Book chapter - Archive ouverte UNIGE
Transcription
Book chapter - Archive ouverte UNIGE
Book Chapter Arms Akimbo: Kinesic Analysis in Visual and Verbal Art BOLENS, Guillemette Reference BOLENS, Guillemette. Arms Akimbo: Kinesic Analysis in Visual and Verbal Art. In: Leslie Atzmon. Visual Rhetoric and the Eloquence of Design. Anderson, South Carolina : Parlor Press, 2011. p. 169-204 Available at: http://archive-ouverte.unige.ch/unige:19315 Disclaimer: layout of this document may differ from the published version. [ Downloaded 27/10/2016 at 02:39:08 ] VISUAL RHETO tvIC AND THE ELOQUENCE OF DESIGN LESLIE ATZMON, EDITOR Parlor '-ess Anderson, South Carolina www.parlorpress.com The Visual Rhetoric series publishes work by scholars in a wide variety of disciplines, including art theory, anthropology, rhetoric, cultural studies, psychology, and media studies. OTHER BOOKS IN 7 -RIES ial: A Practil fat ; of Composition and Writing tl',c Commune t, edited by C, , -- Tid an ° e R. Richards (2008) Ways of Seei... a, ,:ays of Speaking. .J1e Integration of Rhetoric and Vision in Constructing the Real, edited by Kristie S. Fleckenstein, Sue Hum, and Linda T. Calendrillo (2007) Parlor Press LLC, Andersoi , „ Carolina, USA nr/OET ILL'ilPT7771 V IFILffiVA .CINV TVIISIA SISIrTNY DirgNIN :0g -TATINV SNYV 169 According to the Oxford English Dictic-lry, kinesic communication is communication effected nonv illy th )dy movements and gestures. Kinesis is an aspect of human behavior studied by social scientists and a nthropologi in real-life situations) But the perception and understanding :d in art also relies on kinesic intelligence. My purpose in of bodies p ore the way in which v is- - 1 -nd verbal artifacts convey this essay is 'c information, both she ight on and reinforcing complex' based on a definition of tves and values. My argu cultural no 4sky in "Elaborated Knowledge: kinesic int : ig,ence offered by critic Ell( Pictures": "Human kiric intelligence is our sense of the Reading Kin. relationship ui parts of the h -- -Ian body to the whole . . and the spatial understanding of the relati limbs tc )rso their relative lengths and ive exten on and L al orientation" (1996, 159). bulk and that kinesic analysi may be usefully applied not only Spolsky d( to real boune. bodies in art as vfl °ate on one particular gesture: this essay, I the arm akimbo. e English wor T rnbo is defined as an arm gesture and ti in which the hand is placed on th( +w is turned outward. Sociocultural st s reveal that th nrpretatic )f gestures such as this relies on cul y established systems of signification.' A single gesture may have V ■ iaried meanings that are dependent on the time, place, )ntex t in which it is performed. The arm akimbo can be and the IN oa read as an e ression of rela - satisfaction, anger, surprise, defensiveness 'efiance, threat, hi_ — ___ list is not exhaustive. It may al -- be intent, 'el as a sexually orien )(gnal. In many Western cultures he pc c- --1 be coded 'uctive and flirtatious when one at - is set ; :o a e the cur the chest or the hip. In contrast, ° ive when both ham squarely placed on an upright it is read bo are closely connected with torso. These io variations of arms performar nf gender semiotics, the former case being often construed as latter as virile.' feminine C :..EMETTE BOLENS 170 My putpc in this essay is to explore kinesic communication in art and to hlight the complexity and cultural weight of such a commonplace gesture as the arm akimbo. Kinesis in visual arts concerns the ways in which bodies' shapes and structures organize space and communicate information, whether in. a painting or a website.° In order to explore kinesic cominunicatio in art, I practice the type of analysis named "thick desc a" by an.ht alt gist and ethnographer Clifford Geertz in The It .pre ion of Cultures (1973, 3 30), In his discussion of Geertz's theory, cttn st,i't'fgang Iser explains that the procedure of thick. description is "an iinfo of the implications of the manifest, which thus becomes all 7chestrated " (7900, 160-61): the more Readily 'a.. a matter not much of grasping what they repres.-: as of spotligi what they imply. There is always a gap between what is anifest and what is implied in either saying or doing something .... By revealing the observable manifestations thick description establishes a semiotic web of intern:Li t features, which we are given to read. (2000, 160 61) Thick description of kinesic communication entails that we pay attention to the visual rhetoric that informs the representation of gestures and postures. As will be illustrated shortly, a gesture's thin description is a "superimposition of concepts on what one is given to observe" (Iser 2000, 161). By contrast, a thick description of kinesic data in art involves, an analysis of the way in which a given image organizes bodies spati. thereby inducing complex inferences. These inferences are ced. by the picture's visual rhetoric. I use the notion of rhetoric because, nee image ' discuss, recurring visual features function as pictorial tropes, which oscilit a. between literal and figurative levels. Kinesic communication takes place a eeween the literal, and the figurative and. requires a rhetorical awareness of what separates and also connects the two. Kinesis pertains to both regittf I entails a continuous back-and-forth movement between the literal 7'LC 11 reality. of the gesture and the figurative, semiotic impact produced b 1 le represented body. In other words, the arm akimbo in art is never just a sitter's limb touching his or her hip; it inevitably conveys more than a sheer anatomical fact. In the 'artworks selected in this essay, the arm akimbo is an eloquent bodily sign that elicits a variety of inferences. - - ARMS •: KINESIC ANALYSIS IN VISUAL ANC 171 Meanwhile, these i cees cannot be detached from the physical anchorage of the represented limb. A brusque t-anslation of the gesture into .1 gesture and its figural T1, "what it represents" performance of kinesic t ned implications are inextri corn Enunication, which takes place in the it ay between the represented body and its viewer., The arm akimbo in art ,eohibits a dissociation of its corporeal visibilit rn the meanings it evokes for the onlooker. In order to analyze accuratel !sic corm :ation in general and the arm akimbo istantly in balance our a. ee, ,sary to n in particular, it is te inferen. bet en visible corporeal facts a ions The first part of this essay L ,:evote(.: to thick of images in which the arm akimbo expresses male power through body expansion. A diachronic reading of the akimbo pose from the Renaissance twenty-first century—over time and across media—reveals a rhetoric painting as well as 'n le power. I discuss this rhetoric in a Ren '.s —an, and I nropo, uotographic irna t4e of 1950s telev;sion icon 1 form of etoric of power as body eLpa ion also plays out in th v'' ogo designs. emporary webs ite and two contempc e rhetoric of artworks After highlighting sit .r iations in the visual created in different eras and media, I rhetoric of oil paintings belonging to the nat o,ater histc al period spanning the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, I have selec images that share common visual tropes. In these images, the spatial impact of the arm akimbo gesture is exte through the sitter's gaze / means of artifacts that trespass visual ---adaries. Gloves, in partice...ar, play a significant role in each portrait. Th Tecurrence of motifs such as gloves is an important cue in our capacit) entify cultural tropes despite historical distance and to read a visual 'then c based c 'zinesic communication. Indeed, the semiotic )rtraits is partially based on their kinesic value of gloves in irly m #1, e1r are held (str ,-nuously or loosely), treatment, that is on the way in wh by the very hand r conspicuously), and used ' ` displayed (disc l set akimbo resit intelligence s essa), I 1: he second part of Beryn, the first .eenth-century lade develops a peculiar the word akiriwo Tk -s the i -7. that kinesic vhich ultimate' ir teractl is and, on the hand, pe lonymot sui ling text that rhetoric of gt iunication, on JILLEMETTE BOLENS 172 , ;mac disambiguation. As Beryn will show, it is a challenge