Comprehensive Survey of Women as Protagonists at Museum Thyssen-Bornemisza

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Comprehensive Survey of Women as Protagonists at Museum Thyssen-Bornemisza
Carmen Cervera, the Baroness Thyssen, poses for a photograph at the exhibition Heroines at the Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum in Madrid, Spain, 07 March 2011. The exhibition, which runs until 05 June, consists of 121 works representing women as strong, independent and active members of society throughout history. EPA/PACO CAMPOS.



MADRID.- The Museo Thyssen‐Bornemisza and Fundación Caja Madrid present Heroines, a comprehensive survey of the depiction of women as the protagonists of key roles and as manifestations of the gender identity crisis in western art. The exhibition, on view until 5 June 2011, focuses on strong women: active, independent, defiant, inspired, creative, dominating and triumphant. These female figures are notably different to the seductive, complacent, defeated or enslaved ones that acted out the submissive and passive models traditionally associated with two prevailing and associated stereotypes: motherhood and the erotic object. To employ a key term in feminist discourse from the last two decades, this exhibition focuses on images that have the potential to be sources of empowerment for women themselves.

From Greek mythology to the subversive images of contemporary feminist artists, from the great figures of the Christian tradition to anonymous modern women reading the papers, Heroines presents around 120 works that constitute a complete catalogue of female figures of the widest variety of types and from different eras: Penelope and Iphigenia, Artemis and Athena, intoxicated bacchantes and furious maenads, Atalanta, the fastest woman on earth, hunters and athletes, archers and nudists, Joan of Arc and other virgin warriors, Amazons and Valkyries, the sorceresses Circe and Medea, Saint Catherine of Alexandria who converted fifty pagan philosophers, Saint Eulalia, crucified in the manner of Christ, Sappho of Lesbos, Mary Magdalen reading, Saint Theresa levitating, Artemisia Gentileschi, Frida Kahlo and other great women painters.

The exhibition also presents a type of “city of women” that focuses in particular on the period of modern art from the 19th century to the present, although examples are included form the Renaissance onwards. Following a thematic rather than chronological order, it explores the contexts and vocations of these heroines, the iconography of solitude, work, war, magic, intoxication, sport, religion, reading and painting.

Each chapter of the exhibition juxtaposes works from different periods and in different artistic idioms and media with the aim of encouraging the visitor to reflect on change and permanence through these differences. In each section the voices of one or more great women artists respond to the images created by their illustrious male colleagues: Caravaggio, Rubens, Rembrandt, Goya, Delacroix, Pissarro, Degas, Munch, Nolde, Malevich, Hopper; living female artists (Marina Abramovic, Kiki Smith, Mona Hatoum, Julia Fullerton‐Batten, Rineke Dijkstra), and women artists of other periods (including Mary Cassat, Lee Krasner, Nancy Spero, Angelica Kauffmann, Berthe Morisot).

GALLERIES OF THE MUSEO THYSSEN‐BORNEMISZA

1. Solitude
The exhibition opens in the exhibition space of the Museo Thyssen‐Bornemisza with a section on the original condition of the heroine: that of solitude. Presented here are lone women, starting with modern images of classical heroines such as Penelope and Iphigenia. Their act of waiting and longing ‐ seemingly passive activities ‐ contains a germ of independence and even of resistance. Modern heroines of solitude, however, no longer identify themselves with Penelope but with Ulysses. Rather than waiting for the absent hero, they become travellers themselves.

2. Peasant Women, Caryatids
An entire tradition of 19th‐century painting focused on the epic of the countrywoman or peasant woman. The second section of the exhibition is devoted to mowers and threshers, water carriers and washerwomen; robust, monumental women who supported the structure of the family and of society like architectural caryatids. The rhetoric of these images is ambiguous: on the one hand it exalts the working woman, but at the same time it celebrates her servitude as her natural, eternal destiny. Daughters of the Earth, tied to it for life, these peasant‐caryatids are enchained heroines.

