The depiction of women in the illustrated works of Pierre Louys

by Paul Gervais

The illustrated novels of Pierre Louys are instructive in many ways. Primarily, of course, they reveal evolving artistic responses to the author’s prose and verse, thereby not just illustrating his personal vision but demonstrating- indirectly- what book purchasers were understood to want, and what publishers and their commissioned artists believed they could offer them, within the parameters of law and public decency. In other words, the nature of illustrations can be a record of changes in society- in attitudes to sexuality, gender and the status and rights of women.

Louys’ first books appeared in the last decade of the nineteenth century, notably Les Chansons de Bilitis in 1894 and Aphrodite in 1896. The earliest illustrated editions are distinctly reflective of their era, tacitly articulating contemporary attitudes towards the female gender and the position of women in society. Librairie Borel‘s 1899 edition of Aphrodite, illustrated by Antoine Calbet, is a case in point: his depictions of Chrysis reflect the Academic tradition of life studies, derived from the classical artistic tradition since the Renaissance, and the young Galilean courtesan is depicted very much in the style of Greek statues of Aphrodite and paintings of Venus by Botticelli, Tiziano Vecelli and others thereafter.

The title pages of the Calbet edition

Likewise, when Georges Rochegrosse provided plates for an edition of Ariadne in 1904, what he supplied was a very revealing reflection of the period’s conceptions of bacchantes- frenzied women. In the plate illustrated below, they are seen wreathed in ivy and flowers and leopard skin, about to tear apart the helpless Ariadne. Elsewhere in the same volume, Greek ladies were presented as sedate, respectable, elegant, graceful and beautiful- as in the illustration that accompanied the preamble to The House on the Nile by Paul Gervais, which is seen at the head of this post.

As I have described in other posts, numerous further illustrated editions of the various books written by Louys were to follow, both before and after his decease in 1925. A constant feature of these was women in greater or lesser states of undress, plates that faithfully responded to the text but also very consciously appealed to the primarily male collectors of fine art limited editions of books. Amongst these many examples, the most interesting are probably those designed by women. Those volumes worked on by Suzanne Ballivet, Mariette Lydis and Clara Tice are notable for the quality of their work and for the fact that the latter two were lesbian and brought their own sense of eroticism to their reactions to the texts. So, for example, in her plates for the 1934 edition of Les Chansons de Bilitis, Lydis’ vision of female lovers was far more intimate and subtly sensual than most of the works produced by male contemporaries- such as J A Bresval (see below). Other women who worked on the various titles by Louys included Renee Ringel (Aphrodite, 1944), Yna Majeska (Psyche, 1928), Guily Joffrin (Psyche, 1972) and editions of Bilitis illustrated by Jeanne Mammen, Genia Minache (1950), Carola Andries (1962) and Monique Rouver (1967). The frequency with which female illustrators were employed as the century passed is noticeable, although I hesitate to identify a distinctly feminine style.

Maritte Lydis, plate for Bilitis, 1934

Post-war, new editions of Louys introduced us to new conceptions of his female characters. J. A. Bresval illustrated an edition of Bilitis in 1957, his figures being very much inspired by contemporary film stars like Gina Lollobrigida and Brigitte Bardot. The women have a dark-haired fulsomeness typical of the period; the eroticism is rather cliched, such as the frontispiece to the book, which shows Bilitis with a lover: the latter kneels before her partner, embracing her waist and kissing her stomach; the standing woman cups her breasts in her hands and throws back her head in a highly stereotypical soft-porn rendering of female ecstasy.