other, escapee "c.: data '.co words. This task differs from spelling to translate nuance° ing of a gesture, as, for c' ceptu, out t le culturally es " A thin description like this sp example, that "the ar simply superimposes the ,ncept pride (cc the akimbo gesture. John Bulwer reads in the Pride is the r mar y r the Art of Manual Rhetoric ( 1644) 's Chirot arm akimbo, i voted to the meaning of gestures. It c en is the first English tr ion of 7 language based on the assumption, offers a systematic ell entury," that: "gesture could serve "widely entertained i_ th _ seven 26).' This treatise of hand rhetoric as a universal language" (Kendon aki } or aprank, and to rest the explains that, "To set the arm n of pride and ostentation, e is an hand upo,_ turned-in back c 1974, 219), Bulwer provides -id of an orator" (B i unbeseeming ti a remarkably L .embiguous moral and so_ la] interpretation of the arm -edieval Interlude and Tale of Beryn plays akimbo. In stark contrast, t" rt of deli y in a story based on semiotic ° with actors' ai c ambiguities. On the one hand, uncommon lexical untie$ a tature of kinesic communication. On :e the (H - in Bt ry, interactina nrotagonists are capable of to the plot tlie oL-er, it is c, cinesic signals. I will argue ó inferences from aml drawing mul'' n in Beryn also concerns the of kinesic comm the amb peculiarity of gestures in this reception of the t.. and h Ts r, ropensity to dramatize their demeanor 11.t npt narrative and th esic information described in the text. ; act the reader to visual wavily on the reader's capacity to produce dynamic of reading Bery nesic communication. The supplement of meaning mental images on in real situations is that imbues all pe -ptions of kinesic coin: thus produced by the semiotic event of visu i. . estures mentally while reading Beryn— - text that thematize" eitf,aketaity of expressing kinesic nuances and '1' r :racies by mea s . KIN , ; IN VISUAL RHETORIC While C..: arm akimbo is rare in medieval art, it is pervasive in tie - 'cl'-abethan and Jacobean portraiture of male aristocrats. iteenth- and seventeent' century portraits of powerful T' prevaler probably were commonly s akimbo suggests that with t WS AKIMBO: HINESIC ANALYSIS IN VISUAL AND VERBAL ART 113 un arstood interpretations of this gesture. Joaneth Spicer, curator of ance and baroque art at the Walters Art Gallery of Baltimore, argues in "The Renaissanc , Elhnw" that: uct:--- f purposeful gestures will usually in of generally accepted societal F collective experience—otherwise ; whic recognized—and which convey an they wouldn't mpression which the sitter is content to give off, seen Al- etic - igh the prism of the individual artist's ; sensibilities. (1992, 85) The arm akimbo is prominent in Hans Holbein the Younger's 1537 mural depicting Henry VIII in his London residence, in's akimbo influence ro7 be traced back to Italian Whitehall Palace. T -vn'h an arm akimbo over art: Donatello scuipt: .;'avid Victorious st - rt o in 1430. Andrea del )9, and a second Goliath's head in 73- ®75, and Hans Holbein portrays his Young David akin paints an. akimbo St. George towering above the dragon in 1522. ax 1 iolbein the Younger represents Henry VIII standing akimbo, he is _.loping an early modern iconography. but its .)y e it mural was de: II con issioned nown thanks to a co gene , :• •mpos • sents Henry VIII from 7.emigius va_ L _input in 1667. The car s third wife, Jane Seymour, with the Icing's parents, Henry VII _d. ' nother source of and Elizabeth of York, standing in the bacl< c iginal drawing is the Chatswo :t Cartoon, a r inform, it Gallery. It contains the Nations 'ved and is now i , Henry VII. Henry VIII's se—on representin Henry nI and hi 'nced many times in olation from the group. "Three portrait was also 16th century in date, are of immense importance in full length versi original" (Strong 1967, 44). 7 mg of the impact of conveying to us se ° Figure 1). portrait is one of th Gi The Walker Art in's Henry VIII akimbo bears a kinesic resemblance ioning v - .1)site home page design of the defunct to the no long ex.htm) (Figure .akimb03.c bo 3 (htt / Internet compa • is figurative an the home page 2 and Figure 3). T )e sure, the pi : . rthular nature of t is not, but this very fact enables me to h4 pansion .serves to express kinesic data. In both renderings, spatia' GUIL E ETTE af Figure 1 . A r Hans Holbein the Younger, Henry VIII, after 1537, oil on canvas, 2 7 x 134.6 cm, © Walker Art Gallery, ,Tational Museums Liverpool, United Ki success and power. The text at the center of the home page reads: "Internet success stories b ''t here." The company is announcing that the customer will he empo.,--2 1 her connection to akimbo 3. This phrase at the center of the L e page is surrounded by four smaller captions whose spatial distribution echoes the form of the background image with smaller units surrounding a larger caption. The background image is made up of a central ova' si ,e with seven similar smaller shapes connected to it by straight lines. T1- ackground image behind the central shape forms a tilted ARMS AKIMBO: KINESIC ANALYSIS IN VISUAL AND KR' , 175 akimbo nteetVwt Idepasx,0,,,mt, tnterriet s built ess stories ...cmcc,ror new opportunities Figure 2. Home page of the website akimbo 3. Figure 3. Contact page of rectangular area whose sla- , f-xl position emphasizes the fact that the smaller ovals extend beyond ' ' 1 - of this area; they cross over the boundaries of this rectanguk ile being firmly connected to the central body by means of the s ines. The spatial organization of the captions and the visual vocabular, f the background design communicate an expansion iiniscent of extended limbs. The visual rhetoric of the design confirms its tual rhetoric: aki, pronounces itself an expanding source of power. 1 irase "Success stories built here" echoes the visual i of Henry VL 3rtrait as a purposeful monarch. The composition painting, which is visually and rhetorically dominated by the king's )ad shape, can like be read as spatial expansion signifying success and wer. The comf -* (..1 connections among Henry's limbs and costume - GUILLEMETTE BOI ENS 176 r g ad elements I described on the akimbo ornaments correlate v h :ked knees, a stance that is t 3 home page. 1-Y angled out. I-a.s q are turned outward, as evocative of two a, is a dagger held l; the cord of its sheath in H:: .-y's left hand. Just above es and is framed by his dagger, Henry's codpiece Fr( th ,ommel ( fringes. Power is here associated with sexual potency, and spatial gi 'ece as much as by his ex, _ion is signified by the king's pad& d ay his surcoat, form a legs and dagger, His shoulders, greatly en is arms seem to support line that stretches horizontally on both ° this line of force. enry's bod' expands ..,atially through his limbs, codpiece, dagger, and clothing, right arm is akimbo, but the shade under his hand suggests that tea latter is actually not resting on the monarch's side. The king pushes his akimboed arm even further from his torso, thus amplifying his intense physical expansion. The outline of the king's shoulders and arms becomes more intelligible when compared to the logo of another the design company Akimbo Design (http://www . website corr Akimbo-Design') / 1— -;ure 4). 