Women serve as both subject matter and muse for the artist in many of these works. Another painting titled “Women II” presents a woman sitting on a curvaceous couch, whose fabric and the room’s surrounding wallpaper erupt in a dance of decadent floral imagery. Unclothed except for a piece of fabric covering her loins,”Women II” references Matisse’s interest in the decorative aspects of art, as well as his and Gauguin’s fascination with women as exotic emblems. Joanou’s contemporary model, by contrast appears relaxed and self-confident about her body, and appeals to us through an appearance that is neither overly glamorous nor sexualized.
What’s more, Joanou’s woman turns the cliché of women as objects of the male erotic gaze on its head in a most inventive manner. Rather than being looked at, she stares both complacently and victoriously at a tiny naked man whom she holds literally in the palm of her hand. One can’t help but think of King Kong cradling Fay Wray, the distressed damsel in the 1933 movie classic. Size evidently matters now as it did then, but whereas in that first Kong film it was feminine “beauty that killed the beast,” in this painting the woman’s giant stature and its accompanying metaphorical power “kills,” or at least reduces the male ego into a pawn-sized figure quite literally at the mercy of this woman’s every wish and whim. |
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"Woman II", 2002, oil
on linen, 60 x 48".

"The Brass Ring", 2005,
oil on linen, 60 x 48".
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