Presence: Commanding a Gaze
In her book Choreographing Difference, Ann Cooper Albright cites Elizabeth Hollander and her discussion of figure modeling and the power in presence. Hollander explains how it is difficult to analyze a figure model’s experience through looking at a painting, as the painting is a representation of that model crafted by someone else. Hollander then goes on to discuss the possibilities of empowerment in being both an “object of attention” and a “subject for art.” Albright writes, “Ostensibly, there is little to do, and yet the doing itself can be rewarding, even personally satisfying” (Albright 15). Hollander locates a subjectivity in the act of posing, and articulates this subjectivity as “performative presence” (16). She distinguishes this subjectivity, and this commanding of stage with how we usually conceptualize performance with drama and action. Because modeling lacks action in this way, the model must have a “’consciousness of one’s presence as expressive in and of itself’” (16).
If we look at pin up photographs, and photographs of strippers, we cannot figure their experience and label their act of modeling as empowering or not. But we can acknowledge that their role in commanding attention, and gaze has a subjectivity and therefore potentiality for empowerment.
Works Cited:
Albright, Ann Cooper. Choreographing Difference: The Body and Identity in Contemporary Dance. Wesleyan University Press: 1997. 1-20. Print.
Kotz, Liz. "Striptease East & West: Sexual Representation in Documentary Film." Framework 0.38 (1992): 47. ProQuest. 22 October 2015.