8 In this logo (http:// design-ageni i the figure's bent arms are corn/Akimbo-Des www.design-av IR they are practically at right angles. The design's ed so ms ex lakes this feature more visible. lish a Because the arms a— basic lines, the visual impact of l Furthermore, both arms are akimboed arms in this image is ei echo the angles shaped akimbo, and the angles formed by I by the figure's remarkably wide crotch. The angles of the elbows are in sharp contrast with, the logo's circular frame and with the figure's perfretly round "ri in the same way as the angles carmed by the crotch , per c ar limit of th 1- The figure's large cc II's in his portrait. riarke part, as are Herr e and -ady legs as effectively as In both images, to stand a nbo is t ing t:ie visibility of one's possible by setting arms akimbo and by in,. crotch. mess --lenry's posture is easy to The k' h all th, -mic force of the word. To , iggrasp: the le' rge one's b , nid take up more r c can be performed and read a signal of domination and threat. This reading is not relevant, ARMS AKIMBO: KINESIC AMALYSIS Iii VISUAL MID VERSA 177 Figure 4. Logo of Design Company Akimbo Design, © Ben Rigby. however, in Akimbo Design's logo, whose cartoonish and hence humorous quality deflates such an effect. The logo has, nonetheless, the shape and loo )f a regulatory traffic sign. The visual efficacy of the logo thus :Tes _ rmiotic system intended to regulate behavior and moven ably, the logo intends to have the viewer stop and pay attenLion, and it accomplishes this by activating humorously what may be a codified response to the akimbo pose. Finally, it is noteworthy that the crotch in the Akimbo Design logo is not gendered. Indeed, neither the absence of a codpiece (or of anything of the sort) nor the wearing of pants may be read as a straightforward gendering signal in the context of Western, twentyfirst-ce 'ary visual rhetorics. Thus, I propose the hypothesis that the highly visib ?t un-gendered crotch of the Akimbo Design figure suggests that power ty-first century is not inevitably bound to one d -minant gender anymore. it is today imaginable that power may be male and Fen.ale. Th return to Henry VIII, the background in his painting increases the ir iion of voluminous strength. His limbs and artifacts, which are projcr aware densely packed torso, trespass a number of vertical v ;L 11 line; omposition. The dagger, for instance, connects his crotch area to the cu. taia fold on the right and penetrates this 1.4111111M61•112111119S1111=111110rh. GUILLEMETTE BOLENS 8 vertical line horiz( _ally with its pa ed end. In Holbein's original drawing, coa f Henry VIII's father, Henry VII. It is 7 this line is forr noteworthy that tT r duces the detail of a vertical the e transgressed by the king's dp7 ,,, r, eves –lough the literal identity of Li; ep j ect being transgressed has been is o boundary-crossing expansion is T•.! page as well as to that in a picture comparable parable to -17 (http://www.legendsofameelea.com 7 per of George R both photos-ghosts/GeoLger,eeves.jpg). In this image, Superman's arms . akimbo. The backs of his hands with highlighted knuckles are preserled to the viewer. Because his arms are set on his hips with fisted hands., V7:ime of space covered by his body is augmented, forcing his elbow::. .'io out of the picture frame. His crotch also trespasses the picture's Lame, and Superman's external derwear," characteristic of this hero's sartorial makeup, increases the :Hi his crotch and pelvic area despite 1950s decorum. The typography of the word SUPERMAN, flying at full speed through space, seems also ready to burst out toward the viewer, mimicking Superman's style of transportation. Sim: 1 the typography of 2ems to imitate the ukimbo 3 logo (in the upper-right corner of Fig the spatial dist of a human body. The logo is made up- of a lowercs& a with thr 7. s placed at the "elbow" of the letter. The "elbow" G. the first letter of the word akimbo is thus expanded by the three dots, akin --- 'ndinE mbs. Returning to George Reeves, in the logo's design m m's tc , he S fills up its frame maximally, echoing Reeves's akimboed hod, 1 ay in which the S inflates its size to occupy the entire space of the logo's ame typographically confirms the desired visual effect of the very body it serves to mark. The logo symboli— iperman's body and signifies, i z 1L of itself expar 1 ° ;, and thus powerful impact of the hero's phy: c y anotl - ay of ising that "success stories are built here." In the introduction a I V series Th3 Adventures of Superman (1953--1958), the hero appears si.anwng akimbo in outer space, ° cape flapping - ,etically in an interstellar bi e (Figure 5). Spatial Apres eak with expansion rear 'y akimboed to the extreme, hand; sit ted in human space, and linking supernattnel locomotion politicc1 •• ARMS AMMO: KINESIC ANALYSIS IN VISUAL AND VERBAL ART 71 Figure 5. George Reeves as Superman in The Adve--.7 -ures of Superman (1953-1958), 0 Warner Indeed, the voice-over during the introduction describes Superman with these words of anthology: Faster than a speeding bullet. More powerful than a locomotive. Able to leap tall buildings at a single bound. "--Look u 'n the sky!" "—It's a " It's a pl.!" "—It's SUPERMAN!" Yes, it's Superman, strange visitor from another planet, who came to Earth with powers and abilities far beyond those of mortal men. Superman, who can chanL:,- th course of mighty rivers, bend steel in his bare hands and who (disguised as Clark Kent, mild-mannered reporter for a great metropolitan newspaper), fights a never-ending battle for truth, justice and the American way! The Adventures of Superman (1953-1958), Warner Brothers. In , the universe ° - A erican, and Superman's akimboed arms, ye, and 1JC s rove it with the force of evidence. So fa we explored the nature of kinesic data by showing that Henry VII1's portrait, akimbo 3's home page, Akimbo Design's -1111terk GUILLEMETTE BOLI 181 rhe in The Adventures of Superman logo, an I :O-!orge Reeves's orles regz information. Despite ,:.O.;nificant all sha obviow vi and cultural o_iations, kioosic information in these images eloquently 4ssociates akimbo with body size, spatial expansion, potency, and power. THE GAZE AND GLOVES OF AKIMBOTD MALES I wish now to augment my analysis of Henry VIII's portrait by introducing two additional components used in Western art in association with the arm ak' bo, namely, a sustained gaze at the viewer and the peculiar treatment o I I will consider this specific association in Holbein's poi lit of Henry VIII and in two other masterpieces: Nicholas Hilliarc Lit of Earl Clifford, and van Dyck's portrait of Charles I. Th e we aforementioned a tio imbo, gaze, glove) shows, recurrenee d, that specific visua es , ated in early modern art, on the ( and it s on the other hand, that these t )es were used for specific uses, to communicate distinct inferences. Shared visual rhetoric tropes contributed to the invention of original "visible discourses." In Henry VIII's portrait, the king's small eyes look straight 'rom his round face toward the viewer, and his right hand firmly holds ° loves. In the Chatsworth Cartoon, Henry's raz Is more threatening and his hand squeezes the gloves more strenuously 'In the Walker Art Gallery portrait. The same is true for yet anoth portrait by Holbein and ' -c ' he Whitehall Palace prc 2 (Figure 6). Combined his inte imbued an i -satur °g body, Henry's image like a propagandistic call for si nission. As such, the picture triggers p duction of meaning geared toward a programmed behavior. Henry's body Ian— :ggests that the viv s expected to recognize that it would be in his or best interest tt " . In Holbein's design, submission is advertised t le most advantageous, and hence desirable, option for the viewer ir r ° ii to the Tudoi - -An In the frame of Henry's densely akimbo( 1 the king's grip ur his gloves serves to suggest the likely consequenc, of a failure to yield to this script of compliance. The inscription 'ANNO ETATIS SUAE XLIX" means "His year of age, 49." Roy Strong points out concerning Holbein's original '- ARMS AKIMBO: KINESIC ANALISIS IN VISUAL AND VERBAL ART 181 Figure 6. Han. T....t5ein the Younger, Henry VIII, 1540, oil on panel, 88,5 x 74,5 cm, Gallcria Nazionale d'Arte Antica, Rome. mural that "Henry alone communicates with the onlooker, and the effect on visit( the palace was such that they 'were abashed, annihilated' in his presc -e (1967,39). 