Sylvia Sleigh (8 May 1916 – 24 October 2010) was a Welsh-born naturalised American realist painter who lived and worked in New York City.[1] She is known for her role in the feminist art movement and especially for reversing traditional gender roles in her paintings of nude men, often using conventional female poses from historical paintings by male artists like Diego Vélazquez, Titian, and Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres. Her most well-known subjects were art critics, feminist artists, and her husband, Lawrence Alloway.[1]
Early life and education
Sleigh was born in Llandudno, and raised in England. She studied at the Brighton School of Art.[2] For a time, she worked at a clothing shop in Bond Street, where she recalled "undressing Vivien Leigh".[1] Sleigh later opened her own business in Brighton, England, where she made hats, coats, and dresses until she closed her shop at the start of World War II.[1] She returned to painting and moved to London in 1941 after marrying her first husband, an English painter named Michael Greenwood.[1] Her first solo exhibition was in 1953 at the Kensington Art Gallery in London.[3] Sleigh met her second husband, Lawrence Alloway, an English curator and art critic, while taking evening classes to study art history at the University of London; they married in 1954 and moved to the United States in 1961.[4][5] The following year, Alloway became a curator at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum.[2][4]
Work and feminism
Male nudes
Around 1970, from feminist principles, she painted a number of works reversing stereotypical artistic themes by featuring nude men in poses that were traditionally associated with women, like the reclining Venus or odalisque.[1] Some directly alluded to existing works, such as Philip Golub Reclining (1971), which appropriates the pose of the Rokeby Venus by Diego Velázquez.[6] The model was the son of the artists Nancy Spero and Leon Golub.[2][7] This work also presents a reversal of the male-artist/female-muse pattern typical of the Western canon and is reflective of research into the position of women throughout the history of art as model, mistress, and muse, but rarely as artist−genius.[8] Unlike earlier male artists, Sleigh individualized her nude subjects instead of representing them as generalized types.[6]
The Turkish Bath (1973), a similarly gender-reversed version of Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres's painting of the same name, depicts a group of artists and art critics, including her husband, Lawrence Alloway (reclining at the lower right), Carter Ratcliff, John Perreault, and Scott Burton.[2][9] Also shown are two views of Sleigh's frequent model, Paul Rosano.[10] One pose borrowed directly from Ingres's painting is found in the figure of Rosano, seated on the left and playing a guitar with his back turned to the viewer. Alloway reclines in the conventional pose of an odalisque. Ingres's painting has many nude women but Sleigh minimized the number and painted only six men. She carefully painted individual body hairs.[1] Over the course of her career, Sleigh painted more than thirty works that feature her husband as a subject.[7] While somewhat idealized, Sleigh's figures remain highly individualized.[7] She often used her husband and friends as models because they were important to her.[10]
In her male nudes, the subject "is used as a vehicle to express erotic feelings, just as male artists have always used the female nude".[11] In works such as Paul Rosano Reclining (1974) and Imperial Nude: Paul Rosano (1975), Sleigh portrayed her male subjects in stereotypical female poses in order to comment on past biases in which male artists have depicted sexualized female nudes.[12]
Other works equalize the roles of men and women, such as Concert Champêtre (1976), in which all of the figures are nude, unlike its similarly composed namesake by Titian (earlier credited to Giorgione), in which only the women are unclothed. As Sleigh explained, "I feel that my paintings stress the equality of men and women (women and men). To me, women were often portrayed as sex objects in humiliating poses. I wanted to give my perspective. I liked to portray both man and woman as intelligent and thoughtful people with dignity and humanism that emphasized love and joy."[13] Likewise, her painting of Lilith (1976), created as a component of The Sister Chapel, a collaborative installation that premiered in 1978, depicts the superimposed bodies of a man and woman to emphasize the fundamental similarities between the two genders.[14]
Feminist activism
In 1972, Sylvia Sleigh played a significant role in securing a venue and serving as a juror for Women Choose Women, a major exhibition of more than 100 works by female artists at the New York Cultural Center in January and February 1973.[14]
