* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Gender and Art: A Focus on Sarah Lucas
Michael Messner wikipedia , lookup
Gender and security sector reform wikipedia , lookup
Special measures for gender equality in the United Nations wikipedia , lookup
Feminist theology wikipedia , lookup
Gender roles in Islam wikipedia , lookup
Third gender wikipedia , lookup
Anarcha-feminism wikipedia , lookup
Feminism in the United States wikipedia , lookup
Gender roles in non-heterosexual communities wikipedia , lookup
Raunch aesthetics wikipedia , lookup
Judith Lorber wikipedia , lookup
Gender systems wikipedia , lookup
Feminism (international relations) wikipedia , lookup
Gender and Art: A Focus on Sarah Lucas By Violetta Liszka University of Brighton 2016 An undergraduate dissertation submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of unit AG376 (HCS5: Dissertation) of BA (Hons) Photography Word Count: 9986 Gender and Art Abstract Gender roles in society are such that the male gender is considered a dominant aspect while the female gender is viewed from a suppressive position. Such gender roles in society have extended to their representations in art over the years, but since the rise of the feminist movement, perceptions regarding gender representation of women have been improving. Progress has been achieved with regards to the representation of femininity in art, where there is a shift from objectification to an almost equal representation to the masculine ideology. Works by artist such as Sarah Lucas depict a confrontational attitude where there is an intent to blur the traditional binarism of gender representation. Lucas uses art to depict the fissures between the male and female art representation as a way of aligning herself to the feminist ideals. Regardless of the progress made by artists such as Lucas, art is still created in a patriarchal system and primarily depicts aspects of male dominance. 2 Gender and Art Table of Contents Abstract ........................................................................................................................... 2 CHAPTER 1 - INTRODUCTION ..................................................................................... 5 Background of the Study................................................................................................. 5 Purpose of the Study ...................................................................................................... 6 Structure ......................................................................................................................... 6 CHAPTER 2: LITERATURE REVIEW ........................................................................... 8 The Representation of Gender in Art .............................................................................. 8 Feminist Art and Its Intention ........................................................................................ 10 Representations of Gender In Art ................................................................................. 11 Summary....................................................................................................................... 15 CHAPTER 3: DATA ANALYSIS .................................................................................. 17 Gender and Art by Sarah Lucas ................................................................................... 17 Self-portraits by Sarah Lucas (1990-1998) ................................................................... 20 Other Works by Sarah Lucas ........................................................................................ 33 CONCLUSION .............................................................................................................. 39 REFERENCES ............................................................................................................. 41 3 Gender and Art List of Illustrations Figure 1 - Sarah Lucas Eating a Banana 1990 ............................................................. 21 Figure 2 - Sarah Lucas Self-portrait with Fried Eggs, 1996 .......................................... 24 Figure 3 - Sarah Lucas Self Portrait with Mug of Tea, 1993 ......................................... 24 Figure 4 - Judy Chicago Dinner Party 1974-79............................................................. 26 Figure 5 - Sarah Lucas Self-Portrait with Skull, 1997 ................................................... 27 Figure 6 - Georgia O’Keeffe Cow’s Skull With Calico Roses, 1931 .............................. 28 Figure 7 - Sarah Lucas Left: Human Toilet, 1997, Right: Is Suicide Genetic? 1996..... 31 Figure 8 - Sarah Lucas The Toilet Revisited, 1998....................................................... 33 Figure 9 - Sarah Lucas Priere De Toucher, 2000 ......................................................... 34 Figure 10 - Sarah Lucas The Chicken Knickers, 2000 ................................................. 36 Figure 11 - Sarah Lucas The Geezer, 2002 ................................................................. 37 4 Gender and Art CHAPTER 1 - INTRODUCTION Background of the Study The definition of gender goes beyond the biological identification of male or female and transcends into an individual’s inner identity. Gender is a factor that defines the sense of self. Even when gender may explain the sense of self or the individual’s identity, gender roles may sometimes be reflective of the connotations held by society, rather than the individual’s commutation. For those going against defined gender roles, they may be seeking to elevate the position of a particular gender in society while risking a reprimand from society. Art is one of the platforms that artists use to either enhance gender roles as defined by society or call for changes in the perceptions regarding particular genders (Kotthoff, 2006). Considering that society elevates the position of men above that of women, much of the discussion centers on the definition and placement of gender role of women in society. Feminists and other movements in the 21st century are opposed to the subjugation position of women and also their sexual objectification that reduces them into eroticized objects. Artists with similar ideals as the feminist movement resist the societal definition of the position and role of women through their artwork that serves as the street where they can voice their protests. Even though most females seek to elevate the position of women in society, others stick to the societal stereotypes and advance or affirm their various positions through their actions or inconsistent choices. One of the visible figures in modern art is Sarah Lucas, who is a member of the Young British Artists. As a key figure who emerged in the 1990s, Lucas has focused on sculptures that are provocative and subvert, as well as challenged the attitudes directed towards sexuality, gender, and the body. Lucas’ use of familiar and abject materials to bring about provocative body forms about historical and contemporary 5 Gender and Art connotations directed towards the body. Artistic works by Lucas are less flattering in the representation of women and are suspended between representative and authentic (Bradley, 2007). The fact that Lucas fails to comment on whether she is opposing the objectification of women or promoting is as an aesthetic raises the question whether her works are aligned to the femininity movement or are the promotion of gender stereotypes. Even as such questions linger, Lucas’ artworks bring about the issues of sexuality, class, national identity, and gender stereotypes. The paper that follows analyzes several of her works since 1990 in trying to deconstruct her intent with regards to gender (Buikema, 2007). Purpose of the Study The purpose of this dissertation is to establish a missing link between the British feminist artists from 1960s and 1970s and the contemporary artists namely Sarah Lucas. This dissertation demonstrates the impact of feminist artist on the modern art. It additionally describes the way in which various elements such as artistic vocabulary and concepts typically allied with the feminist art from the previous generation of female artists have been either intentionally or unintentionally integrated in the manner the Sarah Lucas approached her work. Structure The next chapter presents a comprehensive review of the literature that deals with the notoriously challenging question: what is feminist art? It draws the attention of the readers towards the issues that were confronted by the feminist artist in their era, predominantly in United States and Great Britain. Without trying to include the entire overview of the history, this section of the dissertation will shed light on the feminist art movement along with its role as the social change art and its inquiry of the construction of gender in art. It additionally explores the probable responses of the exclusions of the 6 Gender and Art female artists from the tenet art. This chapter delves into how the women were portrayed in art and how the feminist artist made efforts to offset the representation and idealism of the female body and more specifically the patriarchal narrative of culture and art. In the same section, the researcher illustrated various approaches of the female artists towards materialistic and conceptual terminologies. The role played by the psychoanalysis in the generation of the feminist art was also discussed in the same section of the dissertation. The third chapter of the dissertation contextualizes the work of Sarah Locus within the phenomenon of the YBAs. It illustrates the self-portraits of Sarah Lucas from 1990 to 1998. It additionally sheds light on other works of Sarah Locus. The last section of the study will summarize the findings of the study. 