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Books > Arts & Architecture > Art forms, treatments & subjects > Art treatments & subjects > Iconography, subjects depicted in art > Human figures depicted in art > Nudes depicted in art
Why did the male nude come to occupy such an important place in
ancient Greek culture? Despite extended debate, the answer to this
question remains obscure. In this book, Sarah Murray demonstrates
that evidence from the Early Iron Age Aegean has much to add to the
discussion. Her research shows that aesthetics and practices
involving male nudity in the Aegean had a complicated origin in
prehistory. Murray offers a close analysis of the earliest male
nudes from the late Bronze and Early Iron Ages, which mostly take
the form of small bronze votive figurines deposited in rural
sanctuaries. Datable to the end of the second millennium BCE, these
figurines, she argues, enlighten the ritual and material contexts
in which nude athletics originated, complicating the rationalizing
accounts present in the earliest textual evidence for such
practices. Murray's book breaks new ground by reconstructing a
scenario for the ritual and ideological origins of nudity in Greek
art and culture.
While the female nude has long played a conspicuous role in western
iconography, the male nude has not always enjoyed such attention,
or acceptance. This ode to the male physique celebrates the
evolving, at one time illicit, art form from anonymous 19th century
erotica through to contemporary work from David Hockney and Duane
Michaels. Through the classic, the playful, and the provocative, it
explores the compositions, postures, and role-playing of this often
under-explored genre. Esteemed masters such as Herbert List, George
Platt Lynes or Robert Mapplethorpe are all there, alongside Baron
Wilhelm von Gloeden, famed for his homoerotic images of nude youths
in classical postures in Sicily. Further highlights include
illustrations from Physique Pictorial, the leading organ of the
mid-50s gay scene and a pioneer in gay publishing. About the series
Bibliotheca Universalis - Compact cultural companions celebrating
the eclectic TASCHEN universe!
Table of Contents: Katlijne Van der Stighelen, Introduction - Eric
Jan Sluijter, The Nude, the Artist and the Model: The Case of
Rembrandt - Erna Kok, The Female Nude from Life: On Studio Practice
and Beholder Fantasy - Victoria Sancho Lobis, Printed Drawing Books
and the Dissemination of Ideal Male Anatomy in Northern Europe -
Paul Taylor, Colouring Nakedness in Netherlandish Art and Theory -
Hubert Meeus, Two Founts of Ivory: Nudity on Stage in the
Seventeenth Century Low Countries - -Johan Verberckmoes, Is that
Flesh for Sale? Seventeenth-Century Jests on Nudity in the Spanish
Netherlands - Ralph Dekoninck, Art Stripped Bare by the
Theologians, Even: Image of Nudity / Nudity of Image in the
Post-Tridentine Religious Literature - Veerle De Laet, Een Naeckt
Kindt, een Naeckt Vrauwken ende Andere Figueren: An Analysis of
Nude Representations in the Brussels Domestic Setting.
Giovanni Civardi breaks down the complex process of drawing the
male nude, from making rudimentary choices about framing, lighting
and the most appropriate drawing tools, to rendering detailed and
anatomically accurate artworks. Civardi's own masterful drawings
provide an excellent touchstone for the artist wanting to explore
the depiction of the male body, and his studies of numerous poses
cover all aspects of life drawing. Civardi takes a pragmatic,
almost scientific, approach to teaching the subject, combining
basic physics with artistic interpretation. Drawing the Male Nude
also touches upon the significant anatomical differences between
the male and the female form, but these are also covered in some
detail in the companion to this title, Drawing the Female Nude.
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Daughters of Darkness
(Hardcover)
Jeremy Saffer; Foreword by Dani Filth; Introduction by Randy Blythe
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R1,441
R1,256
Discovery Miles 12 560
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Daughters of Darkness is a collection of fine art portraits of
women in corpse paint. A nod to black metal and doom album cover
art, Daughters of Darkness was photographed over 10+ years, with
more than 400 models from all over the world, almost all of which
did their own corpse paint and are fans of black metal. Daughters
of Darkness features many celebrities, actresses, musicians, and
models (some under the cover of corpse painted anonymity) all of
whom donned only corpse paint for this book. Photographed by
internationally renowned music and fine art photographer Jeremy
Saffer, this project combines both his music photography and fine
art photography worlds into a single project, which was conceived
to capture the memory of flipping though albums in a music store
and buying albums based entirely on the albums cover art (which
often featured a nude portrait, someone in corpse paint, or both)
prior to knowing the music or the band. Like the music that
inspired it, Daughters of Darkness shows the duality of finding
beauty in dark imagery, and finding darkness within beauty.
The first Yale French Studies issue on photography, examining
French photography's place in art, identity, and society through a
lens of diversity and interdisciplinary investigation In its first
issue on photography, this volume of Yale French Studies presents
multiple avenues of interdisciplinary investigation designed to
intersect and open up new areas of inquiry in the twenty-first
century. These intersections push beyond traditional geographic and
gender boundaries, exploring women's photography, new cultural
contexts, trans orientalism, and minority and marginalized bodies.
As they do so, they ask us to reconsider the way that we conceive
of photography's place in the past and in our lives today.
The life and work of an essential photographer whose feminism and
pictorialist images distanced her from the mainstream In the first
book devoted to Anne Brigman (1869-1950), Kathleen Pyne traces the
groundbreaking photographer's life from Hawai'i to the Sierra and
elsewhere in California, revealing how her photographs emerged from
her experience of local place and cultural politics. Brigman's work
caught the eye of the well-known photographer Alfred Stieglitz, who
welcomed her as one of the original members of his Photo-Secession
group. He promoted her work as exemplary of his modernism and
praised her Sierra landscapes with female nudes-work that at the
time separated Brigman from the spiritualized upper-class
femininity of other women photographers. Stieglitz later drew on
Brigman's images of the expressive female body in shaping the
public persona of Georgia O'Keeffe into his ideal woman artist.
This nuanced account reasserts Brigman's place among photography's
most important early advocates and provides new insight into the
gender and racialist dynamics of the early twentieth-century art
world, especially on the West Coast of the United States.
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