X

Avery, Milton. Painting, Fencers. 1944.
Chagall, Marc. Painting, White Crucifixion. 1937.
Degas Edgar. Painting, The Rape. 1868-1869.
Duchamp, Marcel. Collage, Impossible Bed. (1960s).
Freidlander, Lee. Photograph, Boy in the Window. 1962.
Moreau, Gustav. Painting, Hesoid’s Muse. 1887.
Tintoretto. Painting, Origin of the Milky Way. 1578.
Titian. Painting, Venus and Adonis. 1555.
Trevino, Jesse. Painting, La Panderia. 1977.
Van Baburen, Dirk. Painting, Prometheus Being Chained by Vulcan. 1623.
Van Haarlem, Cornelius. Painting, The Fall of Man. 1577.
Poem “We’ re All Naked Bodies In Our Minds”. 1993.

The selected images in this page, depict human struggle with crossed lines or “X” patterns in their composition. For example, the wings of Hesoid’s muse and Hesoid’s leg describe an “X” pattern. The poem, We’ re All Naked Bodies In Our Minds portrays the dichotomy between two viewpoints of perspective as inner and outer, subjective and objective, the observed and the observer.

Evelyn Tribble’s, "The Peopled Page" in The Iconic Page critiques the editorial features of John Foxe’s trope, Actes and Monuments (1563, 1570, 1576, 1583) better known as the Book of the Martyrs, a massive record of the martyrs of the Protestant church with annotations accumulating to 2000 pages in the 1583 edition. Foxe’s book attacks the Catholic Church by reprinting and annotating a Mass Book, with mocking marginal notes, criticizing the liturgy and the belief in transubstantiation.

 Tribble observes that the placement of the critical text in the margin is more strident, like a heckler in the stands, compared to later normalized publications, which place the critical text as footnotes at the bottom of the page. She concludes that the distinction between text and margin is broken down with this type of text arrangement.

Her research also invites considerations of the centrality of the question of embodiment, represented in the body of the Christ as the Eucharist (communion host) during the medieval and early modern period. Actes’ elaborate woodcut front piece portrays the communion host raised to the grasping hands of a satanic demon. The Protestant and Anglican reformations mark the significant break with the medieval. In the transition to the enlightenment, the debate over the embodied Christ, resolves into a reconstitution of the human as the free and sovereign individual. As the locus of argument, the challenge to the Eucharist refutes papal sovereignty and the precept of faith, transferring the loci of knowledge from theological authority to science and the individual.

Questions of embodiment were at issue in this historic transition as they are now in the transition to the digital era. Although globalization signals the end of colonialism, Paul Virilio proposes that the future terrain of colonization is the human body and mind via implants and technologies of surveillance and influence. The current penchant for piercing may be a cultural precursor to implantation. Blake’s visionary idealism imprinted an image of the sovereign human while resisting the empiricism of his age. In Blake's time, a period of industrialization and mechanization followed the scientific inquiry of the Enlightenment, and the current experimentation with computerization, genetics and robotics is the beginning of a new historical period of cyborg technology and digital automation. Like Blake, Ginsberg et al inscribe an ideal of the primitive embodied human, while resisting cyborg aspirations of postmodern homogenization.

   

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