9 Henry's gaze may be understood as one more organ projected into space. Similarly, the contact page of akimbo 3's website t:e-tures the image of a man with a surprisingly complex facial expression F Cmingly ready to burst out of the computer screen toward the custom( H7 - e 3). The mouth of this highly expressive masculine face is open as if caugh I Lie act of speaking in a vehement tone to the user. The face appears in tL f.,round of a frame askew within the picture, which is slashed with streams of bright colors and flashes of light. Such designerly and kinesic data convey a sense of urgency, which is further enhanced by the exclamation mark in the sentence "contact us!" The visual association of arm akimbo, gaze, and glove rther exemplified by Nicholas Hilliard's full-figure portrait of George is H 3, Earl of Cumberland, in his knightly attire after his victory over Sir Henry Lee at the tilt (Figure 7). Hilliard claimed to be a great admirer of GU ILLEMETTE BOLENS ::,..12 Figure 7. Nicholas I la d, George Clifford, 3rd Earl of Cumberland, 1590, vellum stuck to a t wood panel, 258 x 176 cm, 0 National Maritime Museum, London, negative number 2673. Hans Holbein and, as court painter, he may have been inspired by the Wl-itehall Palace mural, However, the kinesic variations between the two „liss are significant. While Henry VIII's overwhelming phys ality and ig grip embody the monarch's political program, that 1_;, -4 -mand ci for genera' . .sion,•rd's portrait tells a different story, in which he dominates be:Luse his head carries the token of the Queen's preference. George Clifford was a favorite of Elizabeth I, who gave him the bejewelled glove displayed on the Earl's feathered hat. Significantly, the glove i - in his head; Clifford does not touch the queen's glove. Gloves can fur lion metonymically as an extension of the hand. I therefore, that the sociopolitical purpose of Hilliard's painting is to exhibit and celebrate a symbolized kinesic contact performed by means of the queen's glove, indicating that power is bestowed upon men by Elizabeth; she is the source of masculine power. The correlated message conveyed, by ARMS AKIMBO: KINESIC ANALYSIS IN VISUAL AND VERBAL ART 133 master;' not touched. Her Queen.w r tl r 7lizabeth's metonymic hand touches but is be held; no one lays a hand on the Virgin This does not diminish Clifford's success _ any way, as is made clear by the champion's akimboed arm and. clenched': iiteed in the sharp angle of his hip and torso. Spatial expa i expressed in this image ilribo, but it is I c at by means of distance in association ws lances the trea n the queen's untouched rather than contact glove. The knight; eauipr - it shield, helm( a - 1 gauntlets—surround ince and serve to fill up space. In this painting, the Clifford's body gloves that show rather gauntlets are me rch. They point toward ',e champion, a this deictic function stress metonymic status; they ointing fingers. Thus, ; and for hands enact Clifford's spatial control, revolvii_ )und the body instead of thickly protruding from its dense core, as is th, case with Henry VIII. When physic- Hy in contact with Clifford, artifacts further elongate body by thinning . nto space. The into the ge above, which spear's point disap ises the visual 'at achiev effect of its length. ect by means of large feathers ones, which c Lure's upper limit formed by crom, the tree. The akimbo iconogra ise communicates tied rhetoric of power in Sir Anthoi :k's 1635 portrait of !s ( ;ure 8). In the painting, Charles jabs his elbow at the viewer. While the arm akimbo is common in seventeenthcentury art, jabbed elbos rc are rare. However, Dutch and Flemish painters were, at times, prone ..p' y their mastery of perspective in this fashion. Anthony Van Dyc' Flemish artist, working at the royal court of England, and he possibly knew, for instance, Evert van der Maes' Standard( .1617), pain in the Netherlands eighteen years before his portrait of ' les I. In bo paintings, 's torso is drawn in profile so that the bent elbow r ades sasses the "fourth wall," which separates the figui from cn:atia 1 exi i in this design takes the form of a nudgin6 ovement toward the audience. In Van Dyck's g, the king's pointed elbow is highE ith pigments of bright yellowish white, and the size of his arm is si l arger than that of his thighs and calves. GUILLEMET_ ,I NS Figure 8. from Charles I, King of England at the Hunt, Sir Anthony Van Dyei,, 1635, oil on canvas, 266 ) 297 cm, Paris, Musee du Louvre, © Photo N/ Christian Jean. Here, athe other akimbo portraits, the subject gazes toward the viewer. But th is modified by the head's twisted position. The relation of head and t, -so parallels the relation of upper limb to torso; both the arm and tilt aze expand laterally toward the spectator. These kinesic data signal to the viewer that he or she stands on the side of the king. To stand on someone's side has multiple implications. One implication is that the vlewer is not *-- ant or dangerous enough to be faced fro by the king. Charles's )osture, side-glance, low eyelids, and jabbed elbow disempower the viewer to some extent. But the meaning is ambiguous since the very same sp-' configuration places the viewer in relative proximity to the king, ing that, despite social and spatial inferiority (the viewer stands on lower level), he or she is close to and hence in agreement with the m - irch. While Henry VIII's body commands a kind of top-down submission, Charles I's kinesic rhetoric peremptorily enlists the viewer to abide by the 1-: ARMS AKIMBO: KINESIC ANALYSIS IN VISUAL AN3 VERBAL ART 135 Of major ice in the success story narrated by h the glove is handled. Charles, like Van Dyck's picture is the way ° glove in and of the arm set akimbo. But instead Henry VIII, I ,sely and c asually of crushing the glove, he holds ally with his thumb on his open palm. His hand is turned backward, an , the point of contact between T - Ito Hilliard's painting, it hip and hand is the back of the wrist. If c is disf ominently and reverently appears that, v". Ifford's ) shov on the Earl's forehead, Charle glove, but on his backside. The lower half of the glove is on the king's buttock. It is important to it the reader's eye must travel down this this particula narrative el its - ext. he tips of of Charles's glove's fingers glove in order wn by t jacket, eliciting visual contact extend beyon ° s that belong to the groom who between the J the tips of two t caries the ki [oak in the background. In real space, the glove and the page's fingers dc ..ot touch; but Van Dyck's bidimensional elaboration of -- elective close - The re " of the painting is thus made to take of the c t, albeit p4 r, between the king's glove and the hand. The line transgression is excessively stnall, yet it is more ind its impact more provocative than all other spatial trespassing „.....dered so far The male assertie" - 4° power extant in the paintings of arms akimbo I out her s a 1 oast of sensuous polyvalence." he t We saw f Henry Vill's dagger trespasses the vertical line formed I urtain's ibld, thus complementing a I narrative wherein the Li_g's sexual potency is overwhelming and 'rous--a • to which his wives' -° 1)graphies indirectly attest. I ast, Cnai ; glove, rather than a dagger, is the artifact chosen to CO] i. sexu all - nt rhetoric of power. Charles's hand, extended by me is g10, tot turned toward the pommel of his sword—combat is app not his cup of tea—bt ard fingertips of his servant. holding a baton in, front The English king -*ands in a posture of auth of the painting, and ti Taaloring size of the left of him, yet the d !ye toward the elbow, which is highlighted and placed arm, lead the v° elbow is a joint— the glove stol: ' close proximit, the physical sense of bodily joint—NNenen, in addition to connecting his . ° ing's space the softly gloved arty Lones, ambiguously articulates in t' ont. °' f the monarch to his baton-hob bel GUILLEMETTE EOLENS ding pie, ;ual material inve per of akimboed bodies is to t highlight the way in which kinesic commun).