By Victoria Charles
ISBN-10: 1780420900
ISBN-13: 9781780420905
From Michelangelo to Rubens, Degas and Picasso, erotic artwork has attracted many nice masters, who created works that captivate the beholder like few others. regardless of, or perhaps even as a result of, this charm, erotic paintings hasn't ever did not evoke controversy, and often needed to protect itself from fees of pornography. This publication publications readers from early portrayals of erotic scenes produced within the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, to modern highlights reminiscent of Picasso’s sketchbook drawings, encompassing a wide number of kinds and methods.
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Example text
9 cm 60 61 François Boucher (1703-1770) The feminine nude, of whom he had a particularly sensual conception was Boucher’s preferred subject to such an extent that even his mythological allegories or his scenes of “sheepfolds” were only considered as pretexts for debauchery. 5 x 16 cm Bibliothèque d’Art et d’Archéologie, Paris 62 63 His series of etchings (which feature some drawings for works by Molière) as well as his drawings, evoke paintings from Watteau’s genre, not only through their fluidity of line but also by their grace and elegance.
4 cm Musée Rodin, Paris 52 53 These techniques (pencil, charcoal, white chalk on coloured paper, graphite, watercolour and mixed techniques) permit a vivid design which invites us to contemplate on these erotic scenes. The scenes presented by the artists are sometimes treated in a saucy, humourous tone, whereas sometimes they can be quite crude and prosaic. In the Salon Edgar Degas, c. 6 cm Musée Picasso, Paris 54 55 Some of these designs were the preparatory studies for painted works. These erotic designs differ from “traditional” nude studies in the degree where the erotically charged atmosphere is transmitted by the design’s particular technique.
While the lecher or debauchee is active in real life, the fetishist lives in a realm of fantasy, where he relishes in the delights of vice even more deeply and thoroughly than the unbridled debauchee. Seated Couple Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres, 1800-1806 32 33 Distance permits freedom. Art, too – which can also represent a fetishist production for the artist – affords freedom. It affords the freedom to play with fire without being burned. It appeals to the eye; it allows toying with sin without having sinned.
Erotic Drawings by Victoria Charles
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