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The Fine Art of Body Painting

1/6/2014

2 Comments

 
This article by Ann Siracusa was originally published on the Romance Books 4 Us Blog, April 10, 2013

A few weeks ago, a friend sent me some pictures circulating on the internet showing body painting by nineteen-year-old Japanese artist student Chooo-San. She uses acrylic paint to transform herself into a mutant or cyborg. I was so intrigued that I had to find out more.

THE ORIGINS OF BODY ART
Body art is art made on, with, or consisting of the human body with painting, tattoos, piercings, branding, or scalpelling. Body painting is temporary, painted onto the human skin, and last for a day or two. Mehndi henna or temp tattoo and glitter tattoos may last a couple of weeks.

Tens of thousands of years ago, our early human ancestors used painting materials for cave paintings. Many scholars believe that before interior cave-decoration became a prehistoric fad, early humans used the same materials for painting their own bodies, primarily as camouflage for hunting and to defend themselves from predators. They certainly had many examples in nature to learn from.

Picture
Whenever the practice began, body and face painting developed into decorating in shapes, patterns, and colors for hunting, religious, ritual, and military purposes--sometimes the painting was used to scare the enemy--and for artistic expression. Body painting, along with other rites, represents important changes in one's life, such as puberty, marriage, birth, and so on, and has been a part of most tribal cultures since ancient times. The art of transforming the human being for various purposes with make-up and masks seems inherent in all cultures.

Natural pigments, tree barks, plants, minerals, and clays were used; the colors and types of pigments depended on what was available in the immediate area. Different patterns, shapes, and colors have a different significance depending on the culture. Body painting became a way of expressing one's culture and identity.

According to fashionencyclopedia.com, body painting was traditionally used in many societies to signify a person's social status and/or religious beliefs. A temporary decoration, body paint lasted only a few days. In some cultures, both men and women painted their bodies only for important social occasions, while in others, people wore body paint every day as a uniform to show their social status.

TRIBAL BODY AND FACE PAINTING
Nearly all tribal cultures practiced some form of body art. The practice still survives in its ancient forms among indigenous peoples in many countries. While it is done primarily for ceremonial purposes (and tourism), it also serves to preserve elements of the culture and identity in an expanding world. Art makes us different.

Julius Caesar wrote that the Britanni warriors or Picts (which means painted ones in Latin) colored their bodies blue when going into battle. 

History teaches us that the American Indians painted their faces, particularly when preparing for war, and movies like Braveheart show other cultures that painted their faces and bodies.

Contemporary Body Painting
Most of us are familiar with face painting in its contemporary forms. We see the images in ads, on TV and many other places, particularly related to the entertainment business.

Picture
And, ladies, your skin care and cosmetics represent a 160 billion-dollar-per-year industry. That's some serious face painting, wouldn't you say? To quote the Economist Magazine, an industry driven by sexual instinct will always thrive.

Even today in India and Morocco, brides traditionally have their hands and feet painted in henna, and Indian women. Hindu women and men wear their marking and symbols on their foreheads. The small red dot, worm by women, is called bindi and represents the social status of a married woman.

Body Painting As A Form Of Fine Art
Body painting doesn't always involve painting large pieces of a nude body; the art form also includes smaller pieces on otherwise clothed bodies. The model may be a "stand alone" canvas for the artist, or may be part of a more complex juxtaposition of model (or models) and background. Perhaps that is why body painting is considered, by some, as one of the performing arts.

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Body painting as a form of artistic expression experienced a resurgence in the 1960's and 1970's, in part due to the relaxation of the social mores regarding nudity and the freedom movements of those generations.  Some thirty years earlier, in 1933 at the World's Fair in Chicago, Max Factor Sr. and his model, Sally Rand, were arrested when he painted her body with new cosmetics developed for the movies.  By the 1960's artists needed attention and were looking for something shocking and provoking to send their message.

Since the 1980's, body painting has become widely accepted in the US.  There are publications dedicated to it, festivals, and competitions around the world.  The first art gallery dedicated to body painting as a fine art opened in 2006 in New Orleans.

But still today, there is an ongoing debate whether or not body paints is a form of Fine Art.  You'll have to make up your own mind.
]

Artist Chooo-san

Picture



Artist Craig Tracy

http://www.boredpanda.com/body-art-illusions-by-craig-tracy/
http://www.craigtracy.com

Picture





Artist Gesine Marwedel
http://www.gesine-marwedel.de/
http://www.boredpanda.com/body-art-illusions-gesine-marwedel

Picture





Artist Yomico Moreno (I believe these are tattoos, not body painting)
http://www.yomicoart.com/home.php
http://boredpanda.com/body-art-illusions-yomico-moreno/

Artist Emma Hack
http://thechive.com/2009/03/13/stunning-body-paint-art-by-emma-hack-16-photos/

Picture






Artist Bella Volen
http://www.bella-volen.com/fine-art-body-painting.html










Some Others By Unnamed Artists
(unnamed in the articles)

I'd love to hear your opinion of this.  Please leave a comment.
□


Resources
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2004/10/photogalleries/africa_faces/photo7.html
http://www.snazaroo.us/football.htm
http://www.designyourway.net/blog/inspiration/the-art-of-body-painting-and-best-63-examples/
http://www.boredpanda.com/realistic-body-art-chooo-san-part2/
http://www.boredpanda.com/body-art-illusions-by-craig-tracy/
http://www.bella-volen.com/Body-Painting-History-Bodyart-History-Geschichte-der-Koerperbemalung.html
http://www.yomicoart.com/home.php
http://www.gesine-marwedel.de/
http://thechive.com/2009/03/13/stunning-body-paint-art-by-emma-hack-16-photos/
http://www.ideactionmedia.com/livingbrush/2012/10/30/hp-slider-bodies-as-works-of-art-2012/
http://www.chelkoevents.com/event-artists
http://www.bella-volen.com/fine-art-body-painting.html

 

2 Comments
Hotspots in Kentucky link
7/4/2014 06:40:07 pm

Was browsing through Weebly when I stumbled here

Reply
Richard Diltz link
3/3/2018 09:48:33 pm

AT the bottom of your page under "Some Others By Unnamed Artists (unnamed in the articles)" - the image of the woman chipping away at her granite shell is actually created by myself and photographer Dan Hood. Thank you for featuring us in such good company. If you don't mind, a credit to our website would be most appreciated.

Reply



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    Author R. Ann Siracusa

    Novelist, retired architect and urban planner, world traveler, quilter, owl collector, devoted wife-mother-grandmother, great-grandmother, and, according to some, wild-assed liberal.

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