Iris, Messenger of the Gods
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- | "[[Anne Wagner|Anne M. Wagner]], in a superb discussion of [[Auguste Rodin]]'s sculpture, ''[[Iris, Messenger of the Gods]]'' (ca. 1890), which represents [[Iris]] with [[beaver shot|her legs thrust apart and vulva open]], notes that "neither the body's substance nor its activity have anything to do with the sculpted vocabulary of the feminine current at the time," and considers whether, despite the frankly [[phallocentric]] ..." --''[[Body work: objects of desire in modern narrative]]'', [[Peter Brooks]], 1993 | ||
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''[[Iris, Messenger of the Gods]]'' (ca. 1890) is a sculpture by [[Auguste Rodin]]. | ''[[Iris, Messenger of the Gods]]'' (ca. 1890) is a sculpture by [[Auguste Rodin]]. |
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Iris, Messenger of the Gods (ca. 1890) is a sculpture by Auguste Rodin.
See also
- Iris
- Wagner, Anne M. “Rodin's Reputation.” In Eroticism and the Body Politic, edited by Lynn Avery Hunt. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, ...
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