The Bathers

The Bathers by Alexa Dilworth is an illustrated edition published by Duke University Press in 2009, featuring 71 pages in English. This work showcases Jennette Williams’s platinum prints of women bathers in Budapest and Istanbul, capturing intimate and public spaces filled with water, steam, and light. Over eight years, Williams photographed women of various ages, presenting them with dignity and comfort as they engage in activities like floating and conversing, all while challenging traditional notions of objectification.
Readers will find that The Bathers draws on gestures and poses from iconic paintings of nude women, referencing artists such as Paul Cézanne and Pablo Picasso. Williams’s photographs evoke themes of health, beauty, and femininity, while also addressing contemporary questions about representation and the aging body. The images invite viewers to immerse themselves in the sensory experiences of the bathers’ environments, encouraging reflection on the interplay between art and the lived experiences of women.
Official synopsis Publisher
Jennette Williams’s stunning platinum prints of women bathers in Budapest and Istanbul take us inside spaces intimate and public, austere and sensuous, filled with water, steam, tile, stone, ethereal sunlight, and earthly flesh. Over a period of eight years, Williams, who is based in New York City, traveled to Hungary and Turkey to photograph, without sentimentality or objectification, women daring enough to stand naked before her camera. Young and old, the women of The Bathers inhabit and display their bodies with comfort and ease–floating, showering, conversing, lost in reverie.
To create the images in The Bathers, Williams drew on gestures and poses found in iconic paintings of nude women, including tableaux of bathers by Paul Cézanne and Auguste Renoir, renderings of Venus by Giorgione and Titian, Dominique Ingres’s Odalisque and Slave, and Pablo Picasso’s Les Demoiselles d’Avignon. By alluding to these images and others, Williams sought to reflect the religious and mythological associations of water with birth and rebirth, comfort and healing, purification and blessing. She also used copies of the paintings to communicate with her Hungarian- and Turkish-speaking subjects–homemakers, factory workers, saleswomen, secretaries, managers, teachers, and students. Working in steam-filled environments, Williams created quiet, dignified images that evoke not only canonical representations of female nudes but also early pictorial photography. At the same time, they raise contemporary questions about the gaze, the definition of documentary photography, and the representation and perception of beauty and femininity, particularly as they relate to the aging body. Above all else, her photos are sensuously evocative. They invite the viewer to feel the steam, hear the murmur of conversation, and reflect on the allure of the female form.
A CDS Book
Published by Duke University Press and the Center for Documentary Photography
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