The female nude form dominates the history of art and decorative illustration, and apparently the posts of this blog. But there are some seemingly rare examples of using the decorative male nude form, such as this suite of drawings by Beatrice Stevens, from the 1920s—much in the spirit of Franklin Booth.
The drawing suite is entitled Four Oaks, with subtitles referring to the four movements of classical musical compositions—allegro, andante, scherzo, and allegro con brio.
Ironically I saw these in thumbnails in my feed and what caught my eye was the giant trees, not the male nudes. Fon't want to speculate ...! LOL. Beautiful prints.
I am posting these images with a non-profit and educational 'fair use' motive, regarding respective copyrights. Anyone downloading and using these images for any commercial use would be in violation of respective copyrights, and does not have my approval for such use.
My name is Thom Buchanan.
I'm an artist and photographer.
People are my favorite subjects to portray in art and photos. My wife (and studio partner) has called that my 'people skills', as I've been passionately creating portrait studies for many years.
I refer to myself as a pictorialist, a combination of image-making and journalist. Images are my life.
2 comments:
As much as I prefer the female nude, that's just the base side of me...these are incredibly beautiful. Music and image come together.
Ironically I saw these in thumbnails in my feed and what caught my eye was the giant trees, not the male nudes. Fon't want to speculate ...! LOL. Beautiful prints.
Post a Comment