Art in Theory. Группа авторов

Art in Theory - Группа авторов


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productions of nature, in that beautiful disorder which it was never in the power of art to imitate. From thence spring a vast number of little rivulets, which greatly contribute to the fertility of the country, and serve no less to supply the wants of the inhabitants than to adorn and heighten the charms of the plains. All the flat country, from the sea‐shore to the foot of the mountains, is destined for the fruit‐trees, under which, as I have already observed before, the houses of the people of Taiti are built, without order, and without forming any villages. One would think himself in the Elysian fields. […]

      The inhabitants of Taiti are often seen quite naked, having no other clothes rather than a sash, which covers their natural parts. However, the chief people among them generally wrap themselves in a great piece of cloth, which hangs down to their knees. This is likewise the only dress of the women; and they know how to place it so artfully as to make this simple dress susceptible of coquetry. As the women of Taiti never go out into the sun without being covered, and always have a little hat, made of canes, and adorned with flowers, to defend their faces against its rays, their complexions are, of course, much fairer than those of the men. Their features are very delicate; but what distinguishes them, is the beauty of their bodies, of which the contour has not been disfigured by a torture of fifteen years duration.

      Whilst the women in Europe paint their cheeks red, those of Taiti dye their loins and buttocks of a deep blue. This is an ornament, and at the same time a mark of distinction. The men are subject to the same fashion. I cannot say how they do to impress these indelible marks, unless it is by puncturing the skin, and pouring the juice of certain herbs upon it, as I have seen it practised by the natives of Canada. It is remarkable, that this custom of painting has always been found to be received among nations who bordered upon a state of nature. […] The very air which the people breathe, their songs, their dances, almost constantly attended with indecent postures, all conspire to call to mind the sweets of love, all engage to give themselves up to them. They dance to the sound of a kind of drum, and when they sing, they accompany their voices with a very soft kind of flute, with three or four holes, which, as I have observed above, they blow with their nose. They likewise practise a kind of wrestling; which, at the same time, is both exercise and play to them.

      Thus accustomed to live continually immersed in pleasure, the people of Taiti have acquired a witty and humorous temper, which is the offspring of ease and of joy.

      Joseph Banks (1743–1820), an independently wealthy, Oxford‐educated scientist, was the principal naturalist on the first Cook voyage. Indeed it was he who put together, and paid for, the team of scientists and artists. The scientific enterprise of the Cook voyages was quite distinct from the romantic idealization of the nouvelle Cythère pervading Bougainville’s account. Nonetheless, the educated Banks, in somewhat Bougainvillean fashion, had a penchant – at least early on in his sojourn, before actual names were exchanged − for relating the inhabitants of Tahiti to his classical heroes. Two chiefs were dubbed ‘Lycurgas’ and ‘Hercules’;


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