2. The Dark Ages fade, and artistic
experimentation blossoms
“We first have to draw the naked body
beneath, then cover it with clothes.”
-Michelangelo
Michelangelo’s Cascina Cartoon
3.
4. Michelangelo stopped short before the end of
design, leaving the process of design visible
The body is the manifestation of the soul or
state of mind and character.
The Last Judgement Michelangelo
5.
6.
7. Greeks studied the male figure as a means of
measuring beauty
Figure was portrayed with “correctitude”
Greek statue of Kouros
8.
9. Real VS Natural
Antonio del Pollaiuolo- first artistic anatomist
Dissects cadavers
Battle of the Nudes
10.
11. First ideal form was the masculine male form
(the modern day “strongman”)
Eugen Sandow
Michelangelo was a big “strongman” user
The Creation of Adam
12.
13.
14. Second ideal form was the feminine male
(modern day “rockstar” man)
David Bowie, Ziggy Stardust
Androgynous, youthful, pretty
Adam Albrecht Durer
18. Art suggesting homosexuality was illegal at
this time
Homosexual rebellions arose
Donatello creates the first life-size David since
the ancient Romans
19.
20. Giovanni Antonio Bazzi prefers, “Il Sodoma”,
The Sodomite
His work depicted martyred saints because of
illustrated sensuality and physical suffering of
the male figure
26. Gender roles became apparent not only in
society, but in art
Male’s represented strength and power
Women were portrayed as objects rather than
subjects
Michelangelo’s David VS Titian’s Venus of
Urbino
27.
28.
29. Male child nudity was acceptable
Ancient sculptures (Eros) had influence over
nudity in art
Male nudity posed as an aspiration for men,
but served for women as a constant reminder
of where they “belonged” in society
30.
31.
32. Since the 17th Century, societies ideals and
limits have changed quite a bit. How do you
think the image of how the male nude is seen
today has changed compared to during the
Renaissance? Is it accepted more or less? What
about attitudes towards homosexual themes
and undertones? And gender roles? How have
all these things changed since the 17th century?
33. Sorabella, Jean. "Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History." The Nude in the Middle Ages
and the Renaissance. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, n.d. Web. 15 Sept. 2012. <http://
www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/numr/hd_numr.htm>.
Mann, Richard G. "Subjects Of The Visual Arts: Nude Males." GLBTQ Arts (2007):
1-7. LGBT Life with Full Text.
Keizer, Joost. "Michelangelo, Drawing, And The Subject Of Art." Art Bulletin 93.3
(2011): 304-324. Art & Architecture Complete.
Clark, Kenneth. The Nude; a Study in Ideal Form. [New York]: Pantheon, 1956.
Print.Lucie-Smith, Edward. Adam: The Male Figure in Art. New York City: Rizzoli, 1998.
Print.