(7. - explore kinesic analysis a supplement of meanin As far as reception of the akimbo pen.;ture with the same and power in early modern Vs nnograph., suggests that this posture and contem pa produces culturall sign inferences, which can still be decrypted coherently. ile, eaen version of the akimbo narrative offers specific variations. I, g artistic production, lc° imagery communicates informat )ngs to a specific cultur t and that is at the same time an oca _Teate original visual na Indeed, each akimboed arm discussed ire presents its own idiosyne gestural qualities that express a particular rhetoric of success and power. Henry VIII, Clifford, and Charles I have different 'ays of displaying power by standing akimbo. In Holbein's painting, the I g is powerful E (e can crush all opposition; in Hilliard's l a it of Clifford, a ma g iverful when touched by the queen's untouchable hand; and in Val D - k's provocative masterpiece, a ruler displays his power by subtly extend o the realm of homoerotic propensities. The purpose of the next s °s to address the diffi nherent in verbal expressions of kinesic ttelligence. My main focus is 3 fifteenth-century text titled The Interlude and Tale of Beryn, in which the irnbo appears for 0 time in written English. In the first sectic ;ay, I analyzed the Mich kinesic communication in visual ds the rhetoric of images in an important way. In the next section, I that Beryn plays with kin _ communication verbally in order to indue, merf? 1 'r'sualizations in the reader. The act of read' 7- - °--tis text produces a visua nt of rr 6 ig, and, interestingly, tl ent concerns kinesic precise lexical denotation. instead of re corn coin while i.t THE VERBAL RHETORIC OF GESTURES Beryn is remarkable °n its treatment of kinesis because, ° ig gestures to n culturally codified meanings, it that there is ;upplement neaning to kinesic his supplement o: ; human interactions ling perr .eitic translation z.. control ARMS AKIMBO: K1NESIC ANALYSIS 14 VISUAL AND VERBAL ART 187 :r, is affinity with acting sic analysis revea -is vocal inton ion, body movements, and d delivery. Deliver cc ..tance in classical rhetorical treatises. Beryn es; it is of central in deliberately aw" Tard ways, which, I wish — 7 . ibes charac ty of trans' t , the nuances of kinesic • - the ernf a rg Mental images of kinesic data are signi licaticn cot t ext stages and also plays with the produced in Beryn's reader becaw difficulty of denoting kinesic nuance... The Greek noun theatron Gestures in Beryn arc thecomai, to w from the verb in that they are her protagonists explicitly performed to be watched and interpe.: d with exaggeration. iat is more, they are often e in the narrath _ w actors use kinesic sdiatrician Daniel Stern e Psychologist ite just that part of an int- igence: "a good actor will p c 1- 'Ay mu :ative value. And a igh cines cel pattern that ha ,st potent behavior the pick out for exagge . e"rec association of the akimbo this n iser" (1973, evoker or iormance, acting, and kinesic exaggeration in t gesture with vas twent° :h centur :choes its late medieval ..se in the Tale of Beryn. In his ] disc Triter Ivor Brown comments: of ° 4.) in "Just Another V c ; the proper, if inexplicable has settled do Akimbo the arm-on-hips position commonly adopted woi by masterful ladies in the music-hall, Pantomime world and deliver addre I others Da n and matters, "She got terribly ary c came a s a ° s of Mayfair slang for what was akimli earlier called "high horse " I have also heard it used by a and so was a bit akimbo stage people for over-act: ;ht." (1946, 159) female theatrical John Rastell between 1510 and gestu 116, or, die title age of Henry Me-- s Fulgens and Lucres, the earliest comedy e 'English literature, °ving full e of the copy held. ')y the Huntington The titl, a woodcut owing a woman st 'iaig with an arm Library contains akimbo speaking to a suitor (Figure 9)." Despite Is theatrical setting Aga "y associations of the posture with women, akimbo and twentietl rst, lib° as a s GUILLEMETTE BOLENS 188 in early modern iconography is pr .1,c ,:ninantly masculine; success and power is a script devoted to men. Exa.. only confirm the rule: akimbo females ar.: w ,".7.-nen of exce -:1:onal power." Fulgens and Lucres is based on the humar-:::. debate cot.: . Lg true nobility and the dichotomy between virtue. Since Lucres is given the power to aristocratic birth and pc judge two suitors, it is significant that she is portrayed with an akimboed arm. .Lucres must discriminate—according to a set of values debated in the play—between genuine and inherited nobility in order to decide which man she should marry. A woman is granted the power to decide who is worthy attention, and power is expressed visually by means of her arm Howevci, , obable that the woodcut of Fulgen..7 and Lucres was and pala.able to its audience in part because Lucres is a theatrical role—performed in any case by a male actor. A woman can be represented performing an eminently masculine gesture of power because this gesture is theatrical. c orfatocno rfovr ag i p uEi flan on of CD at . late ol)art atcp. il.tfinen cbapelarne ogori fax Figure 9. Henry Me ' - 41gens and Lucres, 1512, title page, woodcut. This item is reproduced by permission of The Huntington Library, San Marino, California. 4•411110111111111141111EMEN11481), ARMS AKIMBO: KINESIC AKA IN VISUAL AND VERBAL ART in larly in 7nci Lucres concerns the - act ; and the 'atus betweeT - performance 7 Lich th.-; passage to a study of Beryn. In the folk. , - ty, an res, the protarnists who open the play pretend to be from ‘--algeris and and n . They ar la!' led. A and B because the ibers of the real names were proba durir nces, which further ity and perk - ice. blurred the boundary between ways -- I pray you, tell me agayn: here be a play? r certeyn. my trouth, glad and fayn. your owyn selfe be oon Of em that shall play. B Nay, I am none. I trowe thou spekyst it To lyke me therto. A mok no , v thought - by ye had b, player. Nay, never a dell. (IVIedwall, :—`,00, 36-51) sakes actor his lavish clothing, "a playf .usion, )rding tc. critic Greg .‘ to the liberty enjoyed ove their social status fe the purpose of playing" by ac rs to dr( ° concerns bodily signals (2000 08). 14 The pi,,blem raised by ) must decide whether ng clothing) interr--by prota (ii (gens an L. exaggeratedly pretend other re acting or not. . igh - a play, Beryn is not to be actors in theatr .1 contex characterized by perplexin o f bodilytformation. This drs who fervently protest is I by overacting iplicity. accusati, KINESIS AND 7; kfli A G U I LLEMETT. ( -NS F 190 E TALE OF BERYN c. s kinesi -ommunication in a way that triggers visualization in the reader pre _cause the descriptions play with the difficulty of accurately translating kinesic data into words and meo ings. T rlude and Tale of Beryn is an anonymous fifteenth, c on of Geoffrey Chaucer's Canterbury Tales, While Chaucer's pilgrims never reach Canterbury, the group in the Interlude arrives in town settles at an inn, and spends the afternoon visiting Thomas Becket's sh-'n efore returning to London the next day. On the way bac' , tne merchz the Tale of Bery . - both parts of the continua, kinesic nar nphasizes the re purpose of gestures, ai stages the protagc ists' skill—or pat hereof—at reading gestures effectively. , A 1 t 1 crestures in medieval n;:eratu re are usually associated with culturauy -meanings, Beryn 1 ribes puzzling physical attitudes whose Ilea 'ngs are patentl nc.' 5 Sev characters in r put on exaggerated meanors increases the theatricality of certain passages. The r tricking ,-ah other relies on their convincing acting hic ize in a ole variety of fraudulent posturing. Such called Macaign convinces Beryn to use his help and SUIT )rt at c here he unexy — falls face down onto the ground, accusing Bery nurder with a hu o _, ievous complaint: "He fill plat to the erth; a r ?leynt and an "--- I He made" (Bowers 1992, 2270-71). Macaign's uecetving and histrionic s that he is acting; his pain trivec is only intended t a nefarious trial.' 6 Beryn is also suec J. . C.,: character in Beryn who sets his arm akimbo. Beryn hL.J Jeen entn swearing an oath implying that he would have to drink all the saltwater in the sea if Syrophanes beats him at chess. Claiming that Ber, 1, who lost, is legally bound to carry out his promise, Syrophanes decid ,eryn to court and overreacts to his victim's expectation of an arnicaL Tient of their dispute: The hoost made an hidoase cry in gesolreut the haut [at the top of la . :e] And set hi; n kenebowe [akimbo]. He lakked never a faute [didn't miss a beat]: "Wenest thowe [do you expect]," seid he to Beryn, "for to ARMS AKIMBO: It! MALYSIS IN VISUAL Am) VERBAL ART 191 scorn [to defraud] (Bowers 199 - 837 39) quires that we cal p An analy is nowledge its theatricality. It matt( 3er; iymous poet refers t the akimbo posture in association with a manipulation of the voice. !,yrophanes's fraudulent action is expressed in terms of delivery (Le., voice - intonation and gesturality). treatises deal Twc important classical i. rcilated Rhetorica th f n of delive e extent with the BC a...1 attributed to Cicero writte.. in the first cer Hero author, (luring ti wiiddle Age 1- el the Institut,' Oratorio, whose century 'awyer and rhetorician, worked in Rom Quin Lilian. tutio Oratorio was gly, the complete text Beryn a s v ritten. According overed in the fifteenth century, Oratorio, delivery, of prime he Rhetorica ad Herennium and the importance to orators, concerns vocal intonation and physical movement, vox and gestus. The gestus comp )ostures and gestures as well as the gait, . Delivery is express and look, called he 'us, and 1 -! when it is on ,asis is or 1 labeled actio when t the voice. The anonyr thor of the Ri--„„, .caadHunniurn underscores Nare how great a task t he difli( , of de; ig delivery: "T .. .