However, by 1961 and Raymond Brenot’s watercolours for a new edition of Sanguines, we see a new aesthetic of the female body beginning to emerge: the bosoms may be just as fantastical, but there is a slenderness and, in some of the clothes, a sense of a more liberated and relaxed mood. Pierre-Laurent (Raymond) Brenot (1913-98) was a painter who was also very much in demand to design record sleeves, advertisements and fashion plates (for such couturiers as Dior, Balenciaga, Ricci and Lanvin). More tellingly, he is known as the ‘father of the French pin-up’- consider, for example, his advert for lingerie manufacturer Jessos- “Comme maman, je porte un Jessos” declares a young teen with pigtails, seated with her blouse unbuttoned to reveal her bra (“just like my mum’s”); I have discussed this style of marketing in another post. Brenot’s poster designs, for consumer goods, holiday destinations and films and theatres, regularly featured glamorous young women and, when this work declined during the later 1960s, he returned to painting, producing many young female nudes.

Brenot, Parrhasius in ‘The Wearer of Purple’ from Sanguines

What has to be observed, though, is that most of the nudity portrayed by Brenot was not justified by the actual stories in Sanguines. There are some naked slaves in The Wearer of Purple (see below), and Callisto in A New Sensation does share a bed with the narrator, but most of the rest of the stories are really quite respectable and sex-free (by the standards of Louys), being more concerned with psychology than sexuality. What we see, therefore, is evidence for the tendency to treat the works of Louys as a platform for erotic illustration. Frequently, this was a distinct element in the author’s stories, but it seems that he had acquired a reputation for sexiness which was then applied more liberally, presumably in the knowledge that the name would sell. The same criticism can, in truth, be made of Georges Rochegrosse’s depiction of the bacchae in the 1904 edition of Ariadne (see earlier): what he depicted might perhaps be implied in the text, but what Louys wrote doesn’t wholly warrant the nudity that we see:

“They wore fox skins tied over their left shoulders. Their hands waved tree branches and shook garlands of ivy. Their hair was so heavy with flowers that their necks bent backwards; the folds of their breasts streamed with sweat, the reflections on their thighs were setting suns, and their howls were speckled with drool.”

Ariadne, c.2
Brenot, Callisto in ‘A New Sensation’ from Sanguines

The men who feature in Brenot’s illustrations often seem hesitant, ill at ease or, even, embarrassed at being discovered with the women in their company- his take on the ‘satyrs’ with nymph in a scene from ‘The Wearer of Purple’ is a case in point. In Louys’ story, this is an incident involving a slave girl being assaulted by two other servants so as to create a titillating composition for the the artist Parrhasius to paint. As we can see in the reproduction below, the satyrs appear afraid of the young woman, having lost all their accustomed priapism, whilst she strikes me as indifferent to their presence and in fully control of the situation. Given Brenot’s later output, it’s almost certainly overstating things to say that these plates reflect shifts in social attitudes.

Brenot, two satyrs & a nymph in ‘The Wearer of Purple’ in Sanguines

Coming right up to date, the 1999 edition of Aphrodite demonstrates how visions of women may have developed and advanced (or not). The book was issued in three volumes, the first two being illustrated by two male comic book artists, Milo Manara and Georges Bess respectively. Both have distinctly erotic styles and the results strike me as being, in essence, highly accomplished and artistic reproductions of glamour photography and lesbian porn; for example, George Bess’ picture of the reclining woman, which faces the start of Book 2, chapter 1 of the story, seems to me to be drawn in a style very much influenced by Mucha or Georges du Feure: the streaming hair and the encroaching, twisting foliage all have the hallmarks of Art Nouveau (which is of course highly appropriate given the publication date of the original book). In the modern version, Chrysis is regularly depicted in intimate scenes alone, with her maid Djala or with the two girls Rhodis and Myrtocleia. With their tousled hair, pouting lips and pneumatic breasts, these women are very much the late twentieth century ideal. Most of the time, they are presented as being more interested in each other than in any of the male characters in the story, but my response is that there are really rather high-quality examples of fairly standard pornographic obsessions. When we look at them, it’s worth recalling Pierre Louys’ own description of his heroine, when he wrote to the painter Albert Besnard asking to paint her:

“Chrysis, as womanly as possible- tall, not skinny, a very ‘beautiful girl.’ Nothing vague or elusive in the forms. All parts of her body have their own expression, apart from their participation in the beauty of the whole. Hair golden brown, almost Venetian; very lively and eventful, not at all like a river. Of primary importance in the type of Chrysis, the mouth having all the appetites, thick and moist- but interesting […] Painted lips, nipples and nails. Depilated armpits. Twenty years old; but twenty years in Africa.”

