Nude and Naked Women in the Arts: Mexico and Beyond
By (Author) Eli Bartra
Foreword by Francesca Gargallo Celentani
Translated by Ellen Jones
Translated by Jessie Mndez Sayer
Translated by Andrea Knowles
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
23rd September 2022
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Gender studies: women and girls
Ethnic studies / Ethnicity
704.9421
Hardback
298
Width 157mm, Height 238mm, Spine 23mm
572g
Nude and Naked Women in the Arts: Mexico and Beyond is a study of female nudity as represented by men and women in Mexico and other parts of the world through analysis of both the high arts and folk arts. Eli Bartra explores the diverse forms of artistic expression and their link to the social construction of female gender. This approach is crucial to understanding how forms of discrimination are created and recreated sometimes in very apparent ways and other times more subtly and how they contribute to the perpetuation of gender hierarchies. Eli Bartra examines the assertion of gender differences in artistic creation and the sexist (and at times misogynistic) imagery of nude women as represented by men.
Eli Bartra has used her encyclopedic mastery of Mexican art to produce a book of critical and intellectual importance. Nudes and Naked Women in the Arts offers a gendered, feminist analysis of nudes and nakedness in art. Her comments on specific works of art will not only fascinate readers but will also work against over-simplification and over-generalization. Equally important, it puts Mexican artists' use of nudes and nakedness into a conversation with related work in other parts of the globe, and in doing so counters a traditional art criticism that has neglected work from the global south.
--Linda Gordon, New York University and author of Dorothea Lange: A Life Beyond LimitsIn Nudes and Naked Women in the Arts, Eli Bartraoffers an ambitious and successful overview of the female nude in western and Mexican art, skillfully dissecting the male gaze in canonical works and contrasting it with women and queer artists' distinct, often decolonizing portrayals of naked women. From Goya's Nude Maja to Oaxaca folk artist Josefina Aguilar Alcntara's clay mermaids, the range of art and the depth of Bartra's analysis are breathtaking.
--John Lear, University of Puget Sound and author of Picturing the ProletariatEli Bartra is distinguished professor in women's studies at Universidad Autnoma Metropolitana-Xochimilco, Mexico City.