s, this new figurative current emerged, characterized by a superlative, exaggerated vision of reality, captured with great accuracy in all its details, with an almost photographic aspect.
John Kacere paints fragments of female bodies, especially sexes and buttocks with tight panties. In sculpture,
John De Andrea makes nudes with a strong sexual charge (
The Artist and his Model, 1976). In Spain,
Antonio López García is the author of academic works, but where the most meticulous description of reality is combined with a vague, unreal aspect close to
magical realism. Some of his nudes are:
Woman in the bathtub (1968), a work of photographic effect, a woman takes a bath in an environment of electric light that is reflected in the bathroom tiles, creating an intense and vibrant composition;
Man and woman (1968–1990), a work on which he worked more than twenty years and left unfinished, aims to create common prototypes of man and woman, for which he took multiple notes of various models, synthesized in a standard forms that could correspond to any person in the street.
Conceptual art (1965–1980) After the material stripping of minimalism, conceptual art renounced the material substratum to focus on the mental process of artistic creation, affirming that art is in the idea, not in the object. It includes several tendencies, such as
linguistic conceptual art,
Arte Povera,
body-art,
land-art,
bio-art, etc. Various genres of social vindication, such as
feminist art and
homoerotic art, could also be included in this trend. In relation to the nude, of special relevance is
body-art, a movement that emerged in the late 1960s and developed in the 1970s, which touched on various themes related to the body, especially in relation to violence, sex,
exhibitionism or bodily resistance to certain physical phenomena. Two lines are evident in this movement: the American, more analytical, where the action is more valued, the vital, instantaneous component, valuing more the perception and the relationship with the viewer, and documented with
Videos; and the European, more dramatic, which tends more to treat the body objectually and touch on issues such as
transvestism,
tattooing or pain, documenting the results through photographs, notes or drawings. One of its greatest exponents,
Dennis Oppenheim, experimented with
tanning, leaving parts of the body white.
Stuart Brisley made spots on his body to imitate blood. The
Viennese Actionism group (
Günther Brus,
Otto Mühl,
Hermann Nitsch and
Rudolf Schwarzkogler) performed self-mutilations, incising their own bodies.
Youri Messen-Jaschin focused on
body painting, integrally covering naked bodies with
psychedelic and
biological colors.
Urs Lüthi uses various media (photography, painting, sculpture, video), exploring his own body in
kitsch self-portraits, with a strong ironic charge, which constitute a reflection on the body, time, and life, as well as the relationship with others. In 2001, he presented two installations at the
Venice Biennale that are among his best-known works (
Run for your life and
Placebos and surrogates), in which the central theme is the excessive cult of the body.
Feminist art has sought to vindicate the image of woman as a person rather than an object, focusing on her essence, both material and spiritual, and highlighting aspects of her sexual condition, such as
menstruation,
motherhood, etc. An essential aspect is the message, the attempt to make the viewer reflect, if necessary, through provocation, with shocking works that stir the conscience. One of the ways of diluting gender differences has been through the degradation or mutilation of the body: thus,
Donna Haraway creates neutral, transhuman bodies, which she calls "cyborg bodies".
Cindy Sherman makes deliberately ugly, repulsive female nudes to demystify gender.
Judy Chicago defends the value of women as more than just beautiful bodies, in works such as
Red Flag (1971).
Zoe Leonard shows the body in its crudest reality, as in her series
Vagina (1990), inspired by
Courbet's
The Origin of the World.
Kiki Smith makes fragile sculptures of fragmented bodies, highlighting the processes of reproduction, with scatological elements. In the 1970s, the organization
Women Against Rape criticized—among other aspects of Western culture—the female nude in painting, considering that the representation of the naked female body is a form of rape. In the 1980s, the
Guerrilla Girls group launched a campaign under the slogan "Do women have to be naked to enter the Metropolitan Museum?", highlighting the fact that less than 5% of the contemporary artists in this museum are women, but 85% of the nudes are female.
Postmodern art (since 1975) As opposed to the so-called
modern art, it is the art proper to
postmodernity. Postmodern artists assume the failure of the avant-garde movements as the failure of the modern project: the avant-garde intended to eliminate the distance between art and life, to universalize art; the postmodern artist, on the other hand, is self-referential, art speaks of art, and does not intend to do social work. Among the various postmodern movements, the Italian
transavantgarde and German
neo-expressionism stand out, as well as neo-mannerism,
free figuration, etc. In Italy,
Sandro Chia creates an autobiographical work that portrays moments of his own existence, along with references to the history of art, especially the artists he is most interested in, such as Cézanne, Picasso, and Chagall.
In The Slave (1980) he made a symbiosis of Michelangelo's
Dying Slave and Botticelli's
The Birth of Venus, as a way of demystifying art. In Germany,
Markus Lüpertz creates highly expressive works that emphasize the grandeur of his formats and the fascinating colors that permeate his paintings. Thematically, he usually starts from figurative themes to derive them towards abstraction, gathering diverse influences from the art of the past; in particular, he is often inspired by the landscape and the human body, which he reinterprets in a personal and spontaneous way:
St. Francis prevents the extermination of rats (1987).
Georg Baselitz is characterized by his images of inverted figures and objects, with rotund, heavy forms, inspired by Rubens:
Bedroom (Elke and Georg) (1975) and
Male Nude (1975).
Rainer Fetting uses bodily elements to reproduce his vision of reality, using bright colors, with an acid aspect and Vangoghian influence:
2 Figures (1981). In the United States,
David Salle has been ascribed to various American postmodern trends, such as simulationism or
Bad Painting. One of his first works, in a pornographic magazine, was one of his most recurrent sources of inspiration: eroticism, images of naked women treated realistically, without modesty. The main characteristic of Salle's style is the juxtaposition of images, a disorganized and incoherent superposition of images coming from art history, design, advertising, media, comics, popular culture, etc. Some of his works are:
Zeitgeist Painting Nr. 4 (1982),
King Kong (1983), ''The Miller's Tale
(1984). Eric Fischl cultivates a realistic style inspired by the American pictorial tradition (Winslow Homer, Edward Hopper), portraying naked women who seem to refer to the figure of the mother, in disturbing images enhanced by the intense chromatic ranges: The Old Man's Dog and the Old Man's Boat'' (1982). In Spain,
Miquel Barceló evokes the heritage of the past, from the Spanish baroque to Goya, in his work, interpreted in a free and personal way, with a certain primitivist air derived from his stays in Mali:
Venus bruta (1980). == Non-Western Art ==