Aphrodite, chapter 1, Milo Manara, 1999
Bess, plate for Aphrodite, 1999, Book 2, c.1, ‘The Garden of the Goddess’

A fascinating contrast to the the first two volumes of the 1999 edition is to be found in the third, illustrated by Claire Wendling (born 1967). She is a French author of comic books and her response to the text is interesting because it is so much darker and less obviously ‘sexy’ than that of her male collaborators. The plates are, literally, dark in tone and, although they tend to focus on solo female nudes, rather than lascivious eroticism is there is a mood of mental and physical suffering entirely appropriate to the final section of the book, in which Chrysis is arrested, sentenced to death, executed and buried. Her cover image evokes- for me- thoughts of Gustav Klimt in its decoration, but the twisted, crouched posture of the woman doesn’t look seductive- rather she’s supplicatory or, possibly, predatory.

At the start of this post I proposed that the book illustrations published with successive editions of the works of Pierre Louys can be a record of changes in society- in attitudes to sexuality, gender and the status and rights of women. I think that this is true, but that the evidence does not necessarily reveal huge steps forward in those areas. Far more women are involved now in commercial art, and the works of Louys provide vehicles for the expression of lesbian desire on their own terms: albeit in the service of illustrating books written by a man in which his sympathetic views of same-sex attraction compete with heterosexual masculine eroticism. Art styles have evolved, but the attitudes expressed by what’s depicted have not necessarily developed at the same pace.

Psyche- a myth of love updated

Cupid & Psyche by Jacques-Louis David, 1817

In a previous post, I described the myth of the love between the nymph Psyche and Cupid (Eros), first told by Apuleius in The Golden Ass, and I considered some of the art created in response to that story. It is a romance full of tragedy and incident that makes for vivid visual images; many other writers have reworked the story as well, amongst them William Morris and C. S. Lewis. As I have mentioned before, the French author Pierre Louys was steeped in the classics and enjoyed giving ancient myths and tales new life and currency by retelling them. He was familiar with Apuleius and the travails of Psyche and Cupid provided him with the foundations for just such a work.

Pierre Louys’ unfinished novel Psyche is an account of a modern-day love affair.  Along with Woman and Puppet, this romance lacks the powerful erotic elements of the author’s other books and, whilst both the stories have their qualities, neither equal the energy and creativeness of either of their predecessors, Bilitis or AphroditeThe writer Claude Farrère (1876- 1957), who wrote the ‘Afterword’ to the 1927 edition of the book, declared Psyche, even without its planned third section, to be Louys’ most significant work.  More recently, the writer André Mandiargues rejected such praise, suggesting that modern readers only feel “boredom at its insipid soppiness.”

The form in which we have Psyché is, to quote Farrère , who was a close friend of Louys, “mutilated.”  Louys composed it between 1906 and July 1913, at which time he confirmed to an acquaintance that the novel had been finished.  However, as it exists, it is lacking all but a fragment of the first chapter of its third and final section.  The love story is not resolved, although it has been possible to reconstruct the lost ending.

Psyche Vannetty and Aimery Jouvelle (his name obviously plays on the French aimé– beloved) are acquaintances who meet one day in the street and, suddenly, perceive their potential to fall in love with each other.  Seized by this madness of infatuation, by that night they are on a train to Brittany together, where they spend a few weeks isolated at Aimery’s chateau, the ‘Castle of the Sleeping Beauty of the Wood.’  They share an intense period of emotional and physical union, until Psyche discovers a poem her lover has written which indicates that his love has faded, even though he has yet to perceive this.  Here the book as we have it ends.