7 Gender and Art CHAPTER 2: LITERATURE REVIEW The following segments in this chapter will try to make clear why women have not been integrated within the canon of art, how the illustration of art replicated their patriarchal society, what it intends to discuss “female experience” in connection to the generation of craftsmanship, what a particular “women’s activist” workmanship practice may imply, lastly, how female artists attempted to go around the issue of the specification of the female body. The Representation of Gender in Art One of the most vibrant sectors of art has been feminist art that started out as a platform to challenge the social and political subjugation of women in society. Feminist art was not the beginning of the representation of gender roles or gender stereotypes on art. In ancient Greece and Egypt while men were depicted as strong, energetic, and athletic, females were depicted as demure (Norton, 2009). As such, the social subjugation of women has been prevalent for centuries, and the issue is still relevant even in modern times. Historically, the depiction of men in artwork refers to their leadership roles and as an embodiment of strength and valor. In contrast, women in the artwork are passive and eroticized, and only significant for the viewer’s pleasure. Some artworks have depicted women as social caretakers, but the dominant depiction revolves around women as objectified sexualized subjects. Feminist Art began in Britain in the 1960s following a combination of political activism and the critique of the historical philosophy associated with art. Social unrest and political upheaval characterized the era of 1960s, with an emphasis on social equality, civil rights, and peace activism (Pollock, 1996). Much of the activities taking place in this period were questioning the social and political structures that the previous 8 Gender and Art generation had lived. The art world was no different as various artists in this timeline were examining the stylistic approaches and conceptual framework used by artists in the previous generation (Kappel, 2007). The questioning of the artistic ideals led to dissatisfaction in the art world, where the only escape was the definition and creation of new artistic roles and activities. In contrast to previous structures where art was traditionally exhibited on gallery spaces, new developments such as conceptualism and post-minimalism came about (Kappel, 2007). Art in this period embraced the political and popular culture and was conceptual. Women had a larger role in this artistic period, and the period is seen as the beginning of postmodernism that constitutes the questioning of art forms, languages, contents, style, and intention of the artist (Collings, 1999). Women and the feminist movement had a large part to play in the post-modern expansion, and the radical reorientation in this period saw women artists coming together to repudiate established notions regarding femininity. Kappel (2007) notes that, similar to the general women’s movements around the world, the art scene was dominated by white women, even though women of had substantial influence since the beginning. Women artists started advocating their inclusion in galleries and exhibitions, but their efforts were based on a larger call for social, political, and economic inclusion. One of the radical and most active women’s group in this period was the Women’s Liberation Movement that was advocating for an end to the artistic marginalization of women as the first step towards embracing inclusive equality for women (Kappel, 2007). In March 1971, the group held its first exhibition in London at the Woodstock Gallery, and prompted further emancipation of women worldwide (Norton, 2009). The most important issue raised by the women artists was grounded on the fact that women had no recognition in the art history and very few women were provided 9 Gender and Art with the opportunity to represent their work in art galleries and museums. Successful women artists of the previous centuries had been excluded from the canons of art history even though they had impressive reputation. Artemisia Gentileschi an Italian artist is one such woman who had been successful as an artist in the 17th century, but her contribution to the art world was forgotten until the 21stCentury (Norton, 2009). In ensuring that women made significant progress in the art discourse and other areas, feminist artists focused on women as their subject matter. Feminist art movements introduced gender issues and the scheme of a fluid subject within the art community as a protest against the existing natural construction of gender and gender roles. The fluidity with regards to gender conceptualization arose with Judith Butler, who contends to the notion that the individual is never exclusively ‘male’ or ‘female,’ but is dependent on certain flux (Butler, 1999). According to the feminists and gender equality activists, gender is a socially constructed perspective rather than a natural construct (Beauvoir, 1988). Feminist artists also questioned the label of ‘genius’ extended to male artists and brought about a concept of pluralist variety (Pollock, 1993). Feminist Art and Its Intention Sarah Lucas work can be placed in the context of feminist arts, seeing that it sheds light on gender aspects directed towards women and men, and most importantly the objectification of women. As previously mentioned, women advocating for artistic representation in galleries were not only focused on the artistic equality, but also demanded for the larger context of social and political inclusions (Parker & Pollock, 2013). Guerrilla Girls, a group of feminist artists from New York created in the 1980s, highlighted the extent of sexism in the art world (Daugherty, 2013). One of the common phrases associated with this group and that will be analyzed in this paper is, Do women have to be naked to get into Met Museum? The question that was posed on billboards highlighted his sexualization of women, by noting that 85 percent of the nude 10 Gender and Art artist works are female. The group was advocating for larger inclusions in the art galleries and museums, but most importantly, for a change in the views and positions of women in society (Harrison, 1977). The exclusion of women artist from artwork and even art history was because women were challenging the existing art constructs and percepts. In the 19th century, the depiction of women in art was still reeking of their subjugation and position as the second-class citizen. As more women joined the artistic movement, images of women and girls were being subverted from their traditional precepts, and this was riling the art world. Art from women artists was only regarded as to the limits of their gender, and it became a common understanding that women in art lacked energy, power, and the inspiration necessary to achieve the highest levels of exemplary artistry. In the viewpoint of critics of women art, the lack was attributed to their gender as ‘feminine’ (Devereux, 2003). While the role of males and their values were considered abstract, female values were passive, emotional, and often associated with their feminine traits. Representations of Gender In Art Art like language is a symbolic medium used to represent the social, political, and economic aspects of the society at a given time. The early 1970s witnessed the political explosion known as the Women’s Liberation Movement. For the feminist artists, art as a symbolic medium was being used to promote dominant male ideals and the proliferation of society as patriarchal. The representation of men as superior to women and as strong and energetic pillars of society played a role in emphasizing the social constructs of male as the dominant gender. Women as the subjugated members of society were seen as passive objects duly available for the satisfaction of male desires (Devereux, 2003). Such representations were what prompted groups such as the ‘Guerrilla Girls’ to rise and oppose societal stereotyping of women that were being 11 Gender and Art depicted in art works during the period. It was common to have women painted or depicted in art as objects of sexual satisfaction (Livingstone, 2000). Women were mainly nude or in precarious positions that promoted their positions as inferior to that of men. Each representation of a particular gender in art was a legitimization