° ents in words and iken i ing to express phys, i4, I IL x 7). 17 Describing ' ntona in writing" (Caplan ations au kinesic nuances verbally is extremely difficult 1 d-o , nes neither say, an arm akimbo, nor with nning a 1 ng it into a :ept such at rat' r with conveying, by mean :linguistic sign ifi ie style and idi ic nuances the ge is performed. While Syrophanes's vox and gestus hardly conform to the comp, nd self-control of the ideal Roman orator, Syrophanes's kinesic and voci m cal .elated to the challenging task of putting into ery, rder to as )mplish this literary feat, words the style of a Beryn's poet resorts ' nt from (:tant literature: "in „nese lexical odcinle., kenebowe" and "in ges---eut the hau,. I contern. serve to evince the difficulty of translating kinesic nuances into in Beryn METT' 192 as well as to' ght the theatrica' ■ ensity of human exchanges Beryn a f Tt best 7ceived when the scenes are visualized. I will first discuss "in i)owe," and then turn to "in gesolreut the haut" The Middle English form of akimbo is in kenebowe, and it only appears re. the Tale of Beryn. This phrase is not used in written English for zi enti ry after Beryn and then reappears in the seventeenth egins to be widely c s already discussed, "17thcentury po T experienced an expic - male elbows" (Spicer 1992, , increased interest in Lt elbows in visual art echoes 86). This s the spreading of the word akimbo in written English in the seventeenth itury. Ti 1 solated occurrence of akimbo in Beryn therefore att etymology "baffles the learned" (Brown 1946, )). The phologic -ansformations of the word, from the fifteenth ituries, are: in kenebowe, a kenbow, a kemboll, a kenbol, to the twen a-garnbo, ou kcuurìw, a-kenbold, a kimbow, a-kimbe kimbo (Oxford English ° :tionary). T • - volution suggests that ti )1 )gy of the written ssion was lost early in the mists of or _ creating one of the most )tic-look, s in the English language. ;e Oxford English Dictionary lists etymolc I ypotheses but concludes that ne.-- 's fully satisfactory. One hypotl tes kenebow to tf f.a ndic '.ginn, "bent staplewise" or "ir shoe curve," and ler 'id die English phrase a cambol, "i anner of a crooked stie 'rived form Medio Latin cambr rooked stick or piece of woe" The unique etymology H.,riglish Dictionary is preceded by a question mark. Kenegiven in the /1/, boue may c ° the English bow and the Old French chane, cane, or quenne, froi canna, "can, p _ j ',„"ie phrase in kenebowe would thus mean "lik landle of a jug. _ _he mysterious looks of akimbo Autions. Expel resist etymolo failed to derive it from convincing roots and or'. In fact, the visual appeal of this lexical unit may be due, in p, - t ,Tay in which it resists reso" -is not impossible, I propose, that poet used "ir we" because, in the fifteenth c itury alre " Felt to - peculiar as the gesture it denotes, 'Are unzzi ir ,C al literature and iconography. nusual is the ph "in gesolreut the haut," which describes Syrophanes's vocal imon he compound G(e-solre-tit) in Ivlide ;glish is almost exdus in musical treatises; Beryn is an ex L in. The phrase c( ;es the musical note G with the --I s AIMS AKIMBO: K1NESIC ANALYSIS IN VISUAL AND VERBAL ART 93 ambination belongs to the medieval hexachord syllables s i(ed in the early eleventh century by mu al system ma of relative scales called hexachords. A. d -Arezzo. Cu ./exachord from singer performing a melody had to change or G could it app to another. Depending on the hexach( 3olreut the laaut," the correspond to either sol., re or ut. In the phrase "above") which means that the note G here a haut is the Frencl .rta ns to the upper part of the screamer's vocal is above middle sophisticated reference Jeliberately ironic tha tl range. It is ce used to exp Syrophanes strains h ze to produce a scream. peculiarit y ea Syrophanes's reaction is co ve, d by lexical choices that the reader to pay ion to signifie it c ntuate the problem of terpretation, c and paralinguiz-, gesture is akimbo Syrophan , Fur 'e, :ophanes's action of etting ambivalent. At the level of'shin description, an arm akimbo reads like defiance and threat. But the context of the action lk all the saltwater and the patently preposterous claim that Beryn mu to be upset, that that Syrophanes is bluffing, pre h e sea also - underscored by nn overacting—an aspect of a acting ai .narrator's coy ienta "Syrophanes set his hand akimbo, he didn't miss ference to the hand specifically and to the action of a beat " P - ;ides, ion of the moment of contact ntal v mboaces a ph a ne uous claim and vocal d is equally exaggerated, , conta bet suggest rionic quality of the s ludicroa—, enement, rophanes's delivery style -e. Theatrical exaggeration must be D. lance. )f "thick description" from refers to Ryle's discussion of ranging from a mere twitch, to parodied-fake-wink rehearsed scription would refer to all A b ar d of till )ielid, while a thick description ified hierarchy of meaningful structures in parodies, rehearsal of pare ,l'es inks, fake-of (Geertz 1973, 7). In the c d interp - Borrowing the philosopher Gilt - t Kyle, Clifford wi x instances increasingly cc pal 3, a wink, a fake-t:,.... before a perfo such instance trjeS to accou of whicl :oduced, 'hanes's ; 1, lexical ' .-, a focus on kinesic data, id GUILLEMETTE BOLENS 194 verge te, increase the semiotic complexity of this the narrative ception of the stratified semantic layers not otherwise lucntails that Beryn's reader visualizes the that inform Syrophanes of Syrophanes's overacted _c_ scene and thereby rec ;imply fer to a g 'me; it formulates and stages gesture. The text doe_ -1 -xity of its recer;on it so as to increase the m of " ;r hanes's gesture is necessary A' 1 court despite the absurdity ids to appraise fully the of Syrophanes's claim.'s Kinesic communication has consequences. As will 3Pryn is conferred to protagonists who can best manipulate appear, succe :ter who eventually saves Beryn from an rey, the kinesic signals. s :4- as his antics are occasions to play aus trial, best epitomiz nte e kinesic intelligenc t meets him, Geoffrey hides his true When B. identity by fakinc, lamer-And when that Beryn in this wise had i-made his mone saw comyng with grete spede I [crippled ma id hast, rna—er fast eippon a stilt [peg-leg] under his kne [tightly], nder his ar es, with hondes al ach [c fcrskrar d Iconto (Bowen _, 2378 Geoffre y .s hands a-- 1 OrskramecL The past participle :ed, shriveled up." It derives iralyzed, twisted shrink." The added prefix for from the Old E nglish verb so-in/nn -idicating that Geoffrey's hands .ng of the partici . fies tilmaimed and distorted. But soon Geoffrey explains to be thorou eformity is nothing but a disguise, that B fn, who fea tnen-Ln save him from his accusers' n and he 1, is a — ke Be] :k with him to Rome. 2ryn agrees to take Geo Nelve years ago and so :tim of the sarn( skrammed m dc- 4.9 l4 lity is f. - he says, for protece,nn. a convince a fearful and distrusting Beryn that his offrey acts in a peculiar way: "My lyres [limbs] been both hole and sound p:- WS AKIMBO: IONE= ANALYSIS IN VISUAL AND VERBAL ART VIC Fc Ar I a( ageyn and down , th and lepe oppon an huche [chest], ain], and walked too and fro, ie shipp, and shewed his hondes sight over al aboute, 'retching forth his fynger >we eny signe of goute, at knot c geyns right disfeter yghte lc apenlyl, ride eche other and som aweyward wry s 1992, 2.710-16) at !en acting, gestures, )lema on is under and kinesi.c inter' le Geoffrey has