The novel is, without doubt, the author’s greatest evocation of romantic love.  Sensuality is present, but it is treated far more subtly and allusively than in many of his other works.  For example, the couple’s union is described as being entirely pure because it represents that which is inexpressible between them and “that which it leaves [is] of the eternal.”  Love is the “sublime evocation of the immaterial being which reveals itself in us…  the physical part of carnal love is annihilated by love itself.” The relations between the sexes as portrayed in Louys’ writings- especially those of his later period- usually involve desire and affection, but deeper emotional ties often seem to be absent.  In the poems he addressed to his lovers, for example, the focus was their bodies and the sexual pleasure that was shared.  In fact, as we shall see, carnal love is not entirely absent from the story (being embodied by Jouvelle’s mistress Aracoeli) but Louys was evidently trying to write something different to his normal descriptions of passion. Claude Farrère sought to explain why Psyché had never been published:

“All his life he had sung of love… but this was the exclusively sensual love which had been sung, before him, by his great inspirations, the masters of Athens, those of Alexandria, those of Syracuse.  The day when he invented Psyche, a different love was revealed to him, one which until then had been unknown or disdained: this was the more complex love of more evolved beings, the full love which aspired to more than the simple pleasures of the flesh, the love which tends to join and mingle not only bodies but spirits, hearts and minds.  It was to this more modern passion that Pierre Louys, burning his ancient gods, resolved to consecrate his supreme effort.   Opposing the two symbols- Psyche Vannetty and Aracoeli- he had that which all painters attempt.  But Pierre Louys was not a painter.  In that brain, one of the most astounding that has ever existed, a pitiless wisdom watched perpetually, directing a critical spirit, as imperious as was the other spirit, the creative spirit of the poet… Caught between his acute clairvoyance and his tender preference, perhaps it was voluntarily that he took refuge in silence.”

Farrère, ‘The Conclusion of Psyche,’ in The Collected Works of Pierre Louys, New York, 1926

Farrère argued that Louys felt that he had been unable to resolve satisfactorily the tension felt by Aimery Jouvelle between his almost chaste, spiritual love for Psyche and the carnal passion inspired by Aracoeli.  The entire novel was read to Farrère by Louys in 1913 and his recollection of the final chapters was that when Aracoeli unexpectedly leaves to travel alone in the East Indies, it makes Aimery return to Paris, thereby shattering the rural idyll with Psyche.  Back in the capital, he realises that his love for her has burned out, as she has already perceived.  When Aracoeli returns from her journey, Aimery goes to meet her in Marseilles.  Understanding that the relationship is lost and that he has reverted to his concubine, Psyche travels back to the chateau in the snow.  She is, of course, locked out, and freezes to death outside.

Apparently, Louys felt unhappy with this conclusion; perhaps he felt that he ought to do more to promote the triumph of ‘true love’ over desire.  What we do know (a fact that Farrère probably did not fully appreciate when he wrote in 1926) is that in his later works (unpublished until after his death) Louys returned to his earlier erotic themes.  Rather than “burning his ancient gods,” as Farrère claimed, the author reverted to them with a renewed passion.  In the pages of Trois Filles de leur mere, L’Île aux dames, L’Histoire du Roi Gonsalve, Pybrac, Toinon and others, we see the unashamed triumph of Eros.

The most difficult and revealing character in Psyché is the young woman called Aracoeli, the mistress of Aimery Jouvelle.  He met her on a ship returning to France from Egypt and she is described in notably racist terms:

“She was born in Pondicherry, to a Filipino father and a Hindu mother, both of mixed blood. There was everything in her ancestry: Dravidian, Hindu, Spanish, Arab and Malay; certain native colourings left a Negro stain on her long fingers.”

Aimery seduced her during the voyage and then took her home as his ‘concubine.’  Aracoeli is portrayed as having natural or naïve habits:

“Aracœli much preferred to be naked. By dint of nature and indifference, she slowly came to have Aimery accept that she would present herself in front of all her servants and sometimes in front of his friends with no other veil than a pearl attached to her right nostril.”

