museum of sex

233 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York
Sunday - Friday: 11am - 6:30pm
Saturday: 11am - 8pm

Men Without Suits

On view June 16, 2005 through March 12, 2006

Men Without Suits: Objectifying the American Male Body

Set against a timeline tracing male nude imagery from classical Greece to the 21st Century, Men Without Suits explores the impact of photography on American culture. Challenging the statement “Clothes make the man,” the exhibition uncovers the facades and persona created in our society with what men wear. Interestingly, it also reveals these guises continue when the clothes come off.

Who makes the images? What is their purpose? Who consumes them? Men Without Suits asks and answers these and many more questions, exploring the nature of male erotic appeal, the objectification of the male physique, and the notions of the male nude as both a fantasy and a commodity.

Beginnings
From 5-4th B.C. Greeks and, later Romans celebrated the naked bodies of youthful athletes and mature philosopher kings. In the 14th and 15th centuries Renaissance thinkers and artists viewed the human body as a reflection of divine perfection. Scientific study of anatomy and new drawing techniques created the need for live models. In the mid 18thand early 19th century artists repositioned the Classical male nude as aesthetic and socially
acceptable. New public museums and galleries collect and display Classical sculpture.

Male body as art
Photographs for the masses drove the explosion of images of men without suits. In the 1870 and 80s Baron von Globen and others promoted Mediterranean exoticism. In the 1890s Koch and Rieth create studio artist tools in the 1890s. By the 1910s and 20s Studio Arax in Paris and Edwin Townsend in New York, among others, developed an aesthetic for photographing the male nude, which was developed in the 1930s and 40s by George Platt Lynes. Photographers including Robert Maplethrope moved the male nude as art into mainstream culture, where it continues to be celebrated, and admired.

Health and nature
19th century physical culture inspired group participation in nudism and exercise, which was supported by magazines and books. Publicly displaying muscle mass enhanced by lifting weights launched many performing and competitive careers from Eugene Sandow in 1880s to Charles Atlas in the 1930s and 40s to Arnold Schwarzenegger in the 1970s. Pumping iron has infiltrated mainstream culture through Marvel comics, the World Wresting Federation and Hollywood action movies.

American century-beefcake
Americans turned beefcake photography into big business. In the 1930s and 40s photographers convinced young body builders and athletes to pose nude. These photographers pushed the definition of obscenity by disseminated images through sales of photographs and a range of magazines. Male physique magazines served purposes other and the promotion of exercise and working out at the gym.

Male nude in the mainstream
Social upheaval and cultural changes in the 1960s changed male nude photography. The boundaries between the erotic and the pornographic were erased as underground images of man-on-man sex and a gay sensibility moved into mainstream culture. Super 8, Beta, VHS and DVDs added movies to the range of male nude expression. While pornography raised awareness of male bodies, male nude images permeate advertising, the music industry and the movies. Beginning in the 1930s no male star was without a shirtless picture for his portfolio. Rockers and rappers have groomed bad boy images by stripping. Today male nudes help position products for female and gay and straight males.

Men Without Suits opens June 16, 2005.

Exhibition Credits

CURATORIAL
John E. Vollmer Curator
Sarah Jacobs Assistant Curator
Karen Eckhaus Research

DESIGN
Casson Mann Design Conceptual Design
Charles Gansa Video/Audio Production
Kimberly McClelland Video/Audio Production Assistant
Jim Richards Temple Construction, Installation Assistance

LENDERS
Dennis Bell, Athletic Model Guild
BigKugels.com
David Chapman
David Leddick
Vintagenudephotos.com

ADVISORS
David Chapman
Jim Kempster
David Leddick
Robert Loncar
Mark Rotenberg
Tim Wilber

Tickets

Adults (18+): $14.50 + tax
Students and Seniors (with valid ID): $13.50 + tax
Group Visits are also available

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