been lition succeL, many years. He behaves feigning his disa ✓ L teeelve years as were a cripple by --- - forming the appearance o nots an(' we 's, conto to nd by using two props expressive of &sal ttached to an undiminished leg 3p ab( eded, ey proves his g his health by delibera contort an— Here again, the ilize dynamic kinesic communication in this scene reader must mentall y and histrionic quality of this demonstration. to appreciate the 1 that suit )dy of semi rot. esses is intended, ultimately, uch to und( lire the value these processes as to highlight the prevalence of semiosis and the necessity of knowing how to decipher as well as to perform kinesis successfully. to be chosen a r -I's attorney in the trial, Gee -ey later op ; iother behavioral disguise, that of a foo' " He con ces Hanybald Ciat to entrust Beryn's defense to a lunatic Tneetiel gua--itee the latter's defect Rhetoric is tf— art of persu —ion. Important f madness -- sture: r e' - -lents in Geoffrey' typical of a 3mbols, i ' er clad a wz:ea , / And made aid to hug'. (Bowers 3003-04 ' In his Institutio Oratorio, Quintilian teach-__ the art of oratory by laying out in great detail ti rhetorical and v°- fierce of gesturer unsidering not only hand gestures also gestures c e, he remarks that ° protrude the chest or stomach, a re nc - GUI TTE BC L arcJ. back, and all bending y. The eenle,s must conform to the he motion f ntire boC; ntributes the effect: indeed, Cicero - -Ads that the body is more expressive than even the hands, (quoted in Butler 1959, bk iii.122) Gt y'- entire body evinces a rhetoric of folly, which corresponds to a typically h fteenth-ce n tu ry conception of the fool. In twelfthand thirteenth-century literature, folly in a main protagonist manifests witness Yvain2° When simulated, itself via isolating outbursts o f folly also looks like rage—witneso .2 ' 1" feast, late-medieval fools are gregarious and effusive sots wn nic while taking part in it. Folly's style adapted accordingl) ther than an enraged outcast, the fool becomes a merry reveler wip Frolics, and claps his hands, just offrey in Beryn. When performint, 1 is act, Geoffrey climbs upon an ised stage to make sure that everyone can F°' l'-` ; rn (Bowers 1992, ). Geoffrey stages himself as fool and enacts a nic of buffoonery ressors. compelling enou Beryn's sma g an( le fact that such et - -rous crooks as tivrophanes, Macaign, and Hanybald are duped by Cy 's indicates gestures in Beryn are conceived as a powerful that has a definitive impact e !Fits. Indeed, the malevolent accus ; 1 Dse the trial. Most important iesis is a powerful language for th ey reason that it resists definitivt intic control; even protagonist, _rsed in kinesis fail at masterin t, C _offrey's bodily rhetoric properly. Indeed, the deceivers are fooled when they believe that they can tell one madman from another. The Tale of Bery is a success story where success is conferred upon agonists wh - c . it play with the se i -.. hiatus between kinesic signs !anings. Th may be seen as a Dn kinesis and the nature interpretatio Kinesis speaks vo ,aid yet rets straightforward denotative stab'. In the garr -nmunicatic tLe winner is he plays to the f srith such elusi) istable supplements of meaning. I hope to have sh this essay how the -alltural history of akimbo evinces the complexi kinesis in visual ve_bal arts. Kinesic intell nee is activated in v'-nal art when th viei. reacts to the rhetoric conve, hrough the visua - ropes articulated in the image. since such an ARMS AKIMBO: KINESIC ANALYSIS IN VISUAL AND VERBAL ART 197 1' Le power and pervasiveness In verbal art, a text such as 7'7; an inter; s. Kinesis in Beryn evokes of kinesic communication in philosopher Giorgio tben's comment c gesture as "communication of communicability" (2000, 39). It also thematizes the difficulty of expressing kinesis in words and the inadequacy of red.r;ng kinesis to a tidy taxonomy of decoded gestures and superimposed c )ts. In Agamben's words, "the gesture is essentially always a gesture of not being able to figure something out in language" (2000, 59). In its use of akimbo, among other lexical and behavioral oddities, Beryn emni. izes the way in which the supplement of meaning that imbues kinesic o. inication resists the full control of linguistic e ression—and here reside tt - - !ntric skill and force of this narrative. Bery builds its su itory on this ve - stumblii block, It successfully speak what it cairn . verbalize, and, by this very token, the reader is led to provide tiT supplement c . iation that makes kinesis meaningful, as the text elicits the iconcertingly evocative gestures. visualization JLEMETTE BOLENS 198 Notes ' See Ray Birdwhistell, Kinesics and Context Essays on Penguin, 1973); Gregory :ation HarnmoncL:v Roily-Motion ; of Chicago he Ui logy of Mind (CIBireson, Steps ige and Gest -e (Cambridge: viol McNeill, ed., L Press, [1972] Ion, Gesture: Visible Action as Cambridge University Press, 2000); Adam Utterance (Cambridge: Cambr;elne University Press, 2004). I discuss recent Style des gestes: Corporeite et Bolen st 'les on kinesics in G - ler. , 2008). litter me: B dans 1 rman Roodenburg, eds. 3remmer 2 See , 'versity Press, 1992); Kendon, Cultural History o 'Gesture (Ithaca: Coi 'lap. 16 in Gesture: Visible "Culture and tl-- Communication Econoi ^ , sify Press, 2004), 326— (Cambridge: Cambridg t Action as Ut 54. Judith Butler, Gender On gender perfo i); Juc Bodies That Matter: On Trouble (New York: Routledgeage, 1993); Judith Butler, the Discursive Limits of "Sex" kiNew Yorl< Undoing Gender ( New York: Routledge, 2004). On this issue in relation to Beryn, sec C Ilemette Bolens, "Kit's Sneeze: Bodily Communication, Performativity of Literature in The Prologue to the Gender Role hly Thingc and Spiritual Matters. Essays on the Medieval Tale of Beryn," a and Katrin Rupp (Cambridge : Cambridge Body, ed. by r' )lars Publishing, forthc _ning). - harc t, Visual Literacy: A See Judith Wilde (NeN, ork: Watson-Guptill 1g to Graphic Proble C_ c p PubLea ins, 19.: st in Gesture from See also Kendon, cha 3 in Adam Kendon, ° .3 the Eighteenth CE Classical An ridge: Cambridge University ction as Utterance, (C Gesture: Press, 2004), 17-42, 6 On the questions of mental visualization and of fgang Iser, "The Ha r of the Text," in Languages of the Tient, see 1 t ire and Literary Theory, ed. Unsayable.: The Play of Negativity in i: Stanford University Press, 3udick and Wolfgang Ise 198 ■ 32,', 329. 7 than as this - -)ne ---er thinks of Henry VIII in any other W17 )f flesh, whose astounding girth is only ARMS AKIMBO: KINESIC ANALYSIS IN VISUAL AND VERBAL ART 13U >W d es id furs that encase him." Roy emphasized by the layers of tledge, 1967), 39. Strong, Holbein and He:. ; VIII (. - Ion Design is le in San Francisco. 9 Strcnig's source is C. van Mander, Le livre des peintres, Libr ie de Rouam imprimeur-editeur, trans. H. Hymans I 1884), 1, 218. Strong rider would have derived his aster, Lucas de Fl< vho was in England circa 1567 information to 1576." value of gloves and the symbolic On the nd vagin n Rosalind Jones and Peter Stallybrass, association of g we in Re—' .e Europe," Critical Inquiry 28, no. "Fetishizing (Autumn 2001) '14-32. Several of this portrait focus on Charles s horse (placed on t right of tile lull picture), ignoring the king's elbow and glove despite th niinent visibility of these two items in the organization of the painting. risible reason for so much decency is that the king is perceived as "the rfect cortegiano" (Roy Strong, Van Dyck, Charles I on Horseback Penguin, 1972], 56); as "a figure "f matchless elegance, 'iority .'ugh culture, 1. 1 of unquestio f the arts, and the RiE Kings" ( upholder of Held, "Le Roi a la ciasse," The Art Bull no. 2 1958 g E. H. Gombrich, The iF Phaidon, 1953] Story of Art Moffitt, "'Le Roi a la ciassen Kings, – Ian Knights, a' 'ngular 'Dismounted Equ, of Charles I," nd Hi ° 4, no. 7 (1983), 79– 99 Pa :sues that Charles inting represents the epitome ;or s christianus. Sucl ipectives automatically preclude, in fac, ambiguities in the Le. . ipt. 12 The caption reads: "Here is conteyned a godely interlude Rome, Lucres his doughter, Gayus Flaminius, and of Fulgens, c! -PublisCorn . .e Disputacyon of Noblenes, and is devyded in two tymes. Compyled by mayster Henry Medwall, partyes to be ga. reverent fader in God, Johan Morton, Cardynall late chapelayne c;au ----e- ury" ledieval Drama: An Anthology, and Archebys,-. 