性、符号、颠覆:19 世纪欧洲的象征主义艺术与男性同性恋

IF 0.3 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Arts Pub Date : 2024-06-05 DOI:10.3390/arts13030103
Ty Vanover
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引用次数: 0

摘要

象征主义有些怪异。艺术史学家们早已认识到象征主义美学与同时代的人类性观念之间的联系,即使是粗略地研究一下象征主义男艺术家在欧洲大陆创作的艺术作品,也会发现大量令人瞠目的肌肉发达的裸体、婀娜多姿的胴体和亲密的男欢女爱。感性的男性身体可以记录艺术家的色情欲望,甚至可以将其作为超验真理的理想化象征。不过,象征主义的 "同性恋 "也许并不局限于主题。学者们认为,象征主义在某种程度上是由视觉符号学的颠覆性方法所定义的:切断符号与其既定文化意义之间的联系,我们可以说这是一种同性恋。同样,男性同性恋亚文化也是通过赋予既定符号和图像以独特的同性恋意义而得以维系的。本文试图从对图像阐释的共同感受出发,探讨象征主义美学与男性同性恋之间的关系。我以瑞典象征主义艺术家欧仁-扬松(Eugène Jansson)的作品为例,认为象征主义对同性恋艺术家具有吸引力,正是因为同性恋亚文化习惯于从规范的图画中解读颠覆性的意义。我对象征主义的性价值进行了新的解读,将该运动的相关艺术作品置于同性恋符号和象征的更广阔的文化背景中,并阐明了象征主义的图像方法与 19 世纪晚期同性恋观看模式之间的相似之处。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Sex, Sign, Subversion: Symbolist Art and Male Homosexuality in 19th-Century Europe
There is something queer about Symbolism. Art historians have long acknowledged the links between Symbolist aesthetics and contemporaneous ideas about human sexuality, and even a cursory examination of artworks by male Symbolist artists working across the continent reveals an eyebrow-raising number of muscled nudes, lithe ephebes, and intimate male couplings. The sensual male body could register the artist’s erotic desire, even as he put it forth as an idealized emblem of transcendental truth. But perhaps Symbolism’s queerness extended beyond subject matter. Scholars have argued that Symbolism was in part defined by a subversive approach to visual semiotics: a severing—we might say a queering—of the ties binding a sign to its established cultural meaning. Similarly, male homosexual subcultures were sustained by endowing established signs and pictures with a uniquely queer significance. This paper seeks to tease out the relationship between Symbolist aesthetics and male homosexuality in terms of a shared sensibility towards pictorial interpretation. Taking as a case study the work of the Swedish Symbolist artist Eugène Jansson, I argue that Symbolism held appeal for homosexual artists precisely because queer subcultures were primed to read subversive meaning into normative pictures. Offering a new reading of Symbolism’s sexual valences, I contextualize the movement’s attendant artworks within the broader cultural landscape of homosexual signs and symbols and articulate the parallels between Symbolist approaches to the image and queer modes of seeing in the late nineteenth century.
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来源期刊
Arts
Arts HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
自引率
40.00%
发文量
104
审稿时长
11 weeks
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