
Yesterday I stood amongst strangers and viewed a slide show that included sexually graphic nothing-left-to-the-imagination shots of anal penetration, and I felt
completely normal. This must be the difference between looking at sex in art and looking at sex in porn; the context decides everything.
It was inside the highbrow environs of the art galleries at London’s famous Barbican Centre that I found myself so blasé.
Seduced: Art and Sex from Antiquity to Now is a new exhibition that runs until late January 2008 with a reassuring ‘adults only’ entry limit and content sure to raise a few eyebrows and provoke some wry smiles upon being discussed or read within the cultural reviews of the Sunday supplements or on the odd television or Radio 4 programme.
As suggested above, this exhibition doesn’t flinch from the nitty-gritty with much ‘hardcore’ material on display, albeit with the key distinction being made early on that this is
ART, with the purpose primarily to provoke thought and emotion rather than pornography’s sole aim to sexually arouse. I tend to agree as nothing here really aroused me at all, while there was some thought inspired, albeit in quite a whimsical sense, by the various representations of intercourse and stimulation that mostly begins, as much does, with the classical Greeks and Romans - each with their wickedly salacious sets of Gods, nymphs and satyrs honoured in marble statues and wall paintings depicting ancient nookie.
Looking to provide something for everyone the curators also include sexually infused pieces from the Renaissance age as well as Chinese, Japanese and Indian pieces, the latter informing myself that we, in the West, have been for years misinterpreting the philosophy of the
Karma Sutra and wrongly attaching our own mucky ideals to it completely inappropriately.
With much of this early stuff fairly humdrum, the exhibition doesn’t really find its edge until it reaches the photographic age and that extra bit of explicit detail the camera provides. Paintings and sculpture portraying sexual acts retain an ambiguous detached-from-reality quality, but photographs mirror exactly what people get up to.
American photographer Robert Mapplethorpe’s pictures have the greatest shock appeal in the exhibition. There’s something about fisting that never fails to create unease within me, even in a shiny black and white shot. Sadomasochism too, has never been my bag at all, though I can appreciate Mapplethorpe’s technically excellent recordings of such acts between consenting gents in medieval dungeon gear.
Seduced has household names amongst its roster of artists: Andy Warhol gets two films,
Blow Job and
The Kiss running on loops; Tracey Emin pops up right at the start, while Pablo Picasso and Francis Bacon are represented by a painting each. These are some of the highlights of the exhibition with a rarely-seen piece from Picasso’s wondrously melancholic blue period revealing an incongruously happy scene of oral pleasuring. Bacon’s painting,
Two Figures in the Grass, while striking, doesn’t seem to be about sex at all, but rather loneliness, given that there appears to be only one figure in the work, and in some distress. Maybe I'm just looking at it all wrong.
So, sexually intercourse didn't begin in 1963 at all, and has actually been going on for ages and ages.
Seduced, without being particularly enlightening, provides interesting evidence of its longevity and how it has informed so much of what we do through history. You're probably even thinking about it right now.