of the dominant ideology regarding that particular culture. Gouma (1999) notes that representation of gender in art is a confirmation of the cultural ideology that is dominant at the time and is usually politically motivated. Changing the thinking is dependent on a re-representation of that particular gender which will bring about new cultural definitions of female or male identity. In understanding the position of women versus men, a psychoanalysis tool was developed by Sigmund Freud, where it came up as a challenge to existing paradigms regarding the male and female gender. Psychoanalysis offered an approach to understanding sexuality and its representation, but it received an objection from part of the feminist artists. Even with the emerging opposition, according to Laura Mulvey, psychoanalysis helped explore gender and sexuality, as well as their representations in cultural contexts. Mulvey in her essay Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema (1975) argued that in the world governed by sexual balance, the role of initiating things typically fell to the male protagonist where as the female actors acquired a passive position. While man controlled the look, women signified the figure or the image to be looked. It was contended by Mulvey that despite the fact that form and figure of female was portrayed for the pleasure of male protagonist as well as the male viewers in the cinema, the female form was also threatening for the reason that it invoked the unconscious anxieties of man concerning castration and sexual differences (Hill, 1998). Other theories developed to understand the position and representation of women especially in popular culture are the Freudian and Lacanian theories. 12 Gender and Art The Freudian theory focused on how the unconscious aspects led to the representation of gender in art through the application of aspects such voyeurism, fetishism, and narcissism (Kappel, 2007). Juliet Mitchell, a feminist and supporter of psychoanalysis, notes that psychoanalysis should be seen as an analysis of patriarchy rather than a recommendation of patriarchy. Women artists had to focus on how unconscious attributes lead to their sexual and gender identities that in turn leads to the determination of their positions and oppression in society. In order to change the dominant ideology where women were subordinate to men, feminist and women artists had to understand the construction of these ideologies so as to deconstruct them. Psychoanalysis helps identify the development of repressive ideologies while at the same time enabling the understanding of strategies to counter the oppressive status of women (Cork, 2003). For those willing to change the subordinate ideologies regarding women, the challenge has been finding ways of counteracting the existing patriarchal narrative, and changing it to reflect the needs and desires of women. The challenge has been insurmountable to some extent, as contemporary work from artists such as Sarah Lucas and Tracy Emin reveal. Though their efforts aimed to deconstruct the sexualization of women in art, their works can be viewed as being a bridge between deconstruction of these ideals and the proliferation of the sexual objectification of women (Harris, 2001). Changing the position of the female gender in art is not possible through changing the images only, but it requires changing the narratives that have been embedded in the patriarchal system. Different visual forms created to challenge the patriarchal narrative have to engage the viewer differently, but the male gaze has been obsessed with pleasure, privilege, and satisfaction. In changing the percepts of the male gaze and its search for pleasure, privilege, and satisfaction, female artists have responded by reclaiming their bodies and sexual feelings and transposing them through art (Hammond, 1979). As such, female artists concerned with de-sexualization 13 Gender and Art and de-objectification of the female body seem to transgress the traditional boundaries regarding the human body. Representation of the female gender in its rightful place depends on taking the viewer beyond traditional meanings and thus, distorts any aspects of satisfaction, privilege, or pleasure. The symbolic aspects that result from the new view of the body seeks to dispel and suppress abjection to a point where there is a distinct boundary between object and subject. The word abjection factually implies “the state of being cast off.” At the same time when used commonly, the term has connotations of meanness of spirit, baseness, and degradation; it has been explored in the post-structuralism as that which habitually agitates the cultural concepts and conventional identity. The famous composition of Julia Kristeva The Powers of Horror: An essay on abjection (1982) eloquent the theory of abjection attained eminence within both experimental as well as feminine art scenes. In order to briefly capsulate the psychoanalytical perspective of Kristeva, the term abjection corresponds to the linguistic and cultural processes of exclusions that function to marginalize and drive out that which cannot be represented within a paternalistic financial system of implication. More so, the symbolic aspects are intended to differentiate the exterior visualization of women from the ideals they hold, or the role they play in society. An assumption that prevails in the art world is that art is usually a reflection of personal experiences. Such an assumption is aligned with a historical perspective of art and is a social construction that holds no truth or is dependent on different variables. Works of art by women do not essentially have to show a shared essence of being female, while works of art by men do not depict a shared essence of being male. The ideas that artists use to create art are gained from society, and thus, women artist can still propagate the notion of male superiority in their art works (Kristeva, 1982). On the other hand, male artists can be significant contributors to the discourse opposed to the objectification of women in art and society in general. The implication is that women artists do not necessarily reflect feminist art and male artists are not inevitably opposed 14 Gender and Art to feminist art. Some feminist artists are accused of proliferating the notion of the superseding male ideology, where the male is regarded at a superior position than the female. As such, this stipulation has led to the view that some early feminist art was essentialist (Kappel, 2007). The discussion on the work of Sarah Lucas in the sections to follow will involve a consideration of whether the artist is an essentialist or is aligned to the feminist artists’ discourse. Historically, feminist artists started out their positive representation of the female gender via a call for solidarity against established notions around women. The call for solidarity may be perceived as an approach towards devaluing the patriarchal system and representation of the male gender in art, but it is a response to social discourses that downgrade women. The historical portrayal of gender in art has not changed even with the long period of advocating from feminist artists though significant changes with regards to the female representation in art visible. As the historical analysis of the work of art by women and the progress made with regards to feminist art, the conclusion is that women’s art is labeled as the ‘other.’ Other considerations emerging are that patriarchal institutions deem the female work as being limited to the ‘domestic’ essence or the distinctively female aspects. Failure by women artists to restrict themselves to such conventions led to their labeling as masculine, deviant, or abnormal. There may be substantial progress in work of art by women or work of art regarding women, but still, the artwork is still viewed from a voyeuristic perspective especially by the male gaze. Works by artists such as Sarah Lucas and Tracy Emin can be viewed as challenge to the dominant ideology with regards to gender percepts in society and art. Summary Feminist art can be comprehended as a significant piece of the twentieth century. Its dawn ought to be seen as remaining in direct relationship with the general 15 Gender and Art progressive up rise, amid the 1960s of last century. Females were battling for equivalent rights in all zones of their presence. There was a need to renegotiate the role of women as artists in the art world as well as their representations within the art works as objectified muses. The entire thought of style, the myth of artistic imagination and the ordinance of art, all largely grounded on values and dialect, must be reassessed and new ways and frames should be explored that permitted females to raise a more noteworthy voice within and beyond the art world. Gender presumptions and the way in which women were connected with specific commitments frequently taking into account physiological instead of mental contrasts between men and women must be ousted and cognizance raising was one of the fundamental motivation of feminist artists of that time in the public eye in general, as well as particularly between women themselves. Craft must be raised to the status of art and the order of various types of art making must be subverted. Questions encompassing the female body and female experience turned into the fundamental zones of artistic examinations. Elective art procedures were proposed and women quite often utilizing their own particular body in different explicit forms investigated feminist issues and gradually penetrated the customary art framework. Existent conventional limits were frequently transgressed and the different gatherings of people needed to adjust to new and quickly changing structures of representation. Basic reactions of art, for occasion, essentialism, narcissism, and elitism must be vanquished by augmenting, changing the range of connected art rehearses, and by broadening the socio-geographic setting within which this art was produced. 