Wednesday, February 19, 2025

Art and the Naked Man

I post a lot of nude photography of men. I have always preferred images that look less professional or posed and I keep away from selfies, except in the pics of guys with cameras that I post on Tuesdays. Occasionally, I receive criticism for posting male nudes while at the same time talking about my faith each Sunday. I think the male body should be celebrated, and some of my readers come to see the photos I will post. If that means they also read my devotionals on Sundays, then it spreads the message I try to convey. That being said, I thought I’d start a weekly series on the male nude in art throughout the history. I doubt I will go in chronological order, but more of an introduction today focusing on the photography of male nudes.

Photography has been a crucial medium in LGBTQ+ art, providing a powerful way to explore identity, desire, and resistance. Male nude photography, in particular, has played a significant role in shaping the visual language of queer art, challenging societal norms, and creating spaces for LGBTQ+ expression. From the early coded works of the 19th century to the bold imagery of contemporary artists, male nude photography has been a key site of queer visibility and activism.

Art has been part of the appreciation of the male body throughout history. The male nude has been a central subject in the history of art, serving as a symbol of idealized beauty, power, and the human condition. In ancient Greece and Rome, male nude sculptures celebrated physical perfection and heroism, embodying philosophical ideals of harmony and virtue. During the Renaissance, artists like Michelangelo and Leonardo da Vinci revived classical traditions, using the male form to explore anatomy, movement, and divine inspiration. While religious and mythological themes often justified depictions of male nudity, these works also reflected shifting cultural attitudes toward masculinity, physicality, and artistic mastery.

In later centuries, the male nude became more controversial, especially in Western art, where shifting moral standards led to greater censorship. While female nudes remained common, male nudity was often restricted to academic studies or hidden in private collections. In the 19th and 20th centuries, artists like Édouard Manet, Egon Schiele, and later, queer photographers such as George Platt Lynes and Robert Mapplethorpe, used the male nude to challenge societal norms, explore eroticism, and assert LGBTQ+ visibility. Today, the male nude continues to be a powerful subject, reflecting changing perspectives on gender, identity, and artistic freedom.

5 comments:

Fiddleheads said...

Good morning Joe. This is the sort of material that I really enjoy. Thanks for posting it.
Best, Brooks

JiEL said...

Nude bodies, men or women, always been there in the art expression for milenium. For those bigots who are «offended» they are because of their ignorance as even at the Vatican inside the St Peter Cathedral the pope can see every day those magnificient murales of Michaelangelo where the nude male bodies are all over the walls and ceiling.
At birth we are naked and God never minded about this.
Every animals on earth are going naked and no one are offended about it.
Even in the hot countries, many native groups are naked and it was just untill the religious white people came to invade them that they put shame on those natives for their normel way of life.

uvdp said...

C'est dans la chapelle sixtine que Michel Ange a peint de nombreux nus intégraux . Par la suite , les sexes ont été cachés . Lors de la dernière restauration , il n'était pas possible de les retrouver .
Michel Ange a sculpté plusieurs Christ nus .
Y a-t-il eu des nus intégraux dans la basilique St Pierre ?

uvdp said...

Congratulations on the weekly series on the male nude in art throughout history !

Anonymous said...

¡Totalmente de acuerdo contigo!
Ángel