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The Body

                                      OUR BODIES MAKE us TANGIBLE, a n d w e d r a w o u r s e l v e s to assert o u r e x i s t e n c e . W e

                                          are the only creatures on Earth that can make our own image. The human body,

                                      clothed or nude, is the most c o m m o n subject in art. It gives physical and emotive

                                      form to religious narratives, myths and fables, history paintings and other stories,

                                      portraiture, and anatomical and erotic art.

                                          Artists are thought to have begun drawing from the nude during the Italian

                                      Renaissance. In this period, the junior workshop apprentices posed as part of their

                                      duties. Drawings were usually made from the male nude to avoid offending the church,

                                      and because the female was deemed inferior. Look closely at Renaissance drawings of

                                      the female body and you will see that most are actually young men with minor

                                      adjustments. During this time, artists also tried to define ideal proportions in the body;

                                      Leonardo drew a man within a circle and square, while Durer took his research further—

A. R. WILLIAMS                        he sought perfection in the infinitesimal measurement of the body and produced four

Contemporary photographer             volumes    of illustrated                   explanation.  Renaissance   artists studying  anatomy   from  dissection
  clinically trained and specialized

       as a medical  illustrator.  Williawmsere  decades             ahead    of  their  medical  counterparts.  Michelangelo   attended  dissections  to
made this image      by light

sectioning: fine beams of light       perfect his understanding of surface form, while Leonardo opened the body to see and
  projected onto a woman's

body draw the celebratory             discover for himself our physical mechanisms. He even believed he had located the soul
contoursof her form like

        a cartographer's map of       in  the pituitary              fossa beneath       the brain and behind    the eyes, giving physical  foundation
undulating land. W e understand

 every curve and balance of           to the theory that the eves are the windows of the soul.
herimpressive presence

because we are given such                 Life drawing no longer dominates the art school curriculum, but the study of
        a controlled, sculptural

description of her form. She          the body is still essential. These classes are popular around the world, and in San
couldeasily be transferred

      into  three  dwimasenpsrioodnusc. eTdhiassF r a n c i s c o ,  the Bay  Area  Models'     Guild  holds  a quarterly  life-drawing     marathon
finished    image

       aprinton Kodak transfer paper

with green-colored dye added celebrating the great diversity of human proportion. The body remains at the core of

over the initially white lines.

                           much Western contemporary art. Strangely, in our privileged and comfortable society,

                                      focus has turned to the vulnerability of flesh: how it can be damaged, diseased, and

                                      surgically rebuilt. Artists now explore the interior of the body with new media and

   Lateral Contour Map of             technology, from video and X-ray to thermal imaging. This chapter addresses issues
a Full-Term Primipara
                                      that are most commonly faced by beginners attending life-drawing classes. It also looks                               x 7 in (300 x 180
  Produced by Light                   at the representation of the b o d y b1e1y3/4o n d traditional life drawing, explaining ranges
          1979

          A. R. W I L L I A M S

                                      of materials and techniques and showing diversities of thought and purpose in making.
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