Culture Magazine

Wednesday 10th December - The Snow Maidens

By Kirsty Stonell Walker @boccabaciata
Do you realize we are only a couple of days away from being halfway through Blogvent?  Doesn't time fly when you're steeped in booze fumes?  Anyway, today's picture is a load of naked ladies...


Wednesday 10th December - The Snow Maidens

The Snow Maidens (1913) Henrietta Rae

I'm not judging (I completely am) however this does not seem like a smart idea. But then if I was young and nubile then maybe I would fanny about in the snowy forest in my all-together too.  It reminds me, rather unpoetically, of a conversation I had at my local shop with a woman who felt her gentleman had done her wrong. 'Well, we've all been there, haven't we?' she said to me, stoically. 'You're screaming blue murder at him, chasing his car as he drives off down the road and you realize you've forgotten to put any clothes on...' Well quite.
It seems an odd choice of allegory, snow and winter as a young woman.  Surely the end of a year is more often seen as an old man, Father Time, handing the mantle over to the baby at new year.  Maybe it's the purity of snow?  The whiteness, the sterility of it?  That's what a gent looks for in a lady - clean and unfertile.  No, hang on, that doesn't sound right.  Maybe it's the smooth cool layer over the richness of the soil?  No, that just sounds weird.  Snow is like a beautiful young woman, you end up wanting to stay in bed all day?  I do apologize.

Wednesday 10th December - The Snow Maidens

Heart of Snow Edward Hughes

Rae wasn't the only artist to use beautiful young nymphettes as an allegory for snow.  I used Hughes' Heart of Snow in a past Blogvent and wondered if he was making a judgment on the young woman's affections.  Maybe it's a comment on beauty, so wonderful and dazzling but so fleeting and gone in such a short amount of time.  Well, that's depressing.  Let's go with this: A cold winter's day is like a beautiful woman, both will take your breath away.
Today's present suggestion is another book, and one of my favourites.  I bought Idols of Perversity: Fantasies of Feminine Evil in Fin-de-Siecle Culture by Bram Dijkstra back in 2003 and go back to it a lot in my research.  It's filthy, funny and obscenely educational which is exactly why I love it so much.
Wednesday 10th December - The Snow Maidens

You'll learn loads and you won't be bored, plus it has some illustrations I've never seen anywhere else, some of them for very good reasons.  I wish I had written it but I don't think I would have done half as good a job as Dijkstra.  Enjoy!
To buy this book on Amazon, look here (UK) or here (US) or Abebooks.

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