3. Maenads and Bacchantes
On occasions the bacchante appears in painting as an erotic‐decorative toy created for the delight of the voyeur. Behind this role, however, stalks the terrifying violence of the mythological maenads, endowed with supernatural powers and capable of pulling up a tree with their bare hands or tearing apart a bull (or a man). The enraged maenad, destroyer of men and rebel against patriarchal order, who fascinated a number of 19th‐century artists, is a typical example of an image that has been revived by contemporary women artists as a source of empowerment.

4. Hunters and Athletes
Like Artemis and her nymphs, the mortal Atalanta rejected the cult of Aphrodite and was outstanding in supposedly male activities such as hunting, wrestling and running races. Her figure involves a potential threat to gender roles that has been repeatedly deactivated, from Ovid to pictorial representations of the myth. In Victorian painting, however, the iconography of female hunters and athletes from antiquity was revived as an image of the emancipation of the female body and of the right to engage in physical exercise as a forerunner of the conquest of other social and political rights.

5 y 6 . Virgins in Armour and The Return of the Amazons
The first part of the exhibition concludes with the image of the female warrior, firstly in the form of virgin warriors or maidens in armour, following the paradigm of Joan of Arc. Armour allowed women to dress as men in order to engage in a typically male activity, but it is simultaneously an effective metaphor of virginity. In addition, in late 19th‐century art by painters as diverse as Degas and Franz von Stuck, female warriors shed their armour and return to the original image of classical Amazons. At the same time they are associated with the claims for women’s rights that first made their appearance during this period.

EXHIBITION SPACE OF FUNDACIÓN CAJA MADRID

7, 8 y 9. Sorceresses, Martyrs and Mystics
In the first part of the exhibition, on display at the Museo Thyssen‐ Bornemisza, the physical power of heroines prevails. The second part, presented in the galleries of Fundación Caja Madrid, explores the spiritual power of sorceresses, martyrs and mystics, who were frequently stigmatised as witches, mad women or hysterics. Depictions of sorceresses in paintings often reduced these figures to the role of femme fatale, defined in relation to male desire and ignoring their facet of orphic figures that humanise and civilise beasts and men. Rather than mere victims, martyr saints are heroines who triumph over their persecutors and torturers. In addition, the supernatural faculty of levitation characteristic of some mystic saints and possessed women may be an image of women’s experience in transitional periods such as adolescence.

10. Readers
A vestige of the spiritual, magical and mystical powers habitually attributed to women in traditional iconography survives in the figure of the female reader. Reading created a bubble in which women can live out their lives through other lives; it is an interior activity that escapes pictorial representation. Given that we cannot read the text, we can “read” the body of the reader, who acts out or somatises what she reads. One example is the typology of the Mary Magdalen figure that accompanies her reading with tears of repentance. Others include the pious reader, the curious or daydreaming reader and the modern woman reading the paper.

11. Before the Mirror
Following this survey of numerous female figures created by men, the final section of the exhibition is devoted to images that women have created before the mirror. It analyses the development of self‐ portraits by female artists from Sophonisba Anguissola to Frida Kahlo. Self‐portraits allowed women to be author or creator (a role traditionally considered a masculine one) while continuing to be the model (the conventional female role). This judicious combination of the active and the passive and this act of becoming the subject without abandoning the role of beautiful object, was the key to the success of the female self‐portrait in a patriarchal society and one that, furthermore, personified Vanity as a woman looking in the mirror. Within the history of the self‐portrait, women artists at times emphasised their gender identity and depicted themselves accompanied by other women, children or objects that functioned as conventional, feminine accessories. On numerous other occasions, however, they depicted themselves in a way comparable to a male painter, wearing artist’s clothes, holding a palette and brushes and looking out at the viewer, perhaps due to their even greater need to claim their status as professional painters.










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