16 Gender and Art CHAPTER 3: DATA ANALYSIS Gender and Art by Sarah Lucas This chapter of the dissertation will present and analyze the outcomes of case study. It will demonstrate the self-portraits constructed by Sarah Locus during 19901998. The portraits developed by Locus portrayed her in different confrontational situations and poses and each addressing the modern concepts of artist-hood, sexuality, and gender. Sarah Lucas is one of the contemporary art figures and feminine artist from the Young British Artists (YBA). Lucas rose as one of the most prominent artists of 1990s where art was characterized by tabloid culture, use of diverse materials, irony, and exploration of contemporary aspects. Artists under the YBA were adopting aspects of minimalism, conceptualism, and pop art as a way of being more youthful in their art, as well as making their artistic content more accessible. Sarah Lucas is among the women artists who are associated with an aesthetic from the radical working class that produces art in the form of sculptures from ready-mades by Marcel Duchamp. It is important to mention at this point that Sensation was an exhibition of the gathering of contemporary art and it included majority of the works of the YBAs. Considering that Sarah Lucas and most artists from the YBA grew up in the 1980s, they experienced a growth in contemporary art practices revolving around feminist arts. Artists that were inspirational at this time were such as Cindy Sherman and Sherrie Levine. Works of art by Cindy Sherman seek to portray women beyond the abject ideologies existent at the time. Sherman portrayed the ‘woman’ as being strong and as an important member of society while still emphasizing their beauty. In the 1990s, inspiration on women art came from feminist philosopher Judith Butler and other feminist thinkers who were inclined to the notion of gender fluidity and its performativity (Butler, 2003; Williamson, 1986). As such, the works of art by Lucas should be viewed from a feminist perspective, and most importantly, a contemporary feminist’s perspective. For Lucas and other contemporary feminists, the real issue in 17 Gender and Art art is subverting the existing feminine and male stereotypes, but she challenges these stereotypes in a different approach from the precursors of feminist art. As an individual who brought about a new sensibility in the art in the 1990s, Lucas focused on cheaper approaches of making art and deriving imagery. The tabloid press became Lucas’ source of imagery, and her works became referred to as tabloid feminism. Artistic work by Lucas may borrow some aspects from artists such as Cindy Sherman, but unlike Sherman, Lucas portrayed her work in less than flattering and unconventional displays. The inspiration for Lucas’ works comes from books on sexuality, and she has thus focused on dealing with male objectification, and how sexual liberation by women can counter their objectification. Her works are therefore an appropriation of gender constructions and masculine tropes that she seeks to deconstruct. Casual misogyny characterizes Lucas’ works making her capable of creating visual puns that counter established ideologies and feminine stereotypes (Muir and Wallis, 2004). With Lucas’ works focusing on femininity and the deconstruction of suppressive ideals, she has often used her body as part of the art. In the Self-Portrait with Two Fried Eggs (Fig.2), Lucas is seen seated on a chair with two eggs on both her breasts while staring directly into the viewer. Other of her works include portrayal of the vagina as densely packed meat or as a tipped over pail. Such anthropomorphism may be a challenge for the societal characterization or stereotyping of the feminine sexuality, while also being a reflection of the artist’s sexual experiences. The use of an artist’s body in art has been prevalent in the art world, and it brings to the fore the discussions around the mind-body dualism hedged in the traditional aspects. Artists and especially women artists have for long considered their bodies as ideological issues and also as important platforms to make and display their artwork (Kaplan, 2000). Cindy Sherman, Hannah Wilke, Sally Potter, and Bobby Baker are some of the artists that have used 18 Gender and Art their bodies as materials and sites for art display, and this had evoked debate with regards to the usage of the artist’s body in the making of art. The use of the artist’s body in artistic representation has divided feminist artists into two groups. The first group of feminists is opposed to the use of the artist’s body and more inclined to development and adoption of a conceptual strategy that regards the female body as a subject rather than an object. The second group was where Sarah Lucas fits in view her own bodies as a liberating tool that can be used to make powerful statements about sexuality and the female gender (Kappel, 2007). Male artists such as Dan Graham, Paul McCarthy, and John Latham have also used their bodies as a canvas for their work, but the focus has been on the female body where artists wanted to delineate from perceptions of self-exploitation. For female artists using their bodies for artistic representations, they often have to deal with accusations of sluttishness, narcissism, and notoriety (Schor, 1997). For male artists, the use of their bodies has often been regarded as ‘high art,’ and is aligned to the ideals of Marcel Duchamp. As evidently seen from the different percepts extended to the male and female bodies, there exists disequilibrium where feminine bodies are objectified while male bodies are seen as subjects. Feminine artists have a challenge of using their bodies as part of artistic representations while avoiding being reduced into just a body. Sarah Lucas’ use of the female body has been highly provocative and explicit and is seen more as a challenge to existing notions regarding gender in art rather than as a display of her sexual consciousness. In trying to delineate from being perceived as their own bodies, women artists use their bodies in different ways such as in performance art. By using the female body as an art material in performance art, artists can influence the perception of their bodies by engaging in a direct address to the audience. Judith Butler, who opines that 19 Gender and Art performativity provides a model from which the fluidity of gender and identity can be understood (Butler, 2003), bases performance art on the perceptions of performativity. In performance, the female artist’s body is used as both a subject and an object, and as such, artists are able to bring the perceptions of a ‘subject,’ where only the ‘object’ existed. Lucas’ use of her body in art has an aspect of countering the feminine stereotypes while creating new views with regards to gender and sexuality. As such, Lucas works exhibit a subverting of the traditional models of the images and roles of the feminine gender. Not all of Lucas’ works use the feminine body as an object and subject in representation. Some of her works include the placing of monumental objects between a penis and banana balanced on crushed cars. Lucas uses surrealism and material sparseness as representations of the human body as a way of revealing the degrading attitudes directed towards women, as well as the vulnerability that may be existing in the male gender. Though her works serve as a mirror for sexism, she notes that she does not focus on solving the problem instead explored the moral dilemma in gender and sexuality by incorporating it in her work (Sumpter, 1997). In understanding the precepts and perspectives regarding gender in Sarah Lucas’ work, this section of the study will focus on an analysis of some of her most influential pieces. Self-portraits by Sarah Lucas (1990-1998) Between 1990 and 1998, Sarah Lucas focused on developing self-portraits that depict her in different situations and confrontational poses. Through the various poses and situations, Lucas is able to confront and address certain notions regarding sexuality, gender, and being an artist. In her Self-portrait eating a banana (Fig. 1), Lucas is seen holding a banana to her