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Hannah Wilke: “SOS” - Starification Object Series
(1974)
Womanhouse (1972)
Judy Chicago and Miriam Schapiro
Reclaiming
Throughout the history of art, the representations of women have been one of the central themes of art practice, often distorting and appropriating the image of women to provide pleasure for men, in both directions of creating and viewing the artwork. When the term “the male gaze” was introduced by British feminist film theorist Laura Mulvey in her 1975 essay, Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema, it referred to the entire spectrum of objectification of female bodies and their voluntary or involuntary subjection to the act of observing, coming from a male counterpart, which as a social phenomenon that occurs not only in visual culture is effectively contained and explained through the analysis of the male-dominated art history. As a part of the inheritance of patriarchal structure, it has not only omitted many of the female artists throughout the centuries of art practice, condemning them to being obliterated and overlooked and thus inhibiting the natural progress of continuation of female artists upon the legacy of the previous generations, but it also reconfirmed the position of a woman in the society, presenting her as an object that is to be looked upon, and thus it created a set of norms that encourages further objectification of the female body. It is used as a tool of visual culture that would soon evolve from the paintings of academic nudes to the hyper-sexualised advertisements, feeding of consumerism and manipulated sexuality, but the core principles of idealisation and degrading decorative purpose of women for either aesthetic formalities or commercial success remains essentially unchanged, as it asserts the values that are preferred within the society, and thus they are, regardless whether they are directed towards female or male audience, forcing their demands and standards of physical appearance and behaviour upon the female individuals as the examples that are rewarded and desirable.
Giuseppe Penone, Soffio di creta H (Clay Breath H)
1978
terra-cotta, 63 x 31

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Jannis Kounellis’s “Untitled (12 Horses)” at Gavin Brown’s enterprise, 2015
"My artwork shows, with the language of sculpture, the essence of matter and tries to reveal with the work, the hidden life within." –Giuseppe Penone What better way to appreciate nature and the wonders of life than with a simply amazing art sculpture like this? In The Hidden Life Within, Italian artist Guiseppe Penone carves …
Mario Merz, Lingotto, 1968
Jannis Kounellis Untitled 1968 Wood and wool
Humani Poveri
When the term Arte Povera was coined in 1968 by the critic Germano Celant, it referred to the art that visually articulated the current protests of the youth against the established institutions that enabled the preservation of the social systems that relied on class and wealth, with inherited elitism and decaying cultural values. In his writing, which would become almost a manifesto of the movement, he advocated the confrontation of the societal arrangement by departure from its favouring of conformity and the importance of financial profit, by returning to more human values and embracing the fluidity of creative processes that did not correspond to the demand of the art market, resulting in an artwork that does not only reject the usual standards of fine art but the entire fine art language as the fundament of the establishment. It replaced the traditional media that have been used for high refinement with the low or mundane materials that had not been associated with the domain of fine art, freeing the artwork from the conventions of thought and form as well, emphasising the experience of the object itself and the pathway of its creation, alluding to the more profound philosophical ideas concerning the relationship with the world and the overall human existence.

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Pleasure Sold
“Pop Art should be popular, transient, expendable, low-cost, mass-produced, young, witty, sexy, gimmicky, glamorous, and big business.”
Pop Art was born from the newly discovered wonders of the consumer culture and the growing post-WWII economy of the USA, characterised by the sense of optimism for the new technologies and the bright possibilities that the modern future further prepares. The growth of the market created an abundance of everything, with the constant acceleration of the wheel of the demand and production; it filled the supermarkets with an unseen amount of food and domestic items, stacked in rows and rows of colourful packagings and memorable branding. It introduced fashion that changed annually and relied on the consumeristic need to discard the old in order to buy the new, completing the circle of capitalism that was spinning on the transient satisfaction of the shopper and their urge to accumulate and spend. Everything was becoming fast and shiny, extremely attractive and responding to the current need, yet it was all impermanent and awfully replaceable in the next shopping spree. Wealth equalled the amount of objects that have been accumulated, and the post-war relief of anxiety of scarcity turned the insatiable public consumer appetite into an instinct of survival. With instant food and instant gratification, fast commute and improved domesticity, life appeared to be as easy and as pleasurable as ever, concealing the rotten core of consumer culture hidden under the flashy, fabulous surface.
Richard Hamilton, Just what is it that makes today's homes so different, so appealing? (1956)
Roy Lichtenstein, Drowning Girl, 1963
Andy Warhol, Marilyn Diptych 1962
Gold Marilyn Monroe, Andy Warhol, 1962

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Franz Kline, Painting Number 2, 1954