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The Male Gaze : The Female Gaze

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Remember seeing an advertisement that seemed to cater to men? How about a picture, or even an internet meme, that didn’t necessarily give an accurate representation of women because it was meant to be relatable to men? This is characterized by the “male gaze”, which can be defined as “the way in which visual arts and literature depict the world from a masculine point of view”. It involves treating women as objects that are there for men’s pleasure. The male gaze coincides with the fact that originally men were only ones allowed to paint/sell art, and they crafted it for other men to buy it. This gaze works so “well” because of the fact that men have always had power over women; political power, mostly. Historically, men have had more power …show more content…

Through the eyes of an innocent child in her poem “Mami and Gauguin”, Julia Alvarez subverts the male gaze by redirecting it into ambition for freedom.
Taking a look at Gauguin’s painting, there is a lot of context to the women portrayed. The women are not looking Gauguin directly in the eyes during the painting, essentially implying that they are uncomfortable in the situation. Although it was perfectly normal for women to walk around topless in Tahiti at the time, the women most likely looked uncomfortable because of the way that Gauguin was painting them; he had power over them. France had colonized Tahiti in August of 1842, so not only did race play a part, but Gauguin was also a man, and men have had more power over women for centuries. The women were being exoticized by Gauguin; He was able to paint the naturally bare-breasted women in Tahiti, and then sell it as a scandalous work of art back home in France.
When looking at Gauguin’s painting “Two Tahitian Women”, there are a variety of opinions about it. Some people adore it as a work of art, but others find it offensive. For example, there was a situation in April of 2011 in which a woman started banging on the painting’s frame where it hung in The National Gallery of Art in Washington D.C. This woman must’ve been aggravated by the way in which she interpreted Gauguin’s painting; it enraged her so much that her actions got her detained and

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