In a 2007 interview with Brian Sherwin, Sleigh was asked if gender equality issues in the mainstream art world, and the world in general, had changed for the better. She answered, "I do think things have improved for women in general there are many more women in government, in law and corporate jobs, but it's very difficult in the art world for women to find a gallery." According to Sleigh, there is still more that needs to be done in order for men and women to be treated as equals in the art world.[20]
In 2006, Sylvia Sleigh donated her largest painting,[2]Invitation to a Voyage: The Hudson River at Fishkill (1979–1999), to the Hudson River Museum.[22][23] In fourteen panels totaling 70 feet in length, Sleigh's panorama occupies two walls when exhibited.[22] She was inspired by the pastoral works of Antoine Watteau, Giorgione, and Édouard Manet.[24] Included are Sleigh's husband, Lawrence Alloway, and a group of friends who were mostly artists and art critics.[24] They are picnicking, posing, painting, and interacting against the backdrop of the Hudson River and the nearby woods.[22][23][24] The "Riverside" and "Woodside" sections, each consisting of seven panels, are exhibited opposite each other for an immersive experience.[25]
In 2008, Sleigh was honored with the Distinguished Artist Award for Lifetime Achievement by the College Art Association.[31] She was similarly recognized by the Women's Caucus for Art, which posthumously awarded Sleigh the organization's Lifetime Achievement Award in 2011.[18] She died of complications from a stroke in October 2010.[1]
Sleigh's work was included in the exhibition Women Painting Women (2022) at the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth[32] and Framing the Female Gaze: Women Artists and the New Historicism (2023) at Lehman College Art Gallery, where her work was the "touchstone" for the exhibition.[33]
^ abcdefghBrown, Betty Ann (1997). "Sleigh, Sylvia". In Gaze, Delia (ed.). Dictionary of Women Artists. Vol. 2. London: Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers. pp. 1280–1281.
^ abSchlegel, Amy Ingrid, ed. (2001). "An Unnerving Romanticism:" The Art of Sylvia Sleigh and Lawrence Alloway. Philadelphia: Philadelphia Art Alliance.
^Borzello, Frances (1998). Seeing Ourselves: Women's Self-Portraits. New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc.
^Borzello, Frances (2 November 2001). "Nude awakening". The Guardian. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
^ abcdRosen, Randy; Brawer, Catherine C. (1989). Making Their Mark: Women Artists Move into the Mainstream, 1970-85. New York: Abbeville Press. pp. 133–134.
^Semmel, Joan; Kingsley, April (Spring–Summer 1980). "Sexual Imagery in Women's Art". Woman's Art Journal. 1 (1): 1–6. doi:10.2307/1358010. JSTOR1358010.
^Arnason, H.H.; Mansfield, Elizabeth (2013). History of Modern Art: Painting, Sculpture, Architecture, Photography (7th ed.). Pearson Education Inc. p. 577.
^ abHottle, Andrew D. (2014). The Art of the Sister Chapel: Exemplary Women, Visionary Creators, and Feminist Collaboration. Farnham, Surrey: Ashgate Publishing Limited. p. 160.
^ abBroude, Norma; Garrard, Mary D., eds. (1994). The Power of Feminist Art: The American Movement of the 1970s, History and Impact. New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc.
^Moyer, Carrie (3 February 2010). "Sylvia Sleigh". The Brooklyn Rail. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
^Meskimmon, Marsha (1996). The Art of Reflection: Women Artists' Self-Portraiture in the Twentieth Century. London: Scarlet Press.
^ ab"Sylvia Sleigh, CV"(PDF). Feminist Art Base, Brooklyn Museum. Retrieved 11 March 2021.
^ abc"History". sylviasleigh.com. Retrieved 11 March 2021.
^Heller, Jules; Heller, Nancy G., eds. (1995). North American Women Artists of the Twentieth Century: A Biographical Dictionary. New York: Garland Publishing, Inc.
^Sylvia Sleigh papers. The Getty Research Institute Special Collections, The J. Paul Getty Trust.
Finding Aid for the Sylvia Sleigh Papers, 1803-2011, bulk 1940-2000. The Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles, Accession no. 2004.M.4. Archive contains more than 100 boxes of: correspondence; project files relating to exhibitions; documentation of artworks; writings and lectures; files relating to women artist organizations and cooperatives; teaching files; printed matter; and personal material.
Sylvia Sleigh Papers, 1961-1983. Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution. Files containing correspondence, printed material and miscellany; photographs of Sleigh's paintings; catalogs, announcements, and clippings concerning Sleigh.