By
Andrew Mulenga
Pictorial
painting can take up many forms in terms of subject matter, a tranquil landscape
in a rural setting, an animated cultural ceremony, a portrait or even the charming
still-life of a flower arrangement.
But
imagine a painting filled with realistically rendered genitalia, strewn all
over the canvas, female and male, gaping and jutting respectively, all framed
in the glistening ambience of a pulsating orgy. This is what you expect to see
in the easier seen than described works such as Forbidden Fruit by British painter Ruth Bircham.
In
fact, it is during moments like this that one hopes to seek refuge in such
words like those attributed to the German painter Gerhard Richter: “To talk about paintings is not only
difficult but perhaps pointless too. You can only express in words what words
are capable of expressing -- what language can communicate. Painting has
nothing to do with that.”
The Kiss (acrylic on canvas) by Ruth Bircham |
Bircham’s
most uninhibited work, which falls into a genre called ‘erotic art’, cannot be
printed along with this article because in the eyes of many it will be perceived
as pornography. But calling her work pornography is an accusation she strongly refutes
and proficiently defends with deeply meditated ideas.
Moreover,
she has already embarked on a campaign to spread her erotic gospel outside the
UK having successfully exhibited at Terra Kulture gallery on Victoria Island,
in Nigeria in 2009 alongside two Nigerian artists as well as Brussels, Belgium
in September last year. At both venues she says she received stimulating press
interviews and the shocked, but enthusiastic audiences loved her art filling
the galleries in streams every day.
“My art is intended for the masses globally, as my intention is to tour to
create the awareness of diverse beauty that shows the nude or naked form in its
natural beauty as aesthetic,” she explains.
By
general community standards of course, sexual acts are perceived to be meant
for the private
domain so their public presence or exhibition may tend to
solicit intense debate hinging on what constitutes ‘public morality’. Bircham
however insists that when the sexual act or nude form is created via art as
representative, it becomes a powerful voice, and has a ‘Will’ of its own that
speaks out against what is based on negative or positive morality, and one must
ask oneself, whose views are these moralities based on?
“Sex
on canvas, in sculpture, photography, drawing and dance is art and should be
seen as art, not pornography. When it’s in the gallery it is art. Pornography is
when you are situated in the same room with the actual persons having sex in
front of you or when something is filmed without editing the footage clips, and
is sold, something that depicts on-going action of sex without stopping,” she explains,
clarifying that because it is created by an artist, it is art, also it is
presented in a gallery for exhibition.
Lust (oil and acrylic on
canvas)
by Ruth Bircham
|
She
has received many confrontational views from the public, in which she asks, “what
is the real” and “what is the extreme?” Is not the extreme what is deemed how
the female body should be portrayed. She argues that what is reflected in art
is how the uses of the nude, naked or sexual body as a means of expression
plays an important part in addressing issues that women in the contemporary
world face.
“This
type of artwork stands in opposition to recognised social representations of
women in the media such as magazines, television, books, newspapers and other
media products, like advertisements,” she says.
She
emphasises that her art is for adults only, and at every exhibition, she has warning
signs against anyone below the age of 21, and in galleries her provocative works
usually get a private room to themselves.
She divides her adult themed art
into two categories, “sensual erotic” and “explicit erotic”, one being more watered-down than the
other, the former probably being the type published with this article.
“Sensual erotic is artworks which are naturally suggestive and just nude.
It is indicative or evocative, making someone thinks of sexual matters. It is titillating,
provocative, and stimulates further thoughts that convey a hint or suggestion,
a promise of a great time,” she elaborates “Explicit erotic is artworks which
pulls the viewer into the image to question its existence, style, methods its
beauty from a diverse form. It is enticing, inviting the viewer’s attention.
What makes it explicit is when the body sections are framed specifically”.
Recently, Bircham
has been applying her remarkable skill for realistically depicting female genitalia
to the fight against
female circumcision otherwise known as Female Genital Cutting (FGC). She
intends to host an exhibition that will have a segment with paintings whose
proceeds are marked for donation to the Orchid Project an organisation that
advocates against FGC, a culture that is practiced among a good number of
societies across the world although Indonesia, Africa and the Middle East
have been reported as having the most prevalent cases.
Three Graceful Bathers by Ruth Bircham |
According to the Orchid
Project, the UN estimates that worldwide, 125 million women and girls are
currently living with the consequences of FGC and a further 30 million girls
are at risk of being cut in the next decade across 29 known countries.
“The age at which a girl is cut depends on a specific cultural context.
In some communities a girl may be just nine days old. In others, it may be
later as a teenager. In half of the countries that practice FGC, the majority
of girls are cut before age five,” reports the Orchid Project. According to the organisation,
men and women often support FGC without question because it is a traditional
practice that has existed in a community for generations. Many communities
believe that a girl needs to be cut in order to marry well.
Bircham is
riled by such cultural practices and describes them as false ideals that need
to be questioned.
“FGC
is an act to make women submissive, isolated, invisible and subjective to being.
I’m objective and will continue to be objective against all things that
demonstrate that the female should be thus,” argues the painter.
But
returning to her work, one must not be fooled by her explicit content and be
quick to judge her. As earlier alluded, her paintings are rooted in thought out
concepts and theory, and its purpose is to challenge perceptions. She believes,
everyone is naked and therefore uses the naked form to “invite and enrich
people to really look at what they are really looking at within themselves;
it’s almost like a mirror reflection.”
“The
main issue is found in what statements I am implying, incorporating and
encouraging in my artworks when I a female turn a situation into a subjective
or objective experience, and the diverse meaning and concepts that lay behind
them,” she says.
Perhaps
it is true that the audience’s perceptions may not always meet the terms of an
artist’s expression, particularly when it comes to the portrayal of nudity
although this entirely depends on the community or the space at which the art
is being displayed. East Africa is fairly tolerant in this regard with Uganda
hosting the annual Nude exhibition
since 2000. Kenya too had a major exhibition with Nude Naked Nature held at the Italian Cultural Centre in Nairobi
last year that featured 20 artists from five countries which included Nigeria,
Ghana, Zimbabwe, Madagascar and Kenya.It featured drawings, paintings,
sculpture, installation and photography and was announced as “a contemplation
of the human body in contemporary Pan-African art practice.”
Closer
to home, in 2001, Nsofwa Bowa, subsequently well-known but then a young Zambian
sculptor eager to launch his career, made a series of concrete statues of
females which he installed around the lawns of a roundabout in Ndola, with city
council approval. Nude from the waist up, the figures caused a controversy
which resulted in a demand by women’s lobby groups for their demolition on the
alleged reason of their vulgarity. Nsofwa made an attempt to “dress” the
statues by making alterations but still, they were destroyed at night by
unknown people barely a week after they were erected.
Nevertheless,
returning to Bircham, although the erotic assumes a substantial component of
her art production, her themes are broad, ranging from conventional portraits,
surrealist landscapes as well as wildlife and nature.
Although
the 48 year old is of Caribbean heritage having been raised in both Jamaica and
England, and has only visited the continent once, her work appears to have an inherently
African visual impression to it. Evident in works such as Wash Day that depicts a typical scene of rural women doing their laundry
by the river or Cry For Biafra an ode
to the brutal Nigeria-Biafra war of 1967-1970 that also speaks to modern times
and according to the artist “questions the logics and theories that lays behind
the methods used to destroy lives, and why Boko Haram should be allowed to commit
serious crimes” in obvious reference to the recent kidnaping of over 200 Nigerian
school girls by insurgents.
greatly written thank you
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