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ABSURD-Naked in front of strangers.
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(Olivia Howitt)
A global project invites members of the public to pose nude for
artists. After 20 years of life drawing, Tanis Taylor decided to take
part – on the other side of the easel.
You can tell a lot about a person from the way they undress. Life
models often have a silk robe that sort of sighs to the ground before
they take their pose. Some walk out of the toilets stark naked making
small talk with the class. Others never make eye contact. I remember one
sitter who took her clothes off item by item and sat glowering at us
from her bar stool for a full hour. I’m wondering, when my time comes,
what I will do. How I will expose my average, totally naked, 40-year-old
body to a roomful of strangers. How would you?
My fellow sitter
has just left the platform. Young, bearded and heavily tattooed, he high
fives all the artists on leaving and does not strike me as naturally
bashful. I go to the toilet. I apply some translucent powder – about the
only thing I’ll be wearing for the next 30 minutes. It does nothing to
cover the vivid blush spreading from my cheeks to what used to be my
cleavage when I wore clothes to hold it together. And now? Now I walk
into the studio in front of eight men and two women, say hello and drop
my shirt in a rather apologetic way.
I am part of illustrator Mike Perry’s global pop-up experiment: his appeal to the public to ‘Get Nude. Get Drawn’.
In cities around the world, he gathers together the artists and
illustrators he admires and stages events asking members of the public,
via social media, to pose for them.
“It started in 2011, I wanted
to get back into life drawing but I didn’t have the patience to sign up
to a regular class,” says Perry. “I thought it would be cool to see if
some strangers would be willing to come out and pose. We did it as a
one-night pop-up and put the word out through Twitter. We honestly
didn’t expect anyone to come. But the response was awesome. And the
drawings were so exciting, much more so than with a model.”
Illustrator Kyle Platts at the Get Nude Get Drawn event in London. (Olivia Howitt)
The project has had an enthusiastic response,
with volunteers for events in New York, Amsterdam and London. Sitters
have included a couple on their first date, a sleep-deprived mother of
two, tourists on a stag do and a girl who had been advised by her
therapist to come along to get over a pubic hair phobia.
“You get
all sorts. You get the person who doesn’t care at all, you get those in
the middle ground – ‘yeah I’m uncomfortable but only because I’ve never
done this before’. And then you get the ones who are incredibly,
excrutiatingly uncomfortable and are almost trying to prove something to
themselves … you really get the bravery it’s taking and you can tell
that they really want to do this thing.”
Has he noticed any
cultural generalities? British prudity? American exhibitionism? A
normalising of nudity in the Netherlands? “There’s nothing noticeable,”
he says. “People are people – there’s the same mix here as anywhere.”
The only difference, he delicately hints, is that we Europeans might
still be more hirsute than our American sitters. And he’s not talking
about a fashion for beards. Skin deep
The audience’s beard count is high at this evening’s version of Get Nude. Get Drawn hosted by It’s Nice That’s Printed Pages.
I sit, unsure and naked, in an open-plan East London studio with white
curtains for modesty. The people around me are drawing on pieces of A4
coloured paper in pen and ink and, when I adopt certain poses, I can see
exactly what they are doing. In one sketch my belly is bigger than my
boobs.
I lock my gaze onto the pot plant. I tell myself I can do
this thing. I’ve been on the other side of the easel for more than 20
years. I know that where I’m standing is hallowed ground. Sacred. A life
drawing discipline is non-judgemental; no body fascism here. The droop
of a breast, the swell of a stomach – these are all friends to the
artist. Think the dimpled flesh in the paintings of Lucian Freud or
Jenny Saville. The best life models I’ve ever drawn didn’t have the
honed bodies of dancers; they were the ordinary ones with their ordinary
details – the bite of a bra strap, fallen arches from years of bad
shoes – this is what I love to draw.
Illustrator Will Edmonds at the Get Nude Get Drawn event in London. (Olivia Howitt)
I strike a pose which I hope is interesting while
revealing absolutely nothing. I have stopped breathing. I notice that
my stomach is clenched. Mike offers some direction and mutely I obey. I
hope I’m doing it ‘right’. At one stage I worry that a particular artist
is bored. I realise that, although there is no judgement in the field, I
have brought my own – 40 years of critical body image and British
shame.
I try an experiment. Six minutes after the session begins,
in a collapsed standing pose – head lolling down, legs crossed – I
decide to look at my naked body with a simple curiosity. I notice the
contours of my body – a set of interlocking shapes – and the different
tones of my skin. It is interesting, nothing more. But my breathing
relaxes. I notice that there’s music playing. I raise my gaze from the
pot plant to one of the artists and slowly, tentatively, begin to take
my space. The naked truth
There are
unwritten social contracts as to how we – women in particular – should
get attention. To ask for it too directly is considered gauche. The idea
of not being seen, painful. Instead, I have used a range of secondary
manipulations: be clever, be funny, be coy; cleavage, heels, seduction.
To suspend all of this, even for 30 minutes, to take the spotlight
wordlessly and be appreciated for my form alone, is different. To stand
in my vital and imperfect, ageing and alive body and be witnessed by
strangers feels liberating. It’s the ultimate no make-up selfie. A drawing of Tanis by Will Edmonds
No
longer do I feel demure and distant, I feel totally involved –
inviting, curious and challenging. The experience is not erotic. I can
feel the attention of the artists on me now: their eyes on my body and
their pens scratching furiously, trying to express the bends and grooves
of my curves, and I feel almost architectural.
Once the session
is over, I pull on my shirt and with it all of the social conventions
(and sexual tensions), eclipsed for the last half an hour. But in the
following weeks, subtle effects remain. Taking the spotlight – suffering
the scrutiny until I began to feel its warmth – felt like a direct and
honest way to receive attention; something I can practice, with my
clothes on, in my life.
Much has been written about the therapeutic effects of being witnessed by a non-judgemental other. Artists like Ellen Fisher Turk
use nude photography with women to challenge the historic views we
might hold of our own bodies, encouraging subjects to write journals
about their images. I buy a small picture of myself from the exhibition.
I like it. It doesn’t look like me but it captures something that
resonates.
Artists are always, really, drawing themselves even
when they are drawing someone else. Lucian Freud talked about the model
serving “the very private function for the painter of providing the
starting point for his excitement”. I would argue that that excitement
works both ways; that the act of being seen rather than watched is in
itself remedial. I would thoroughly recommend it.
bbc.
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