Thursday, January 16, 2020

Where Women Lead The Show †Renoir’s Acrobats At The Cirque Fernando, 1879

Pierre-Auguste Renoir’s Acrobats At The Cirque Fernando, 1879 shows two young girls, most probably between twelve and fifteen years of age, taking turns to perform their act at the circus. One of the young girls is carrying balls around her chest while the other is communicating with the audience as part of her act. The girl who is communicating with the audience has a questioning, innocent expression on her face. The one who is carrying balls is possibly waiting for her turn to perform. She, too, is innocent and fresh in appearance as the other. However, she seems to be dwelling on her new experiences of semi-adulthood. Perhaps she is musing on the boys in her life – the young men who admire her very much. The audience depicted in the painting, behind the bodies of the two young girls, appears to consist of men alone after all. The men appear like judges, in their black coats, giving them the semblance of uniformed officers. Only one of the men has his face visible through the painting, and the face is hard enough for the girls to display their innocence in all its glory with the assumption that the counterpart of a harsh and doubtful attitude must be softness. Although the girl carrying the balls has her back turned toward the hard faced man, she knows that she too would have to perform. The expressions of the male and the females in Renoir’s Acrobats At The Cirque Fernando, 1879 are rather similar to the expressions of the two sexes depicted in many of the artist’s works of the time. The woman is seen as the adored and innocent object that performs, even though the man is hard faced, perhaps weary of the work that he performs to fend for his family day after day. The woman is the amuser, the muse, and the object of entertainment to fend for. After all, she is beautiful. The only beautiful facet of the man is that he is strong – in Renoir’s paintings, at least. What is more, the man is always staring at the woman in Renoir’s works. He fondles her whenever he has the chance. The woman remains faithful to him – this is depicted through the innocence on her face. If she becomes unfaithful she knows that the hard faced man would discontinue supporting her. The French word for ‘thank you’ is merci, which, if used in English, perfectly describes the attitude of the woman in late nineteenth century Paris. Although Paris was one of the first places in the west where women were generally believed to have been liberated, Renoir’s painting reveals that the women were definitely not liberated through promiscuity or debauchery. Rather, the urban Parisian women in the late nineteenth century seem to have been given permission by their men to be out and about, entertaining them, while remaining faithful to their innocence as well as their marital vows. As the facial expression of the young girl carrying the balls in Renoir’s Acrobats At The Cirque Fernando, 1879 reveals – women understood their position in Parisian society even as they were aware that men and women are equally dependent on each other. Perhaps they also knew that men could turn violent against the woman – the epitome of mercy – and that their partners may very well become harsh and cruel if they were not obeyed according to divine laws that are believed to demand that they become subservient unto men. Although these beliefs continue to be nurtured in many parts of the world, Renoir’s Acrobats At The Cirque Fernando, 1879 is a reminder that divine laws may have been misconstrued as well!

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