Sunday 5 April 2015

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Red Corsets Biography


In my novel, Eat My Heart Out, a deranged second-wave feminist called Stephanie Haight owns a series of rip-off Allen Jones sculptures.

These Pop art pieces, made in the late Sixties and early Seventies, consist of fibreglass female models posed as items of furniture. Stephanie says: “I don’t know if he was being ironic or just straightforwardly offensive.”

Now 77, the British artist’s retrospective  has just opened at the Royal Academy,  London. It is offensive, but also fascinating. The  first gallery gives people what they want:  here is Table (1969), a life-size, pornographically perfect woman on all fours; she wears knee-high boots with spike heels, black gloves, a black corset which displays her  balloon-like breasts. To make her and other works like Chair (1969), Jones worked with a company that produced waxworks for  Madame Tussauds.

Significantly, a hand-mirror is positioned on the rug beneath her, and she stares at herself. She is frozen in a position of submission and vanity. This is the age-old patriarchal vision of woman: born to serve, admire herself, be used. A glass surface is bolted to her back, transforming her into a coffee table. If woman has historically been aligned to the domestic, Jones turned her into a domestic object.

Jones has said that his aim was to create something with “an iconic presence,” and in this sense he succeeds without question. Nearly half a century after it was made, Table appears as fresh and powerful and grotesque as ever. While much of Pop art now seems tired, Jones created a  singular visual language. Here is the female figure rendered abject and humiliated, a fact which is obscured by the brilliance of his design.

Stanley Kubrick approached Jones to design the set of A Clockwork Orange (1971), but he declined. Kubrick ripped off the designs instead. In the Korova Milk Bar, where Alex and his droogs drink milk laced with drugs, furniture comprised of painted white women adds to the ambience of “ultra-violence”.

Jones has called himself a feminist, but the sculptures were attacked by the new feminist movement that was emerging in the late  Sixties and early Seventies. For me, they point to the contradictions of the idea of “free love” in which we are still mired. Second-wave  feminism emerged alongside the “sexual  revolution”, but the two shouldn’t be confused; the former demanded equal rights for women, while the latter encompassed Playboy and the birth of the modern porn industry, which glorifies male dominance.

Jones’ sculptures may be classified as “porno chic”, but what they show is sexual cruelty.  Forniphilia is “the art of human furniture”, a word coined in 1998 by the fetish company of self-proclaimed “mad bondage scientist” Jeff Gord, who said: “I have always loved the thought of using women as items of furniture... I guess it is the thought of having such a powerful sexual being totally under control.”
There are precedents in art history: Salvador Dalí was photographed sitting behind a desk made up of a real woman for a 1947 photo shoot for Look magazine; François-Rupert Carabin used the female figure as a structural rather than decorative element in his fin de siècle wooden furniture. Jones seems as much influenced by the Modernists and Surrealists as girly magazines.

A display case in the second gallery is engrossing; it shows the cultural impact of Jones’ work. There is a vile cartoon that was published in The Daily Mirror at the time: a male visitor to Jones’ exhibition mistakes a real woman for a fibreglass one and ashes his cigarette in her shelf-like cleavage. Her husband grabs him and says: “That ashtray happens to be my wife!”

While Jones was part of the artistic avant-garde – along with Royal College of Art contemporaries Patrick Caulfield and David Hockney – the sculptures clearly appealed to regressive patriarchal taste, which was threatened by the new feminism. A 1969 photo shoot for Vogue shows Table and another sculpture, Hat Stand (1969), alongside Jones’ wife, Janet, who is blond and appears akin to the models. The effect is uncanny and sinister: real flesh appears interchangeable with fibreglass. The difference is not immediately obvious.

There are objects too from Jones’ studio: a tiny woman locked in a cigar jar, some soft-porn seaside postcards, and a gold Playboy bunny statuette of Marilyn Cole, Playmate of the Year in 1973. It seems dangerous to take these images too lightly, as mere relics of a sexist time. We still live in a sexist time; women are still the second sex, expected to be subservient to men’s needs. The feminist response should have been included in the display too.

The next gallery is a swerve from what visitors might

Red Corsets Corset Piercing tops Dress Wedding Dresses Training Before and After Prom Dresses Tattoo Photos 


Red Corsets Corset Piercing tops Dress Wedding Dresses Training Before and After Prom Dresses Tattoo Photos 


Red Corsets Corset Piercing tops Dress Wedding Dresses Training Before and After Prom Dresses Tattoo Photos 

Red Corsets Corset Piercing tops Dress Wedding Dresses Training Before and After Prom Dresses Tattoo Photos 

Red Corsets Corset Piercing tops Dress Wedding Dresses Training Before and After Prom Dresses Tattoo Photos 

Red Corsets Corset Piercing tops Dress Wedding Dresses Training Before and After Prom Dresses Tattoo Photos 

Red Corsets Corset Piercing tops Dress Wedding Dresses Training Before and After Prom Dresses Tattoo Photos

Red Corsets Corset Piercing tops Dress Wedding Dresses Training Before and After Prom Dresses Tattoo Photos

Red Corsets Corset Piercing tops Dress Wedding Dresses Training Before and After Prom Dresses Tattoo Photos
 
Red Corsets Corset Piercing tops Dress Wedding Dresses Training Before and After Prom Dresses Tattoo Photos

Red Corsets Corset Piercing tops Dress Wedding Dresses Training Before and After Prom Dresses Tattoo Photos

Red Corsets Corset Piercing tops Dress Wedding Dresses Training Before and After Prom Dresses Tattoo Photos

Red Corsets Corset Piercing tops Dress Wedding Dresses Training Before and After Prom Dresses Tattoo Photos

Red Corsets Corset Piercing tops Dress Wedding Dresses Training Before and After Prom Dresses Tattoo Photos

Red Corsets Corset Piercing tops Dress Wedding Dresses Training Before and After Prom Dresses Tattoo Photos

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