Tuesday 15 July 2014

The Scandalous Buttocks of La Frileuse

Jean-Antoine Houdon (Versailles, France, 25th March 1741 – Paris, France, 15th July 1828)

Today marks the anniversary of the death of Jean-Antoine Houdon. A sculptor of no small note, Houdon enjoyed enormous success both before and after the French Revolution, though he fell from favour during those turbulent intervening years. A graduate of the Académie Royale de Peinture et de Sculpture, Houdon became known for his busts of famed figures including monarchs, philosophers and even American Presidents!


La Frileuse by Jean-Antoine Houdon, 1785


Despite his fashionable popularity and renown, Houdon scandalised polite society in 1783 when he unveiled his work entitled, La Frileuse, or, Winter. The figure depicts a young, naked woman, draped only in a shawl that does little to cover her, posing before a classical urn and supported against the trunk of a tree. 

Initially worked out in terracotta and then carved in marble, in 1785, Houdon submitted the work to the Académie for its salon and found it rejected though there was a grudging suggestion that it might be placed in a corner somewhere, hopefully to hide the young lady's buttocks! It is certainly a unique depiction of the season even today and no less eye-catching, though perhaps we have grown a little more difficult to scandalise.

In 1787 Houdon returned to the subject and cast a bronze version of the work for the duc d'Orleans, this time removing the tree trunk and urn and leaving her even more starkly exposed. Houdon made several copies of the silvering, vulnerable figure, as did a number of other sculptors, much to his annoyance. However, the original, scandalous inspiration definitely belonged to Jean-Antoine Houdon.

15 comments:

Debra Brown said...

It is lovely! But I am utterly scandalized.

Catherine Curzon said...

I should hope so too!

Anna Belfrage said...

No goose bumps? Very warm winter....

Catherine Curzon said...

Her scarf must be keeping all the heat in!

Stephen Barker said...

It looks so modern, if you had said it was Art Deco it would have been plausible.

Catherine Curzon said...

It does, doesn't it? I must admit, I love it.

Anonymous said...

She is so vulnerable almost like a victim of War...I don't know why but it reminds me of that and the little Match Girl...

Celticlady's Reviews said...

Poor thing looks cold...lol

Catherine Curzon said...

I think I actually know what you mean!

Catherine Curzon said...

Needs a bigger scarf...

Alison said...

Such a modern piece for the time! Could be analysed in so many ways!

Stephen Baines said...

Could be a modern statue, to bring to our attention the vast number of young girls who are still being exploited.

Catherine Curzon said...

And probably has been!

Catherine Curzon said...

It could!

marianne said...

I wonder why he called it Winter...? not really the most descriptive title do you think ? unless like the original tree everything has fallen off apart from article (one leaf) …. but it still doesnt seem a befitting name....