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Recreating masterpieces at home? People have been doing it for centuries

23 April 2020
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Famous paintings are flooding the internet 鈥 but not as we are accustomed to seeing them. These are not just reproductions. Literally coming to life, paintings are being re-enacted at home with art lovers posing their way into everything from to .

Given social distancing, it鈥檚 not surprising portraits are the favoured genre. Being home-bound also means using what is available: a bath towel in the place of a luxurious Renaissance dress; pots and pans instead of medieval headgear; pets taking on surprising roles.

These images invoke a humorous game of spot the difference. One especially shows a couple recreating a detail from Hieronymus Bosch鈥檚 Garden of Earthly Delights, with Bosch鈥檚 bizarre and whimsical world matched by contemporary verve.

These recreations are not just rooted in the boredom of quarantine. The impulse to recreate paintings has a long history that speaks to a need for shared cultural touchstones 鈥 and their subversion.

Parlour games

The recreation of famous paintings, or tableaux vivants (literally 鈥渓iving pictures鈥), was a in aristocratic circles in 18th-century France. The phenomenon then spread throughout Britain, Europe and America.

In Australia, there are records of these tableaux being enacted in theatres and households .

An 1871 American publication, , capitalises on 鈥渢he great desire among the rising generation to participate in this simple and elegant amusement鈥. It includes painstaking instructions for an evening of entertainment, including the number of tableaux (five to ten), types (classical and contemporary) and genres (serious and comic).

Prince Alfred styled as Bacchus, for Tableaux of the Seasons performed for Queen Victoria and Prince Albert in 1854. Royal Collection Trust / 漏 Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2020

Curtains would roll up to the spectacle of costumed figures posing with props and backgrounds from paintings by artists such as Titian, Michelangelo and Rembrandt. Shouts of appreciation or guessing games would ensue, with guests showing their knowledge of art history (or lack thereof).

The game was like charades, but silent and immobile. Part of the trick was the act of physical control needed to maintain the pose until the curtains rolled down and the actors prepared for another tableau.

Cultural touchstones

Dress-up and posing have been documented as far back as . In festive pageantry of medieval and Renaissance Europe, parades and processions by rulers featured tableaux that were with important political and didactic functions.

Perhaps the most spectacular example of a tableau occurred in 1458 on the entry of Philip the Good, Duke of Burgundy, into Ghent. A describes how over a hundred citizens greeted Philip the Good and his entourage in a recreation of the city鈥檚 celebrated altarpiece, Jan and Hubert van Eyck鈥檚 Adoration of the Mystic Lamb (The Ghent Altarpiece), painted in 1432.

The Ghent Altarpiece from the Cathedral of St Bavo, Ghent, completed 1432.

This brilliant and complex polyptych presents a summation of Christian theology; its recreation would have been an incredibly ambitious undertaking.

The Ghent Altarpiece functioned as a shared cultural touchstone that its citizens could relate to. Only the nude figures of Adam and Eve would have been exempt from the recreation.

Controversy and subversion

This was unlike the later tableaux of Victorian societies, when female nudes were acceptable and . During the late 19th century, morality laws were evaded by the stillness of the models: as long as the women weren鈥檛 moving, they could present the tableaux as art education, rather than titillation.

In defence of these displays, the American poet Walt Whitman if the sight of these tableux is considered 鈥渋ndecent鈥 then:

the sight of nearly all the great works of painting and sculpture [鈥 is, likewise, indecent. It is a sickly prudishness that bars all appreciation of the divine beauty evidenced in Nature鈥檚 cunningest work 鈥 the human frame, form and face.

Pansy Montague, a Melbourne chorus girl, posing as the Modern Milo (with arms), c1898 -1905. State Library Victoria

Later tableaux created by well-known artists stem from very different motivations, from satire to critique.

Pier Paolo Passolini鈥檚 shows the making of several tableaux of mannerist paintings for comic effect. Cindy Sherman鈥檚 from 1990 is an appropriation of Caravaggio鈥檚 Young Sick Bacchus created four centuries earlier.

In her re-enactment, Sherman uses make-up, prosthetics and props 鈥 yet there is never any doubt that we are looking at Sherman. Her appropriation raises important questions about identity, feminism and the status of images.

Cindy Sherman, Untitled #244, 1990, Chromogenic color print, 48 x 38 inches, 121.9 x 96.5 cm. Courtesy of the artist and Metro Pictures, New York

Art matters

In our era of self-isolation, institutions like are requesting recreations of works from their collections.

From homage to subversion, these recreations incite in us that jolt of recognition, nods of appreciation and boisterous laughter.

Most of all, tableaux vivants highlight an interest in shared cultural knowledge: an assumption that icons of art matter; that looking at and thinking about art is an essential activity.

As we face down weeks and even months in our homes, there also is a compelling participatory element: why just look at a masterpiece when you can be one?The Conversation

, Senior Lecturer in Art History,

This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .

Image credit: Hiroshi Watanabe/Getty Images

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