So, I started looking at some more of William Kentridge's work since in a lot of ways, my final project is going to emulate his....I made a kinda disappointing discovery though. He has also made some stills of a woman (wife) climbing into a bath tub. I don't think I should be too surprised. The bathing nude is basically its own genre. At least he did not make a movie about bathing, just a few drawings.

Untitled (video transfers). 2002
Charcoal, dry pigment, and gouache on paper (series of nine)
So I like what Kentridge said about this work is response to the idea that it fits into the classic genre of bathing nudes "The model become intimate rather that allegorical, objective or idealized." Good, that is exactly what I hope to get across in my short film! Sure it's not an original idea, an original media, or an original means of animating, but oh well, I want to do it. I think it will speak to people. I think it will be an absolutely momentousness amount of work, so if nothing else, I have the struggle.
Weighing... and Wanting. 1998

for the film Sobriety, Obesity & Growing Old (1991)
Kentridge is best know for his short film that he began creating in the late 1980's. His more recent work does not seem to be in film form, but rather in exhibitions. He has worked in sculpture, created an opera, and a series of tapestries out of netting and ripped construction paper. His sketching and drawings are often highly gestural. He says himself that often times the marks he put on paper do not have to be accurate, but they need to stand for some observation. In the image above, two figures, a man and a woman, lay in a small pool or puddle in the center of the picture plane. The horizontal movements in the image leave the viewer with a sense of stillness and calm but definite sadness. I'm not sure but I think there are bovines in the background. The woman is naked, rotund, and appears to be very sad. It looks as if the man is comforting her.