mouth, while staring directly at the viewer’s gaze (Butler, 2003). The artist is seen in short hair and a black leather jacket over a 20 Gender and Art white t-shirt. The Self-portrait eating a banana is the first of Lucas’ self-portraits and is in the form of a photographic portrait. Figure 1 - Sarah Lucas Eating a Banana 1990 In the above portrait, Lucas’ plays on the popular sexual innuendo depicted by a woman eating a banana, but use a masculine appearance and a confrontational gaze to alter the subject and perception of her portrait. Most of Lucas’ works involve her clad in leather jackets, ripped jeans, and t-shirt as she tries to create the masculine appearance from her feminine frame. Through the gaze that the artist directs towards the viewer, she confronts the male gaze while at the same time deflating any insinuations of the image portraying a sexual act (Israel, 2015). Lucas once noted that from the portrait, she could see her ‘masculine’ aspects, and she has focused on using the appearance to her benefit in the art (Elizabeth, 2001). The ‘masculine’ look in a feminine body is intended to bring about the image of a macho female who is tough and abject, thus emphasizing her defiant femininity. Andy Warhol’s short films depict the same attributes of defiance, and Lucas may be drawing her inspiration from the defiance portrayed by Warhol. In one of his films, 21 Gender and Art Warhol depicts Robert Indiana eating a mushroom for 45 minutes, where the viewer is in a time freeze (Harron & Minahan, 1996). The film by Warhol allows the viewer to see the heightened aspects rather than have to undergo the distractions of movements by the film (Kinema, 2014). Warhol is trying to show that defiance is an important aspect that can transform normal aspects into artistic depictions. Another film about Warhol’s Factory showcases the daily events of a factory without anything interesting (Crimp, 2012). Warhol is trying to use boredom as part of art and to draw people to the most important aspects of his works. Lucas uses defiance in her femininity to bring about aspects of masculinity, and most importantly, a challenge to the dominant ideologies of masculinity and femininity. While eating a banana by a female figure is often eroticized, Lucas’ portrait is different as she subverts the eroticized image to depict an opposition to particular ideologies. Lucas’ defiance is also notable in her use of the leather jacket in most of her portraits. Like the Self-Portrait Eating a Banana, the artist is seen dressed in a t-shirt and leather jacket. The use of the leather jacket is an androgyny that is bringing out the fluidity of male and female, by emphasizing the masculine aspects of the artist. The leather jacket used by Lucas is not feminine, but is rather associated with masculinity and ruggedness (Lucas et al., 2005). Lucas is seen as always in the question of existing stereotypes and constructs of gender, and the use of the jacket is no different. She exhibits defiance where she does not intend to conform to the notions of femininity, and the requirement to dress in sexually appealing clothing. The t-shirt also accentuates the defiance aspect, and is a way of the artist’s protest against societal constructs. The defiant femininity in Lucas work that she extends in other portraits such as Self Portrait with Fried Eggs (Fig. 2) and Self Portrait with Mug of Tea (Fig. 3) indicate an artist ardent on challenging the dominant sexualization of the female body (While, 22 Gender and Art 2003). The leather jacket and male pose that Lucas uses in her portraits are indicative of an androgyny that is aligned to the fluidity of gender as proposed by Judith Butler and what has been mentioned earlier in this paper. Through the portrayal of the fluidity in gender, the artist is able to challenge the constructions of gender and the submissive position given to women in society and art. Androgyny helps artists to prevail upon the socially constructed signifiers of gender, as well as its assigned role. The artist in Self Portrait with Fried Eggs (1996) is seen leaning back in a chair with two fried eggs placed on her breasts. Lucas is in her usual ripped jeans and t-shirt, but she is not wearing leather jacket. Her legs are wide apart, while her heavy footwear is firmly planted on the ground. In the portrait, the artist stares directly at the viewer, which can be seen as a way of challenging and confronting the viewer’s gaze (Stallabrass, 1999). The confrontational stare is intended to shift the male gaze from falling into the perceptions of sexuality, privilege, satisfaction with regards to the artist’s feminine body. Again, androgyny is evident in this self-portrait from the dressing style of the artists where she uses ripped jeans and a t-shirt, as well as heavy footwear that are dissimilar from the sexualized feminine individual (Stallabrass, 1999). Modern images of sexualized feminine individuals have the women clad in short dresses or none at all, while the footwear is most likely high heels rather than the heavy footwear in Lucas’ portrait. 23 Gender and Art Figure 2 - Sarah Lucas Self-portrait with Fried Eggs, 1996 Figure 3 - Sarah Lucas Self Portrait with Mug of Tea, 1993 For the artist, she uses androgyny in her portraits to make it more difficult for the viewer to refer to the image in the established binarism where the male individual is the privileged signifier, while the female individual is seen as its other. Like other feminist artists using their bodies as materials in art, Lucas employs androgyny to blur the 24 Gender and Art difference between masculinity and femininity. Such attributes in art result to a middle ground with regards to perceptions of either gender and limits the viewer’s likelihood of looking at the body as either subject or object (Meskimmon, 1996). The concept blurring of the line between masculine and feminine by women artists through the use of androgyny goes as far back as the 80s, where feminist artists were exploring new ways of diverting the male gaze. Prior to the use of androgyny, the feminist artist would only comment on the piece of art or use distinction to avoid objectification of the feminine body. Artists such as Frida Kahlo used cross-dressing to show that the definitions of gender were not stable, but rather open to revision. By the use of androgyny in her art works, Lucas is exhibiting a protest to the common binaries around gender identity and its role. Thus, she is seen as reflecting an opposition to the sexualization and objectification of women (Carson, 2001). The use of foods and explicit imagery in the art by Lucas is a transgression of the traditional taboos with regards to the representation of the female sexuality, and also a depiction of female fetishism. An example of criticism directed to artistic representation such as the one used by Lucas was the 1979 Dinner Party by Judy Chicago (Fig. 4). In her work, Chicago used vaginal imagery to represent 39 famous women from legend and history (Kappel, 2007). Critics and observers of traditional taboos regarded her work as essentialist and a reduction of women to their reproductive parts. Sarah Lucas in the two of her pieces follows the same path that is reminiscent of transgressive boldness. The boldness is essentially a call to view the gendered representations of women away from their sexualized and objectified personas. The exploration of art beyond traditional taboos by the artist reinforces the view that her art is confrontational and directly challenges existing ideologies with regard to gender (Phelan et al., 2001). The artist is not only protesting to the traditional representation of gender in society, but she is also voicing her protests against regressive procedures that limit creativity and the outward opposition to traditional ideals regarding gender. 