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The Nude in Art

The nude in art - Michelangelo: Sistine Chapel CeilingThe nude in art has been a consistent theme and subject throughout the history of fine art.  Be it religious art or portraiture, the naked human form has always fascinated mankind, and been one of the enduring subjects of art.  Many of the masterpieces of fine art have featured the nude. Consider Michelangelo’s ceiling of the Sistine Chapel which depicts God stretching out his finger to bring life to the naked Adam.  The statues of Venus and David both celebrate the perfection of the human form as nudes.  And almost all the gods of Greek and Roman antiquity were represented in statues as nudes.
The Fall of Man - Adam and Eve nude
The Fall of Man (1504)
Albrecht Dürer 1471-1528
Engraving 10 x 7 1/2 in.
Why is there this fascination with the nude in art?  Perhaps the key to it can be found in the Old Testament story of Adam and Eve where we are told nudity was an intrinsic part of the enjoyment of Paradise prior to the Fall.  We are told that Adam and Eve, having been made in the likeness of God, enjoyed life in the Garden of Eden in the presence of God, and did so naked.  Part of the “gift” of Paradise was not to feel any shame in their nakedness. In fact, it seems that Adam and Eve were ignorant of right and wrong; or should I say "innocent" of right and wrong.   Paradise was the enjoyment of a life in which Adam and Eve communed with God face to face, as it were, without any sense of shame and guilt, without any judgment of or understanding of right and wrong. 

However, after the Fall, Adam and Eve become aware of their nudity and feel shame for the first time, and in response cover their sex organs with fig leaves; they have lost their innocence.  The story also suggests that God was not immediately aware of the Fall, but on the next occasion that he came to commune with Adam and Eve he saw that they had covered themselves in shame, and it was by these actions that God understood that they had disobeyed his instruction not to eat of the fruit of knowledge.  By eating the "forbidden fruit", Adam and Eve entered the human condition of awareness of right and wrong, and of having to make judgment and choice as to right and wrong.  The irony of this is that in becoming human, Adam and Eve now became more "god-like" in that they now shared with God this knowledge.  But it was to be a burden that they and their children would bear, because having this knowledge would mean they would henceforth have to choose whether or not to "serve God". 

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See nude painting of George Bush and more Nude Art by the artists of ArikiArt Online Gallery

The story of Adam and Eve then tells us that nudity without shame was symbolic of the state of innocence that Adam and Even enjoyed prior to the fall.  As such, it is by implication the state to which mankind will return upon achieving redemption. 

The depiction of the nude in fine art, then, can be viewed as part of the redemptive effort of mankind to regain his innocence and return to the presence of God and to enjoy once again the state of innocence that Adam and Eve enjoyed in the Garden of Eden. The nude can be viewed as one of Plato’s “forms” or Jung’s archetypes; a metaphor for the common yearning of all men to be redeemed of his shame and to enter closely into the presence and friendship of God.  Since we cannot look upon a nude without being reminded of our sexuality and how our bodies compare to others, the nude is both a reflection of the redeemed state that we yearn for, and a reflection of what we are lacking in our current state. 

What is your response to viewing a nude?  Can you not say that you are compelled to compare yourself to the form and shape of the nude?  I am fatter, thinner, shapelier, more or less “well endowed”. Can you not say that you have been reminded of your own sexuality when you view a nude, even though the work of art is far from pornography?  The nude reminds you that in being human you are also animal, and imperfect, and separated from God, someone who must live with the burden of the knowledge of good and evil.  It reminds you that you are on a continuum; that your naked body is somewhere and somehow better or worse than that of the nude upon which you gaze, and also somehow better or worse than the naked bodies of all those with whom you share the planet.  It reminds you that you judge your body because others are constantly judging and comparing your body, and that you in turn judge and compare the bodies of those with whom you share you daily life. 

Would it not be paradise to be free of all these thoughts and judgments made by ourselves of others, and of others about ourselves; to never have to compare ourselves to others again?  Would it not be paradise to be absolutely unaware of our imperfections and differences compared to others?

Such is the role of the nude in art.  The nude can celebrate the body as the most marvelous and beautiful creation of God, and in so doing remind us that we are made in God's image.  At the same time, the nude reminds us that we bear the burden of the loss of innocence suffered by our "first parents" and of our separation from God.  The nude in art is a bold and courageous attempt to regain our innocence and to enter once again the company of God.

© John Corney 2005

Nude Art from the artists of ArikiArt Online Gallery

Fine Art Nudes by Daniele van Eck
Bum, a male nude painting
Female Nude Oil painting by Annie Marquis
Female Nude with Long Red Hair
Male Nude Holding Rainbow - Painting by Raymond Neher
Nude Men Playing at Beach by Raymond Neher
Pict Family Life  Limited Edition Giclee Print
Pict Warriors Preparing for Battle Giclee Print
Reclining Nude Painting by Raymond Neher

 

Venus de Milo

Venus de Milo (Louvre Museum)

 

  

 

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