1; editbyGr Bla 304. s Hilliard ed Elizabeth I sitting—not even bo in tilt ine Portrait, made in 1585 (now –w,. And Paul van Somer represented Charles I's mother, in F-I field : ; GUILLEMETTE BOLENS 200 Anne of D rk, unt, standi an arm akimbo, the back of her wrist in contact with her hip in a St :ontorted fashion (1617, HM The Queen, Royal ction, Windsc: In this painting, Anne of Denmark stands next 1 her horse. As a - ; mentioned, a great deal of attention has been ted to the role of t lorse in Van Dyck's Charles 2t the Hunt and t iusual fact that the king is dismounted. I make e nypothesi act that. Charles is dismounted is a reference to the r Jrtrait of ti s mother, standing in a strikingly rnasculine posture. Paul van S -- also made a portrait of Jarne T father7C-:' -les I, standing with an arm akimbo. But James I stands in a iber, his arm akimbo is covered I cloak. Thus the setting in 'yck's painting (the figure is at the h tear a wood, dismounted, and prominently displaying the arm set akim a link with the portrait of Charles's mother rather than with t. Charles's version of the arm akimbo he mascu mce imitates the portrait of his mother ling lin. 14 On this question iLn Rosalind Jones and Peter Stallybrass, Renaissance Clothing and teiviaterial of Memory (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000). "Critics Jean-CL L. hmitt in L r,t ' ;on des gestes dans C ident medieval (I 74 -illimard, )90) and J.A. Burrow in Ge, ar Looks in Medieva.. L..-7ative (Cambridge: Cambridge University Pre—, emonstrate the importance and sir n'ficance of gestures in medieval culture and literature. See also CliffoiC idson, ed., Gesture in Medieval Drama and Kalamaz Western Michigan University, 2001) and emette I r_,e Sty Corporeite et kinesie dans le recit litteraire BHMS, According to Muriel Bradbrook, Themes and Convention ; Elizabethan Tragedy (Cambridge: Cambridge University 16 Press, 1964), 20 26, Elizabethan actors "exaggerated movements and statuesqueness and used inflated delivery and conventional posture. The most common method of expressing grief was for the actor to throw himself to the ground." Throwing himself to the ground to express grief is the exact theatrical move Macaign performs t , ccuse Beryn of his father's murder. - corporis ex, Non sum nescit 'uanturn susceperim negotii qui motus verbis et imitari sc.°:, conatus sim voces. ARMS AKIMBO: NINESIC ANALYSIS IN VISUAL AND VEKtk.ITT 201 Beryn's legal predica: 1 and trial, see Guillemette Bolens, "N r. Use and ractice of - ion in The Book of Sindibad and The Tale yn," Poet day29, no. 2 (2008), 309-51. "On foll, 3eryn, see Guillernette Bolens, "Traditions of Simulated illy in The Canterbury I-- .?rlude and Tale of Beryn," in Behaving Voice, Gesture, and L. liter in Texts, Manuscripts, and icy Perry and Alexii Early Book arz (Turnhout, Belgium: J ) ing in 2011. 2) See Chretien de Troye., ou le chevalier au lion, ed. David F. Hult Pa is: Poche, Lewes gothiques, 1994), 2 ' See Thomas, Le Ror le Tristan suivi de La Fo Tristan de Bel La Folie an d'Oxj ev. ed. of Felix. Lecoy's lanuele - tner and lan Short (Paris: Champion, ed. and trans. 2003). GUI LLEM 202 Bi - hy Giorgio. Means without End: Notes on Politics. zo Binetti and Cesre Casarino (originally published Translated b ° editore), In Theory out of in 1996 as Mezzi. senza fine by Boliati Bor' Bounds 20, Minnesota: University of Min ta Press, 2000. Bateson, Gregory. Steps to an Ecology of Mind. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, [1972] 2000. Birdwhistell, Ray. Kinesics and C:ontex Essrys on Body Motion Corny ° Hanimondsworth: Penguin, 1973. B: Guillemette. Le Style des gestes: Corporeite et L ausanne: BHMS, 2008. English translation kiresie dans ° forthcoming at the ifopkins University Press. "Narrative Use and the Practice of Fiction in The Book of Sindibad and The Tale of Beryn." Poetics Today 29, no. 2 (2008): 309 1. . "Traditions of Simulated Folly in The Canterbury Interlude and Tale of Beryn." In Behaving like Fools: Voice, Geun, d Laughter in Texts, Manuscripts, and Early Books, edited by Lucy P 1 Alexander Schwarz (Turnhout, Belgium: Brepols), forthcoming. "neeze: Bodily Communication, C. mder Roles, the Performativii rature in The Prologue to t1. cf Beryn." - I Matter! leshly Things and on the Medievt :cly, edited I Ticole Nyffenegge. -nd Katrin Ru r , Cambridge: Cambridge Scholars -;„ forthcoming. Bowers, John M., ed. "The Canterbury Interlude and Merchant's Tale of Beryn." In The C bury Tales: Fifteenth-Century ConBowers, 55-196. Kalamazoo: tinuations and Additions, edited by , Western Michigan University, 1992. Bradbrook, Muriel C Themes and Conventions of bethan T y. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1964. Bremmer, Jan, and Herman Roodenburg, eds. A Cultural of Gesture. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1992. Ivor. Book of Words. London: Jonathan Cape, 1946. John. Chirologia: Or the Natural Language of Dr the Art of mat Rhetoric. Edited by James W. the Hand. Cleary. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1974. Burrow, J.A. Gestures and Looks in Medieval Narrative. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002. ARMS AKIMBO: KINESIC ANALYSIS IN VISUAL AND VERBAL ART 203 Matter: On the Discursive ° Butler, Judith, 99.?. f "Sex." New York: Rou Gender New York: Routledge, 2006. Undoing Gender. New York: Routledge, 2004. Chretien de Troyes. Yvam ou le chevalier au lion. Edited by David F. Hult, Paris: Poche, Lettres gothiques, 1994. Davidson, Clifford, ed. Gesture in Medieval Drama and Art. Kalamazoo: Western 11/44 ' .-3-tigan University, 2001. f Cultures. New fford. The Interpre Gee t York: Basic Books, 1973. ifgang. "The Play of tF s .. nguages of Iser, Theory, edited he Play nr PaOtivity in Literature and the Uns6 Iser, 325-39. Stanford: Stanford University dick and by Sa - erPress, 1987. it Is Literary Anthropc te Difference beof the Aesthetic: tween E tanatory an' '1oratory Fictions." In edited by Miciiael P. Clark, 157-79. The PlaL,„ of Literature in Theory Today, Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000. S. as Utterance. Kea lam. Gesture: V versity Press, 2004. Cambridge: Canabridg He] _ The Art Bulletin 40, ins S. "Le Roi a I no. 2 (June 1958): 139-49. Jon Rosalind, and Peter Stallybrass. Renaissance Cut ing and the Matl ° f Memory. Cambridge: Cambridge University _ 2000. —. "Ft - ihizing the Glove in Renaissance Eu re ." Criti2001): 114-32. cal Inquiry 28, no. 1 (Anti. McNe. - ° 1, ed. Language and Gesture. Cambridge: Cambridge University Medwall, -y. "Fulgens and Lucres." In Medieval Drapp. 305-347. Oxford: Blackwell, 2000. wiogy, edited by C W ma:A.., Roi a la ciasse?': Kings, Christian Moffit )ismounted Equestrian-Portrait' of gul Knigl. and Van Dy e4 7 (1983): 7999. Artibus and ish Dictionary, online, 3' ed. Oxford: Oxford 0.x.) Press, 2007. G LTILLEM ETTSES SC -. ENS Quintilian, Instita,,;o Oratorio. Edited and tranr';- te -' by H. ity Press 1959. E. Butler. Cambridge: I: - . aid i rm. a ad i ind translated by Harry -d Uni Caplan. Cambric' 4 ' mitt, Jean-Claude. La gestes dans 1'C;.eident medieval. Paris: rd, 1990. cer, Joanea 1- " —he Rena' :e Elbow." In A Cultural story of Gestur: ted by Jan Bre: r ar 1 an Roodenburg, 84128. ' ess, .a: Cornell )lsky, Ellen. "E` Knowledge: Reading Kinesis in 9, no. 2 (Summer 1996): 157-80. Pictures." Poetic.- T Daniel N. "On Kinesic Analysis: A Discussion with iniei N. Stet !eview: TDF 3 (Sept. 1973): 114-26. onL Holbei,1 r, IIIL London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, ‘,"--n Dyck, Charles Ion Ho 'rack. London: Penguin, 1972. as. oman de Trish suivi de La Tristan de Berne et La Folie 'Ox -Ze-ed it ion of Felix Leco . Edited and translated by Em Baumgartner and Ian Short.. C! npion, 2003. Greg, ed. Medieval Drama: Anthology. Oxford: Blackwell, 2000. ide, Judie Richard Wilde. Visual Literacy: A ConCef Approach to ophic F Solving. New York: Watson-Guptill Publications, 1991. - - ARMS AK MBO: KINESIC ANALYSIS IN VISUAL AND VERBAL ART