As a result, she is able to hold him “by a certain primitive influence, a simple and naked charm which emanated from her and which constantly suggested to the mind and the flesh the taste of the ardent union.” She is docile, not jealous of his other lovers, and is depicted as unselfconsciously childlike or submissive.  We first encounter her playing naked with a monkey; she sits up “straight on her heels like an Egyptian slave; and in the kindest tone, without a reproach, without a bitterness in her voice, almost as she would have said: ‘How can I please you?’ she whispered [to him].”  She is even referred to as “the little slave.” Louys’ treatment of his character is distinctly chauvinist, betraying some of the deep-rooted prejudices of a white bourgeois male living in a colonial country. All in all, Aracoeli appears as something of a cypher; she is exotic, young, passionate in bed, and yet curiously disconnected from the world, showing no signs of possessiveness that might inhibit her lover.  Jouvelle seems to enjoy all the benefits of a youthful and enthusiastic mistress without any of the drawbacks.  Aracoeli, having grown up in a different culture (in which she mingled Catholicism with Hinduism) is presented as a novelty, a benign savage who behaves as she wishes, entirely untrammelled by our conventions. Her unreal carnality is meant to contrast with the character of Psyche, but for me she seems equally unbelievable. The novel’s heroine is a widow in her twenties, yet she is apparently a virgin and quite innocent. Jouvelle, meanwhile, is a privileged male unthinkingly enjoying all the advantages of his social position. In this respect, he resembles Mateo in La Femme et le pantin, whilst Conchita in that story embodies another female stereotype.

The fact that the novel was incomplete and unsatisfactory seems to be reflected by the fact that- in comparison to books like Bilitis or Aphrodite- very few illustrated editions were published. The first seems to have been in 1927, with fifteen plates by Fernand Hertenberger (1882-1970). His other illustrative work included La-Bas by Huysmans and Colonel Chabert by Balzac. In working on Louys’ novel, Hertenberger paid particular interest to Aracoeli and her monkey, a scene that would draw other artists as well.

Hertenberger, 1927

This publication was followed the next year by a translated edition issued for the Pierre Louys Society of the USA and featuring plates by ‘Yna Majeska’ (Henriette Stern). The rather obscure ‘Madame Majeska’ (d. 2006) was an American artist, decorator, book illustrator and costume designer who worked with Vanity Fair, the Zeigfeld Follies, Cecil B. DeMille and Irving Berlin. She was born in Philadelphia and at first worked as a dancer before receiving an artistic training in Europe. Back in her native country, she found that changing her name and pretending to be European she got her more artistic commissions. As well as Louys, she illustrated Sappho by Alphonse Daudet and the Japanese medieval classic, Genji Monogatari. Her frontispiece shows the final scene of Psyche arriving at her former lover’s house in the snow. This version of the book was reissued in 1931. Majeska also illustrated a collection of Louys’ early verse, translated into English under the title Satyrs and Women.

In 1934 a very familiar artist, Mariette Lydis, worked on the book as part of the set of Louys’ texts that she illustrated at that time. Lydis provided six plates, one of which was a colour portrait of the heroine. As was her preference, she gave particular attention to the female nudes in the text and, as can be seen, Aracoeli (and her monkey) proved to be a good deal more interesting to draw than the rather anaemic Psyche Vannetty.

Carlegle, 1935

1935 saw an illustrated version from Carlegle, whom we have discussed before. His numerous colour plates typify his slightly cartoonish style and, again, show a marked interest in Aracoeli and her preference for nudity and playfulness.

Lastly, after a pause of several decades, in 1972 an edition appeared with a dozen plates by Guily Joffrin (1909-2006). Joffrin was born in Paris and trained at the École des Beaux-Arts from 1928. She became a professor of drawing in 1939 but, in 1945, left teaching to devote herself to her watercolour painting and illustration work; she also designed stained glass windows. Female nudes were very important in her work, as may be judged by her response to Louys’ text.

Joffrin, 1972