25 Gender and Art Figure 4 - Judy Chicago Dinner Party 1974-79 The use of food as a material for art in her work confounds to the traditional aesthetic concepts. Food in art challenges the notion that art has a lasting value, as the food is in continual decaying in front of the viewer (Korsmeyer, 2004). Also, the use of food is an opposition to conventional aspects of art where art is supposed to be viewed. In this case, the artistic pieces play about with the senses of smell and taste in addition to the visual aspects. The artist is using different approaches to perceptions of art to propagate ideologies that run counter to the established ideologies of male dominance. The confrontational approach to representing gender in Lucas’ art is not limited to the artistic subject in the artworks, but also extends to the modes of representing the abstract pieces. Lorraine Gamman and Merja Makinen in their book on Female Fetishism (1999), postulate that women have a fetish for food and other things. According to the authors, food fetishism is highly inclined to sexual fetishism. Lucas has a high inclination to the use of food to represent different aspects including the sexuality of male or female in her portraits. Such an inclination points towards the theoretical argument of women fetishizing food. The fetish towards foods and the use of everyday objects (including food) by Lucas serves as a way of mirroring back the pervasive stereotypes about men and women in society. Sigmund Freud in his work on fetishism observed that fetishism 26 Gender and Art was a condition prevalent among men, but women also exhibited fetishism in certain areas. Freud argues that having a fetish takes the place of a penis (Freud, 1927). From such an argument, women’s fetishism directed towards various objects or processes acts as a replacement to the phallus that they lack. In essence, Sarah Lucas’ works are aligned to this argument as her fetish for food is used as a protest against established gender stereotypes, with emphasis on the dominance of the male in society. Observing food and fetishism from a psychoanalytic point of view allows the viewer to construct a certain view of the artist. The artist also challenges the existing binarism in different ways apart from androgyny. In her 1997 Self-Portrait with Skull (Fig. 5), Lucas sits on a floor with a skull in between her wide apart legs. The skull is usually a common construct associated with masculinity and the idea of a macho character. Sarah Lucas wants to tackle gender and art from a rebel perspective where she is in opposition to the socially constructed gender roles and stereotypes. In most of Lucas’ works, she inhabits masculine clichés in an attempt to subvert and reframe them to reveal the existing construction of gender (Malik, 2009). Figure 5 - Sarah Lucas Self-Portrait with Skull, 1997 27 Gender and Art Skulls are used to depict the extremes of masculinity. In modern culture, individuals associate the skull with danger or fear and the extremes of testosterone. Gangs often have skulls tattooed on their bodies to signify their capabilities, which may include the taking of human life. In this context, Lucas uses the skull as a sign of her macho and links it to female sexuality. From another viewpoint, artists such as Georgia O’Keeffe have directed their fetishness to skulls, where most of her paintings center around animals’ skulls. Like Lucas, O’Keeffe was trying to show her opposition to paternalism, and this directed her to an adoption of materials that were outside the shared artistic experience. In a painting such as Cow’s Skull with Calico Roses, 1931, (Fig. 6) O’Keeffe combines the masculinity and paternalistic aspects of the skull with feminine elements such as an inclination to the beautiful roses. Such a style is similar to Lucas where she combines masculine aspects with her feminine figure. The artists are voicing their opposition against the societal creation of gender, and are trying to evoke the fluidity of gender. In gender fluidity, gender is seen as a social construct, and as such, it is an aspect that can be challenged (Butler, 2003). Figure 6 - Georgia O’Keeffe Cow’s Skull With Calico Roses, 1931 28 Gender and Art The message that the artist is driving in her Self-portrait with Skull is that gender is a social construct and should be viewed as a fluid aspect. Associating aspects of masculinity with femininity is a way of challenging dominant ideologies and the weakness associated with the female gender. Having a skull between her legs is also a representation of the capabilities of the feminine gender and that the difference between masculine and feminine is in the mind. Similar representations of the feminine gender are seen in the Self-portrait of the Human Toilet Revisited, 1998 (Fig. 7). The portrait features Lucas seated on a toilet seat with only a t-shirt while holding a cigarette by her fingertips. Although the artist is looking away and exposing her vulnerability, holding the cigarette is representative of a rebel accessory. Some see the cigarette as a phallic stand-in, while others see it as a means of independence (Elizabeth, 2001). Other works by the artists also use cigarettes widely, and this may also fall within Freud’s argument of fetishism, where the cigarette becomes the substitute for a phallus. Maria Walsh in her book on Art and Psychoanalysis (2013) contends with Freud’s argument on fetishism. According to Walsh, women are already aware of their inferiority once they see their father’s penis. Once the girl sees her father’s penis, she becomes envious on the basis of frigidity, denial, and the femininity proper. As such, women will be in search of the object that denotes completeness, and Lucas finds her completeness in the cigarette. The cigarette becomes a representation of the phallus and a symbol of masculinity. Essentially, holding a cigarette in the portrait can be viewed as a challenge to the existing position of the woman as the other, while the man is the dominant subject in society. In bridging this gap in the gender construction, Lucas uses objects associated with masculinity, and that are also phallic representations. Lucas is using a cigarette in her portrait to demonstrate rebel to particular stereotyping and shows some form of concordance with the strong individual. 29 Gender and Art Cigarettes are sometimes used to enhance the sexuality of a feminine individual by displaying her as an ultra-female, but this particular portrait represents the opposite. The portrait does not show any eroticized aspects and as such, the cigarette reflects an acquired masculinity. The Self-Portrait with Fried Eggs also has a pack of cigarettes and an ashtray on the artist’s right side. Still, the artists are stressing on the fluidity of gender and abiding by the tenets of psychoanalysis that is a tool used to challenge the paradigms of gender analysis. The use of cigarettes or cigarette packs in most of her works of art conforms to the Freudian concept of fetishism and the search for an acquired masculinity. Fetishism is used as a way of acquiring power. The vulnerability of the artist in the portrait can also be seen as a sign of women’s internalized oppression. In most of her self-portraits, the artist is depicted looking straight at the viewer, which is seen as a challenge to the male gaze looking for the privilege, satisfaction, and desire. The Human Toilet, 1997 (Fig. 7) and Self-Portrait in Human Toilet Revisited, 1998 (Fig. 8) portray a different attitude with regards to how the viewer should approach the portrait. Looking away while the shot is being taken places her at a vulnerable position and the question coming to the viewer’s mind is whether these pieces of art is from an aesthetic perspective or a feminist point of view. Feminist artists often refrain from exhibiting vulnerability so as to avoid objectification (Elizabeth, 2009). Lucas’ depicts vulnerability in those two portraits but does not refrain from using a phallic validation (cigarette) to emphasize her position regarding gender identity and its social construction. From a psychoanalysis point of view, the vulnerability depicted by Lucas in her portraits reflects a way of opening up about the internalized oppression of the female gender. 30 Gender and Art Figure 7 - Sarah Lucas Left: Human Toilet, 1997, Right: Is Suicide Genetic? 1996 The psychoanalysis of the representation of gender in art conforms to the notion that the ‘personal is political’ that was used in deconstructing the issues facing the female gender. The Self Portrait in Human Toilet Revisited, 1998 can be analyzed from such a perspective by drawing reference from Sigmund Freud’s articulation of the genders. Freud notes that the presence or absence of the phallus is what distinguishes the sexes. Freud analyzes the concept of the phallus by drawing relation to the phallic phase in growing children. A boy and girl both share a similar sexual history where they are seen as both having a phallus (masculine). The phallus is the mother’s desire, and so they begin by desiring their mother (first object). Once the differentiation of the sexes occurs, the boy’s Oedipus complex ends, and the girl develops an objection love to her father (Freud, 1986). The transfer of love from the mother to the father by the girl comes about due to the presence of the phallus in the father though the girl identifies with her mother who lacks the object. As such, the female will desire to have a phallus while the male will struggle to represent his phallus (Mitchell, 1982). The relationship between the mother and daughter is 31 Gender and Art problematic as the mother tries to protect the daughter from brutal aspects of patriarchy while still preparing her for a secondary role in society. Like the relationship between a mother and daughter, feminine artist has to tolerate the storms of a patriarchal society that has been defined by masculine ideologies, and the result is a conflict regarding ideals. The conflict is visible in the struggle that artists have in representing a subjective ideal of their bodies. Lucas’ Selfportrait in the Human Toilet Revisited is reflective of the conflicts between the need to establish a dominant female ideology and the existing ideology that presents women as vulnerable members of society. The portrait shows Lucas holding a cigarette, which translates to a phallic representation and an aspect of masculinity, but the portrait still exudes vulnerability. The argument of the daughter’s attraction to the phallus represented by her father can be extended to the attraction that Lucas exhibits towards the cigarette. In essence, as much as the feminine individual is looking for an independent position in society, dynamics existent in the patriarchal social order limits the ability to have total control. As much as Lucas may try to bring about a masculine aspect and an opposition to the subversive ideology directed towards women, the Human Toilet Revisited portrait exudes aspects of aesthetics rather than feminist ideology. Regardless, the artist is noting that the male gender is given a subjective position in society while femininity is reduced to vulnerability and objectification. 