Gender Politics, Presence and Erasure: Tattoo in in Pursuit of Venus [infected] and Les Sauvages De La Mer Pacifique

dc.contributor.advisorMatthew Rarey
dc.contributor.committeememberJennifer Johung
dc.creatorCornish, Emily
dc.date.accessioned2025-01-16T17:59:31Z
dc.date.issued2016-05-01
dc.description.abstractThis paper utilizes tattoo as a means for exploring the dialogue between contemporary Maori artist Lisa Reihana’s In Pursuit of Venus [infected] and Joseph Dufour’s nineteenth-century decorative wallpaper Les Sauvages de la Mer Pacifique. I argue that the tattooed body constitutes a re-insertion or re-infection within the pictorial program of In Pursuit of Venus [infected]. As such, tattoo becomes one focal point which allows us to work through four themes investigated by these two artworks: gender identity and ambiguity vis a vis practices that concern bodily adornment, the mutability of looking practices from one culture to another, encounters between different cultures and the concept of images as sites of encounter themselves, and the relationship between images, systems of knowledge and technology.
dc.description.embargo2018-06-17
dc.embargo.liftdate2018-06-17
dc.identifier.urihttp://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/85416
dc.relation.replaceshttps://dc.uwm.edu/etd/1130
dc.subjectContemporary Art
dc.subjectLisa Reihana
dc.subjectNew Media
dc.subjectOceania
dc.subjectTattoo
dc.titleGender Politics, Presence and Erasure: Tattoo in in Pursuit of Venus [infected] and Les Sauvages De La Mer Pacifique
dc.typethesis
thesis.degree.disciplineArt History
thesis.degree.grantorUniversity of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
thesis.degree.nameMaster of Arts

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