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[28] [32] Nude depictions of women may be criticized by feminists as inherently voyeuristic due to the male gaze. [33] Although not specifically anti-nudity, the feminist group Guerrilla Girls point out the prevalence of nude women on the walls of museums but the scarcity of female artists. Without the relative freedom of the fine arts, nudity ...
The woman's face is hidden, so the emphasis of the piece rests on the woman's nude body. [10] Degas included many works of female nudes bathing in the last Impressionist exhibition in 1886. [12] Nine of Degas's pastel drawings of women at their bath were exhibited by Theo Van Gogh at Galerie Boussod et Valadon in 1888. [4]
The painting shows a woman with her back turned, with a bare torso, by an oval mirror which reflects her face and the top of her chest. Her left hand rests on a green dressing table. On the table there is a box with an open lid. With her right hand she has lifted and arranged her brown hair, which is tightly set with a centre parting and ...
Woman in a Tub (or The Tub) is one of a suite of pastels on paper created by the French painter Edgar Degas in the 1880s and is in the collection of the Hill-Stead Museum in Connecticut. The suite of pastels all featured nude women "bathing, washing, drying, wiping themselves, combing their hair or having it combed" and were created in ...
An iconic Gibson Girl portrait by its creator, Charles Dana Gibson, circa 1891 The Gibson Girl was the personification of the feminine ideal of physical attractiveness as portrayed by the pen-and-ink illustrations of artist Charles Dana Gibson during a 20-year period that spanned the late 19th and early 20th centuries in the United States. [1]
The Pubic Wars, a pun on the Punic Wars, [1] was a rivalry between the American men's magazines Playboy and Penthouse during the 1960s and 1970s. [1] [2] Each magazine strove to show just a little bit more nudity on their female models than the other, without getting too crude. [2]
Fair warning, it almost hurts to look at this photo of a woman sitting on a subway that's going viral. Sitting with your legs nicely crossed is one thing, but this woman somehow managed to twist ...
Discomforts of an Epicure, 1787 (image 27 x 20 cm, in mat 43 x 33 cm) [1]. This is a descriptive list of erotic etchings and drawings by Thomas Rowlandson, based upon the research of Henry Spencer Ashbee published in his three-volume bibliography of curious and uncommon books: Index Librorum Prohibitorum (1877), Centuria Librorum Absconditorum (1879) and Catena Librorum Tacendorum (1885).