Marlene
Dumas
Jule-die Vrou
1985, Oil on Canvas
125 x 105cm |
Jule-die
Vrou is a disembodied portrait painting framed in extreme
close-up; only the model's eyes and lips are fully rendered
attributes of seduction and sexuality. The rest of the painting
is obliterated by a corpulent fleshy pink, suggestive of femininity,
sin, violence and womanhood. The contrast between representation,
and abstraction suggests a psychological disparity, where
morality, representation, and social convention are questioned.
‘I don't have any conception of how big an average head
is, I've never been interested in anatomy. In that respect
I relate like children do. What is experienced as most important
is seen as the biggest, irrespective of actual or factual
size. In the movies everything is larger than life and yet
you experience that as real(istic); all my faces are much
bigger than human scale. From blowing up to zooming in, for
me the “close-up” was a way of getting rid of
irrelevant background information and by making the facial
elements so big, it increased the sense of abstraction concerning
the picture frame. The elimination of the background also
did away with the place of being and environmental context.'
‘As the isolation of a recognisable figure increases
and the narrative character decreases (contrary to what one
might initially assume that this lack of illustrative information
would bring about), the interpretative effects are inflamed.
The titles re-direct the work, however, they do not eradicate
the inherent ambiguity. One cannot interpret the painting
of Jule-die Vrou without entangling some of the root metaphors
applied not only to the female, but to the idea of portrayal
in general'. Marlene Dumas, 1992. |