A Reflexive Gaze on Art History: ‘Pregnances’
A Reflexive Gaze on Art History: ‘Pregnances’
Author(s): Marta SegarraSubject(s): Aesthetics, Structuralism and Post-Structuralism
Published by: Universitatea Petrol-Gaze din Ploieşti
Keywords: Colette Deblé; feminine aesthetic; feminist art history; feminist gaze; penetration; pregnance; birth;
Summary/Abstract: This article examines one of Jacques Derrida’s essays concerning aesthetics, ‘Pregnances’ (first published in 1993), which comments on the work of a woman artist, Colette Deblé, in relation to the question of the ‘feminine’ and to a feminist gaze in art history. Derrida argues that Deblé avoids oppositional or ‘reactive’ logic regarding Western pictorial tradition in favour of what can be called a reflexive gaze of this undoubtedly phallogocentric tradition. Deblé’s work also represents a reassessment of the traditional opposition between (masculine) activity and (feminine) passivity, as well as male/masculine penetration and female/feminine impregnation, but also of chronological temporality, hierarchy between the original and the copy, and precedence of the original over the quotation.
Journal: Word and Text, A Journal of Literary Studies and Linguistics
- Issue Year: XIV/2024
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 138-147
- Page Count: 10
- Language: English