Body art: connecting past and future.Everywhere you turn, young people are using the human body as a canvas. What they fail to realize is that they are participating in a form of artistic expression that is nearly as old as human existence. Addressing a Need Observing my students' fascinations with tattoo and henna, I decided body art might make an excellent topic for study, guaranteed to keep students' attention. The topic was interdisciplinary and gave me the opportunity to educate students about health and safety issues. Defining Terms Body Art: any form of art or expression that uses the human body as a canvas or medium. Skin Art: any form of decoration to the skin, permanent, or temporary Body Modification Body modification (or body alteration) is the permanent or semi-permanent deliberate altering of the human body for non-medical reasons, such as spiritual, various social (markings), BDSM "edgeplay" or aesthetic. It can range from the socially acceptable decoration (e.g. : the altering of the appearance of the human body by adding or taking something away. Body Sculpting body sculpting Surgery A highly popular term for cosmetic surgery intended to change the contours of a person's body to achieve what he or–more commonly–she perceives to be a perfect physique. See Cosmetic surgery. : the altering of the appearance of the human body by changing its size and/or shape. Making Connections I showed students a slide presentation highlighting the methods people have used to modify themselves over the years. We looked at such cultural "norms" as scarification scarification /scar·i·fi·ca·tion/ (skar?i-fi-ka´shun) production in the skin of many small superficial scratches or punctures, as for introduction of vaccine. scar·i·fi·ca·tion n. from Africa, piercing among the Inuit, as well as in Africa and Indonesia, the use of lip plates and plugs by many cultures, neck stretching from Myanmar, head shape alteration in South America South America, fourth largest continent (1991 est. pop. 299,150,000), c.6,880,000 sq mi (17,819,000 sq km), the southern of the two continents of the Western Hemisphere. and Egypt, and foot binding in Asia. We discussed how different cultures have used very similar methods of body decoration, many for very similar reasons, and how different cultures view beauty. We drew parallels to many things people do today, things that are not normally thought of as body art such as tanning tanning, process by which skins and hides are converted into leather. Vegetable tanning, a method requiring more than a month even with modern machinery and tanning liquors, employs tannin; its use is shown in Egyptian tomb paintings dating from 3000 B.C. , plastic surgery, bodybuilding bodybuilding Developing of the physique through exercise and diet, often for competitive exhibition. Bodybuilding aims at displaying pronounced muscle tone and exaggerated muscle mass and definition for overall aesthetic effect. , aerobic training, exercise, and even diet, all of which alter or change the color, shape, and form of the human body to make it more "attractive" to the eye. Narrowing the Focus Focusing on skin art, we looked at the long history of painting and staining the human skin. We examined the earliest forms of tattoo, body painting, and the art of Mehndi Mehndi (or Hina) is the application of henna (Hindustani: हेना- حنا- urdu) as a temporary form of skin decoration, most popular in South Asia, the Middle East, North Africa and Somaliland as well as expatriate communities from these , a form of staining the skin with the dye from the Henna plant. We discussed the many reasons people use these forms of body markings, from religious and superstitious to political, social, and medicinal. Cultures on many continents, from Africa to Europe to the Americas, have engaged in the art of body painting. I enjoyed drawing the parallel between the ancient Celtic warrior who painted himself blue and went into battle bare-chested, and the American football fan who paints his face red and blue and sits in the stands bare-chested. Mehndi is primarily an Eastern and Asian art Asian art can refer to art amongst many cultures in Asia. The Fukuoka Asian Art Museum is the only museum in the world that systematically collects and exhibits Asian modern and contemporary art. form practiced in northern Africa, India, and parts of Asia, where it has great cultural significance. Health Concerns We spent time discussing the health risks associated with each of these forms of body art, in particular tattoo and henna, including: the danger of blood-born pathogens such as hepatitis and HIV HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus), either of two closely related retroviruses that invade T-helper lymphocytes and are responsible for AIDS. There are two types of HIV: HIV-1 and HIV-2. HIV-1 is responsible for the vast majority of AIDS in the United States. when tattoo needles are poorly cleaned and reused or tattoo parlors are not kept sterile; and the danger of using highly toxic highly toxic Occupational medicine adjective Referring to a chemical that 1. Has a median lethal dose–LD50 of ≤ 50 mg/kg when administered orally to 200-300 g albino rats 2. and caustic colored henna as opposed to natural colored henna. An Assignment Students were given the assignment to create a design for a henna marking for themselves or for someone else. I wanted their sketchbooks to show evidence of research, inspirational material, and variations on a theme. Beginning to end, we spent about two weeks discussing and creating the artworks. NATIONAL STANDARD Students describe the function and explore the meaning of specific art objects within varied cultures, times, and places. WEB LINK www.amnh.org/exhibitions/bodyart/index.html Keith A. Rosko is an art teacher at Chenango Forks High School in Chenango Forks, New York Chenango Forks is a hamlet of about 500 people in Broome County, New York in the United States. The community is partly in the Town of Chenango and partly in the Town of Barker. . roskok@cforks.org |
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