Jacqui Palumbo
Figura en una
finestra (Figure at the Window), 1925
Museo Reina Sofía
In the early 1800s, German painter Caspar David Friedrich returned
to the same subject again and again: figures looking at sublime landscapes,
their backs toward the viewer. He painted a couple peering out from a ship’s
bow; a woman gazing from her window; and, most famously, a wanderer on a cliff,
overlooking a tempest of fog.
Painting subjects from the back was not a new compositional device.
In the 14th century, the Italian artist Giotto became one of the first artists
to use it when he turned the backs of Christ’s mourners to establish depth of
field. The technique occasionally cropped up in the canvases of Raphael and
Vermeer. Yet Friedrich and his fellow German Romanticists popularized this
aesthetic mode, naming it Rückenfigur, or “figure from the back.” They used it
to both evoke longing and invite the viewer into the scene as the faceless
subject. With its heroic, mysterious figure, its loose and emotive
brushstrokes, and its sense of awe at the sublime, Friedrich’s WandererAbove
the Sea of Fog (ca. 1817) became the movement’s archetypal work.
Grob Gallery
Man Ray
Le Violon d'Ingres, 1924
Musée National d'Art Moderne, Centre Georges
Pompidou, Paris
Rückenfigur generates tension as it creates a
paradox: The technique simultaneously invites viewers into a landscape and
reminds them of the border between themselves and the scene. “It functions as a
placeholder we can imaginatively occupy, allowing us a virtual existence in the
landscape,” art historian Julian Jason Haladyn wrote in 2016. “[The] distance,
however, requires us to be more actively involved in the experience of the
painting if we are to enter its world.”
Since Friedrich popularized it, Rückenfigur has crossed the
boundaries of visual culture, appearing across art movements and disparate
media. Surrealists such as Salvador Dalí and René Magritte painted backwards figures
to instill a sense of mystery and introspection. One of Dalí’s most traditional
works, Figure at a Window (1925), creates a sense of yearning by capturing a
woman gazing seaward from an airy window. To highlight the allure of the female form, artists including Gustave
Courbet
Iconoclastic and influential Realist painter
Gustave Courbet is often regarded as the 19th century’s pioneering artist.
Courbet rejected academic …
, Man Ray, and Horst P. Horst all created works reminiscent of
Ingres’s La Grande Odalisque (1814), with sensual backs revealed and faces
concealed. Adding a dose of voyeurism, Edgar Degas drew a series of pastels of
anonymous women drying themselves after a bath.
In contemporary photography, Rückenfigur adds an air of mystique.
Cig Harvey uses the device in her contemporary surrealistic self-portraits, and
Erik Madigan Heck in his bold, enigmatic fashion images. Lakin Ogunbanwo puts a
different spin on Rückenfigur with tightly cropped portraits of the backs of
men’s heads. Their hats become symbols of their Nigerian identities.
In film, figures from the back can create drama—what happens, the
audience wonders, when the subject finally turns around? As an eagle-eyed
YouTube user showed in 2011, actress Jennifer Connelly has stood on a pier with
her back turned in three different films. In a dream sequence in the dark drama
Requiem for a Dream (2000), Harry (played by Jared Leto) tries to approach
Marion (Connelly) on Brighton Beach, yet she disappears when he reaches her.
In Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004), a mind-bending
moment occurs when Joel (Jim Carrey) tries and fails to turn his girlfriend’s
new lover around to see his face. And in Jordan Peele’s horror film Us (2019),
the young Zora (Shahadi Wright Joseph) meets her doppelgänger in a house of mirrors;
when she turns and finds herself facing the back of her twin—a visual parallel
to Magritte’s Not to Be Reproduced from 1937—the sight elicits immediate dread.
In both situations, Rückenfigur amplifies a sense of unease.
Nowhere is Rückenfigur more suspensefully used than in Alfred
Hitchcock’s classic film Vertigo (1958). Kim Novak plays a tortured beauty who may be
possessed by her late great-grandmother. A lovelorn detective, played by James
Stewart, follows her as Hitchcock films his heroine from the back. In an eerie
museum scene, Novak gazes at a painted portrait of the ancestor whom she has
been emulating through style and dress. The camera slowly skims every detail of
her turned figure as Stewart stealthily studies her from behind. He desires her
and knows he can’t reach her—just as Friedrich’s wanderer appears unable to
cross the abyss in front of him.
These days, Rückenfigur is finding novel uses online. On Instagram,
influencers use its mystique to gain fans: The turned back is especially prevalent,
especially in front of open vistas in far-flung locations. Followers can
imagine themselves in glamorous destinations, enjoying vicarious thrills. The
account @followmeto is the most famous example, with photographer Murad Osmann
and his model wife Nataly taking viewers around the world as he captures the
back of her slim figure and outstretched arm. As he takes her hand, Murad
becomes a surrogate for the viewer. Nearly half a million followers virtually
join the pair on their journeys around the world, tapping into the same longing
for the sublime that Friedrich harnessed more than two centuries earlier.
https://www.artsy.net/article/artsy-editorial-mysterious-appeal-art-depicts-figures?utm_medium=email&utm_source=20125693-newsletter-editorial-daily-04-24-20&utm_campaign=editorial&utm_content=st-V
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