32 Gender and Art Figure 8 - Sarah Lucas The Toilet Revisited, 1998 Other Works by Sarah Lucas Away from her self-portraits, Sarah Lucas has a multitude of other works that largely include art works employing the simplest form of materials in a simplistic manner, yet still delivering an intended message. In one of her works, Prierre De Toucher, 2000 (Fig. 9), a photographic portrait of the upper half torso of a woman is seen with her hands behind her back. The torso is dressed in an old and torn cream tshirt with holes by the torso’s nipple and the upper and lower abdomen. The holes reveal the woman’s skin and it is evident that the subject is white. The title of the portrait is in French, which means ‘please touch.’ The artist’s use of this portrait is to bring back the strength of the feminine body and empower women. Rather than use the stereotyped image of women where they are regarded as sexual objects, the artist results is using the feminine body to highlight the plight that women have to undergo on the basis of their sexuality. The image in the portrait cannot be said to be eroticized as the torso is completely covered in a t-shirt, except for the nipple area and the lower abdomen. Within this representation is the artist’s claim that women are still being sexualized, through her depiction of the left nipple. Looking at the image, the male gaze may be uninterested as it does not fulfill the purpose for pleasure, privilege, or satisfaction. 33 Gender and Art Figure 9 - Sarah Lucas Priere De Toucher, 2000 The artist is using such an image of the female body to highlight the objectification directed towards women. The display of the nipple may be representative of the sexualized image of women, but the dressing of the torso may be seen as in line with the artist’s inclination towards androgyny in the art. As a female artist, Lucas is evidently protesting against such portrayals and reduction of the female body into nothingness. The depictions of such images regarding the feminine body are ways used by the artist to show her dissent to existing constructions regarding femininity. The art in these pieces reflects an angry attitude and an apparent call for a view of the female body in different light. The work of art in Priere De Toucher can be seen as radical art that is contesting the devaluation of women and also contests on oppressive stereotypes on women. 34 Gender and Art Oppressive stereotypes in society cannot be contested without addressing the existing stereotypes. Lucas’ addresses these stereotypes by depicting them in her artwork in a direct and angry tone that draws attitudes directed towards rectifying the situation. By definition, the depiction of the dominant ideology in the simplest of forms by using simplistic materials acknowledges the importance of studying the distinctions between male and female. Lucas explores the distinctions existing between male and female genders, but most importantly makes strong statements regarding the position of women in society. Such attitudes towards feminist arts are limited to British feminist artists, while their American contemporaries approach feminist art from the perspective of the images of women and the representation of these images (Lippard, 1995). Other observers of feminist arts refer to British feminist art as confrontational, and Lucas’ work is no different as she displays attitudes that are reflective of active defiance and opposition to gendered roles in society. The Chicken Knickers, 1997 (Fig. 10) is another image by Sarah Lucas that continues to use the artist’s obsession with food to represent human genitals. The image contains the lower body of a female (the artist’s lower body) in white knickers but with a chicken attached in place of her genitals. The rear orifice of the chicken is in position with the artist’s vulva. Sarah Lucas continues to use food as substitutes for human genitals in ways that exhibit her confrontation with traditional roles of both genders. Most important in the artist’s campaign has been the confrontation of the objectified roles of women in society. Lucas is using the literal and physical representation of terms directed to the human body parts to draw attention to the fact that feminine gender roles are sexualized and objectified. In drawing attention to what the female body has been reduced to, the image does not contain the subject’s head and upper part of the body. As such, the viewer’s gaze is ultimately directed to the female genitals represented by the raw chicken. 35 Gender and Art Figure 10 - Sarah Lucas The Chicken Knickers, 2000 The use of food items to represent human body parts points back to her transgressive tendencies and boldness to addressing issues that are overlooked in society. The boldness is essentially a call to view the gendered representations of women away from their sexualized and objectified personas. Food in art challenges the notion that art has a lasting value, as the food is in continual decaying in front of the viewer (Korsmeyer, 2004), but, this time, the artist deviates from using cooked food items. In other artworks such as Fried Eggs, and Two Fried Eggs and a Kebab, the artist uses cooked food items to represent the female genitals to show how women have been reduced to nothingness. In this image where the artist uses a raw chicken for her genitals to probably propagate the notion that the objectification of women is far worse than that directed towards edible food items (Korsmeyer, 2004). Lucas’ exploration of art beyond the traditional taboos associated with the artistic use of food items is a reinforcement to the view that her art is confrontational as well as directly challenges existing ideologies with regards to gender. The artist is voicing her protests against the gendered representation of women, and is still reinforcing the notion that women are still being objectified. 36 Gender and Art In underscoring the artist’s perception towards gender in society, her artwork on The Geezer, 2002 (Fig. 11) envisages the artist’s obsession with gender identity. The Geezer is a portrait dedicated to Charlie George, a former Arsenal player whose career peaked in the 1970s. The portrait contains pieces of collaged pizza advertisements on the subjects face and hair. A soccer ball is on the viewer’s right side and the image’s left side. The shoulders and upper body part of the image are in a maroon and whiter jersey to represent the team that the soccer player played for. The wall behind the subject in the image is also plastered in pizza advertisement collages. Although the artist appreciates that the figure in the portrait is that of Charlie George, the figure has a resemblance to Sarah Lucas shows the artist’s exploration of androgyny and double identity. Figure 11 - Sarah Lucas The Geezer, 2002 Charlie George grew up in the same working-class neighborhood as the artists, and he may have been a representation of the artist’s escape and dreams of stardom. The analogy that the artist is trying to draw between the subject and herself is one that blurs the line between both genders. Most importantly, the artist is drawing an analogy between the objectification of feminine beings and the commodification that is ardent in 37 Gender and Art the sports world. The artist’s claim is that women’s objectification has a close semblance to the commoditization of sports stars such as George. The artistic work viewed from a feminist perspective can be seen as a way of harmonizing the ideologies or views of both the male and female gender. In the representation, the assumption is that the artist is objectifying both the feminine and masculine gender identities. Through such an approach, the artist is drawing reference to the fluidity of gender and is constructing both genders in new ways. The artist is drawing the viewer to the notion that as much as the feminine gender is objectified: the masculine gender should be seen in the equal light. The artist is showing no preference or is extending no subjectivity to any particular gender. Conforming to Butler’s attributes regarding gender, there is no natural construction of either male or female. Both genders are social constructs and are developed from the habitual acts that are learned and based on the cultural connotations of male and female. Being either male or female in society is defined by the performance of gender constructs and adherence to such cultural norms. If performativity and norms of any one gender were to change, it would bring out entirely new percepts regarding the particular gender. 