<P> L'Origine du monde ("Origin of the world") painted by Gustave Courbet in 1866 was the first realistic painting of a vulva to be exhibited in Western art . This example of eroticism is also referenced as inspiring Catherine Breillat's filming of the female genitalia in her 2004 film Anatomie de l'enfer (Anatomy of Hell). </P> <P> British artist Jamie McCartney used casts of four hundred vulvas to create the installation known as The Great Wall of Vagina in 2011 . The vagina casts are life size . Explanations written by the project's sexual health adviser accompany these . The purpose of the artist was to "address some of the stigmas and misconceptions that are commonplace". </P> <P> Starr Goode explores the image and possible meanings of the Sheela na gig and Baubo images in particular, but writes also about the recurring image worldwide . Through hundreds of photographs, she demonstrates that the image of a female displaying her vulva is not an anomaly of European religious art or architecture, but that similar images are found in the visual arts and in mythical narratives of Goddesses and Heroines parting their thighs to reveal what she calls, "sacred powers ." Her theory is that "the image is so rooted in our psyches that it seems as if the icon is the original cosmological center of the human imagination ." </P> <Ul> <Li> <P> Possible Rupestrian depictions of vulvae, paleolithic </P> </Li> <Li> <P> Possible stylised vulva stone, paleolithic </P> </Li> <Li> <P> Attic red - figure lid . Three female organs and a winged phallus . </P> </Li> <Li> <P> The Universe an oil painting by Meister des Hildegardis - Codex </P> </Li> </Ul>

Which of these is not part of the vulva