38 Gender and Art CONCLUSION In general, over the past three decades the female critics and artists have confronted several challenges and their journey was certainly not easy. Furthermore, feminism in art since its dawn was certainly not beyond its criticisms, particularly because of contrasting standpoints from within the movement itself. It is essential to restate few of its main issues specifically the customary and almost exclusively the male-oriented concept of enormity that takes into account an art history that has been explicitly dominated by the makes and evades the contributions made by the female artists. The purpose of this dissertation was to establish a missing link between the British feminist artists from 1960s and 1970s and the contemporary artists namely Sara Lucas. This dissertation demonstrates the impact of feminist artist on the modern art and in what manner the various elements such as artistic vocabulary and concepts typically allied with the feminist art from the previous generation of female artists have been either intentionally or unintentionally integrated in the manner the Sarah Locus approach her work. Sarah Lucas as a contemporary artist of the 21st century has used contemporary approaches in delineating the aspects of gender in society, as well as its representation in art. Although the feminist art history reveals that certain progress has been made regarding the objectification of the female body, art in the contemporary world is still created in a patriarchal society. Aspects of patriarchy and dominance of the male have to come up in the contemporary artistic representations, as equilibrium is yet to be achieved in the construction of gender. Works by Sarah Lucas such as in the self-portraits reveal an artist intent on challenging gender stereotypes and their representation in art. Lucas tries to bring a masculine image of herself in the art as a way of construing the male gaze from the 39 Gender and Art objectification of women. More so, the artist tries to deconstruct the traditional concepts of representing art in an approach intended to view feminine art in a positive light. The titles of Lucas’ artworks use wordplay as she conforms to her image of tabloid feminism, and also as a way of directing attention to relevant art pieces that challenge existing notions of gender. Some of her work may be regarded as aesthetic and not confrontational to the gender stereotypes but her role in feminist art places her as an influential advocate of feminine subjectivity rather than objectification. We are living in the era where few might see the failure of the accomplishment of the female art movement and a shift to the customary implicit masculine dominance in the world of art. On the other hand, other live in the fictitious impression that the position of the women artists has improvement and no discrimination exist against the female artists. However, it is still difficult to predict the future of female artists in world of art. 40 Gender and Art REFERENCES Bradley, H. (2007), Gender, Polity Press, Cambridge Buikema, R. (2007), Doing Gender in Media, Art and Culture, London & New York, Routledge Butler. J. (1999), Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity. London: Routledge. Butler. J. (2003), Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity. London: Routledge. Carson, F., (2001), Feminist visual culture, Routledge. Chadwick, W. (2015), Kobiety, Sztuka, Spoleczenstwo, Poznan, Rebis. Collings, M. (1998), Just How Big Are They? White Cube: London. Collings. M., (1999), This is Modern Art, From the Channel Four Series. London: Weidenfeld & Nicholson. Cork, R., (2003), Everything Seemed Possible: Art in the 1970s. New Haven: Yale University Press. Crimp, D. (2012), Our kind of movie: the films of Andy Warhol. MIT Press. Daugherty, A., (2013), Nochlin, L., Why Have There Been No Great Women Artists? Baker University. Devereux. M., (2003), The Oxford Handbook of Aesthetics. New York: Oxford University Press. Elizabeth, M., (2001), Sarah Lucas. [Online] Available at: http://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/lucas-self-portrait-with-fried-eggs-p78447/textsummary [Accessed 13 November 2015]. Freedman, K., (1994), Interpreting gender and visual culture in art classrooms. Studies in Art Education, pp.157-170. Freud, S., (1986), The Essentials of Psychoanalysis. London: Penguin Books. 41 Gender and Art Georgiakeeffe.net. (2009).Cow’s Skull [Online] Available at: http://www.georgiaokeeffe.net /cows-skull-with-calico-roses.jsp [Accessed 9 December 2015]. Gouma, T., (1999), Schapiro, M.; Shaping the Fragments of Art and Life. New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc. Hammond, H., (1979), A Sense of Touch. New York: Art and the Martial Arts. Harrison. M. (1977), Notes on Feminist Art in Britain 1970-77, in: Studio International, Vol.193. No.987. 3/1977. Harron, M. and Minahan, D., (1996), I Shot Andy Warhol. Grove Press. Hill, J. (1998), Film and postmodernism. Church Gibson, Pamela/Hill, John: The Oxford. Israel, M., (2015), What You Should Know About Sarah Lucas. [online] Available at: https://www.artsy.net/article/matthew-israel-what-you-should-know-about-sarah-lucas [Accessed 13 November 2015]. Janion, M. (2006), Kobiety I Duch Innosci, Warszawa: Sic! Jones, A., (2014), Sexuality, Documents of Contemporary Art, London, Whitechapel Gallery. Jrank.org. (2015), Fetishism [Online] Available at: http://science.jrank.org/pages/9365 /Fetishism-Overview-Psychoanalytic-Interventions.html [Accessed 9 December 2015]. Kaplan, A., (2000), In This Issue/ Presence. Art Journal, 59(2). Kappel, S., (2007), Gender Subjectivity and the Feminist Artist. Westminster: University of Westminster. Kinema, (2014). The Unbearable Duration of Andy Warhol’s Films [Online] Available at: http://www.kinema.uwaterloo.ca/article.php?id=490&feature [Accessed 9 December 2015]. Korsmeyer, C., (2004), Gender and Aesthetics: An Introduction. New York: Routledge. Kotthoff, H. (2006), Gender and humor: The state of the art. Journal of pragmatics, 38(1), 4-25. 42 Gender and Art Kristeva, J., (1982), Powers of Horror: an Essay on Abjection. New York: Columbia University Press. Lippard. L., (1995). The Pink Glass Swan; Selected Essays on Feminist Art. New York: The New Press. Livingstone, M., (2000), Pop Art: A Continuing History, London: Thames & Hudson. Lucas, S., Dziewior, Y., Ruf, B., Zürich, K. and Liverpool, T.G., (2005), Sarah Lucas: Exhibitions and Catalogue Raisonné, 1989-2005, HatjeCantz. Malik, A., (2009), Sarah Lucas Au Naturel, Afterall Books, London. Meskimmon, M., (1996), The Art of Reflection, Women Artists’ Self- Portraiture in the Twentieth Century. London: Scarlet Press. Mitchell, J., (1982), Feminine Sexuality. Hampshire: Macmillan. Mitchell, J., (1999), Feminism and Psychoanalysis at the Millennium.Women: a Cultural Review, 10(2). Muir, G., and Wallis, C., (2004), In-A-Gada-Da-Vida. London: Tate Publishing. Mulvey, L., (1975), Visual pleasure and narrative cinema. Media and cultural studies: Keyworks, pp.393-404. Norton, (2009), Art and Gender [Online] Available at: http://wwnorton.com/college/custom /ShowcaseSites/thgate/pdf/4.10.pdf [Accessed 13 November, 2015]. Parker, R. and Pollock, G., (2013), Old mistresses: Women, art and ideology. IB Tauris. Perry, G., (1999), Gender and Art, Open University, New Haven & London. Phelan, P., de Beauvoir, S., Di Prima, D., Friedan, B., Solanas, V., Johnston, J., & Ukeles, M. L., (2001), Art and feminism. Phaidon Press. Pollock, G., (1993), Trouble in the Archives. Make, 54 (1). Pollock, G., (1996), Generations and Geographies in the Visual Arts: Feminist Readings, London, Routledge. 43 Gender and Art Potocka, M.A., (2015), Gender in Art, MOCAK, Krakow. Robecchi, M., (2007), Sarah Lucas, Electa, Milan. Robinson, H., (2015), Feminism Art Theory. An Anthology 1968-2014, Chichester. Blackwell Schor, M., (1997), Wet: On Painting, Feminism, and Art Culture. Durham: Duke University Press. Sherman, C., Durand, R., Tyler, C.A. and Criqui, J.P., (2006), Cindy Sherman. Flammarion-Pere Castor Stallabrass, J., (1999), High art lite: British art in the 1990s. Verso. Sumpter, H., (1997), Naughty But Nice. The Big Issue, September 1997 p.8. Walsh, M., (2013), Art and Psychoanalysis. New York: IB Taurus. Warhol, A., 2014, The philosophy of Andy Warhol: from A to B and back again. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. While, A., (2003), Locating art worlds: London and the making of Young British art. Area, 35(3), pp.251-263. Williamson, J. (1986), A Piece of the Action: Images of woman in the photography of Cindy Sherman, Consulting Passions, Maryon Boyars, London and New York, p.91. Williamson, J., (2010), Decoding Advertisements: Ideology and Meaning in Advertising, Open Forum, Marion Boyars. 44