Thursday, May 10, 2012

Beefcakes!



Summary:

            “Lovely men parading (around) as early as (the) 1920’s topless and with extremely hefty physique” are considered beefcakes, the cheesecake’s counterpart. A cheesecake what female pin-ups are referred to, and male pin-ups, beefcake ("Beefcake - sexy,").
            Beefcakes are known to be heavily into fitness and health. Johnny Weissmuller, a Tarzan actor, is considered a beefcake who came into fame because of his practically-nude clothing, so to speak, and his fit and muscular body displayed in the Tarzan movie.
            In comparison to cheesecakes who wear a decent amount of makeup and cute little outfits, beefcakes’ main focus is on maintaining their build and ultimate fitness – that in itself is enough to give them the title.
            The types of “scenes” that are depicted in photographs of beefcakes usually involve the man being topless in a bed. Other scenes involve the “Cowboy”, the “Sailor Boy” or even “The Firefighter”. Images of beefcakes are often found in advertisements that promote a healthy lifestyle, top-of-the-line underwear, etc. ("Beefcake - sexy,"). Playgirl and Rolling Stones are popular “beefy” magazines that contain two prevalent and very much-admired beefcakes: Brad Pitt and Hugh Jackman for instance. These two in particular are more of the modern-day beefcakes ("Beefcake - sexy,"). “Pin up is never complete without a touch of vintage masculinity” ("Beefcake - sexy,").


Analysis:
           
            It’s important to remember that the female isn’t the only gender of the human species that have beautiful and sexy bodies to be fawned over and appreciated. Men, too, were seen as worthy of being looked at, but the idea of women looking at erotic pictures of men wasn’t as widespread. Although, the beefcake still existed and there are still media that allow them to showcase their attributes, in a sense. The most-likely reason for the lack of prevalence in regards to beefcakes/male pin-ups is the tendency for women to suppress their sexual desires and fantasies, though they do indeed exist. For some reason, in society, it isn’t quite politically correct for a woman to drool over a man and to use men’s pictures for the same purpose as men use women’s’.
           

Reflection Questions:

1.      Why isn’t the idea of a beefcake as common as a cheesecake or female pin-up?
2.      How did the first beefcake’s come to be?

Beefcake - sexy men!. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://www.pinuppassion.com/beefcake.html






History of the Pin-Up (Going Way Back)


Summary:

            Sculptures were made of Paleolithic women in prehistoric times and are seen as possible fertility or erotic talisman symbols by anthropologists. The Greeks were all about the nude, being that the first Olympics had naked athletes compete, although they were men only at this time ("The history of,"). Erotic art was prominent in Rome and Pompeii, being that there were many sexual illustrations all over many murals, sculptures, and marketplaces. This was before the religion became Christianity in the Fourth Century under Emperor Constantine. “Immoral ‘pagan’ imagery was banished and driven underground” ("The history of,"). This time period was known as The Dark Ages. There came a point where the merchant class, too, could be financially supported, leading to “a new definition of feminine beauty” that could be developed ("The history of,"). Many Italian fables were used to have a reason to show naked women, ensuing with the Renaissance. During the time of the middle ages, only the wealthy people were offered illuminated manuscripts. Producing graphics at the time was a long and costly process. Photography was soon developed after Lithography had been invented towards the end of the 18th century. Photography allowed new printing techniques that assisted in producing better quality print jobs that were done a lot faster and larger. The Golden Age of Illustration (about 1880-1920) soon began after printed material was available to not only the wealth, but to everyone ("The history of,"). There weren’t many models or photographers to photograph them after the war to fill these magazines, so Abstract Impressionists overtook the art world instead ("The history of,").
            Before the upsurge of pin-ups in the late 20th century, the art seen prior “challenged the role an artist played in relation to the world around themselves” ("The history of,").  Pin-ups had been popular during World War II; Louis F. Dow Calendar Company produced special booklets of pin-up that were mailed overseas to soldiers. After World War II, consumerism increased along with the popularity of erotic images. This time period is referred to as the Popular Revolution, in which pin-up girls truly became iconic. The official definition of a pin-up girl, the first used in 1941 (but the actual practice dating back to the 1890s), is as follows: “A pin-up girl is a woman whose physical attractiveness would entice one to place a picture of her on a wall” ("The history of,"). The craze began with images of attractive women being cut out of magazines and hung up, or calendars (most popular form of pin-up material at the turn of the century) with these women being hung up, but then lead to complete posters of these women that were mass-produced ("The history of,"). Post-war, Christian Dior altered his undergarments, separating them into two separate pieces, the bra and girdle.
Pin-up girls were not only actresses that were viewed as sex symbols, but were also plainly artwork in some cases depicting the ideal “sexy” woman. Male pin-ups, on the other hand, are referred to as “beefcakes” (female pin-ups would be considered cheesecakes).
The New York Society censored Paul Chabas’s “September Morn” (a rather controversial nude image); regardless, this images was found all over calendars, postcards, etc. “Romantic nudity” was found during the Art Deco Period ("The history of,"). Merely displaying the ankle of a woman was seen as risqué and reprehensible. Yet, just one generation later it took a lot more skin to get the same reaction.
The peak of the Golden Illustration was during the 1920s in part because of the new film industry. Businesses were attempting to create an identity that would be popular with the public at this point. A new trend began to develop in this new era of pop culture: “higher brow fare offered by such slick periodicals” ("The history of,"). These periodicals included ones prior to playboy (mainly Esquire), such as the Cosmopolitan and The Saturday Evening Post. Art Deco’s “romantic nudes” mentioned before were “tasteful” enough to be placed in these magazines ("The history of,").  Esquire had never had nudity that would be considered explicit in contrast to Playboy who came a little while after.
Alberto Vargas y Chávez, who developed the Vargas Girls in the early 1900s, began on the more conservative side, but wound up creating the concept of the centerfold. A commercial artist who worked at Esquire before Vargas was George Petty (the creator of “The Petty Girl”). “The Petty Girl”, present from the 1930s-1950s, even having a movie made about her – as she was “a fictitious airbrushed icon” ("The history of,").
A new thought arose in the 1930s, “If a pretty, wholesome girl-next-door could be utilized to sell a product, why not a girl in stockings modestly flashing some skin?” This concept evolved commercialization greatly ("The history of,"). The “mayonnaise school” refers to a lush oil technique that involved the use of thick layers of paint in order to “attain warmth and a glow” ("The history of,"). This technique was used by many pin-ups that are of significance. Initially, “explicit” men’s magazines “made such innocent depictions seem quaint and old-fashioned” Pubic hair was first shown in Penthouse in 1970 ("The history of,").
Today, the sex symbols are “comprised of pre-packaged teen sensations, silicone-enhanced quasi porn stars and anorexic 'supermodels” ("The history of,"). Airbrushing is a technique almost always used in today’s photographs, which leave the images of these women looking too perfect, that they look phony. The more modern pin-up artists have “turned their vision towards photorealistic fantasy or fetishistic subjects and lack the innocence of their predecessors” ("The history of,").
The Rocketeer character, created by Dave Stevens, is a modern recreation of the vintage style pin-up, meaning not every detail of a woman’s body is given all at once. With artists such as Stevens, the style of the 1950s vintage pin-up is being brought back.

                       
           

Analysis:

            This article really emphasized the evolvement of the idea of the pin-up over time, as well as the actual pin-up girl in herself. Beginning with cavemen creating sculptures of women, Greeks showcasing naked athletes in the Olympics (taking pride in one’s body and flaunting it to others), sexual depictions found all over Rome and Pompeii, etc. In many areas throughout Europe and America, this idea of recognizing the apparent beauty of a naked body progressed into the creation of the pin-up girl. It began with a sense of innocence and admiration, but eventually led up to the “pin-ups” of today. The way a woman’s naked body is viewed today is from an entirely different perspective. It’s lost its tastefulness and beauty and has become vulgar and coarse. The authentic has become synthetic and the mystery has been lost.

Reflection Questions:

1.      Why have the images of pin-ups evolved from being depicted as a natural woman to a synthetic one?
2.      How did the idea of the pin-up come to be?

The history of pin-up art. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://www.arthistoryarchive.com/arthistory/pinupart/


Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Pin Up Girls: Additional Information


Summary:

            The idea of the pin up girl began in the 1980s in France with Jules Cheret, a major artist and lithographer. Cheret was known as “the father of women’s liberation” because of the way in which he portrayed women (free-spirited) on his posters ("Pin up girls:," ). Soon, taxes were placed on these posters because of its growing popularity, this occurred towards the end of the 19th century. All of this lead to the pin up girl and this was concerning to many ("Pin up girls:," ).
            The main American pin up girl was The Gibson Girl created by Charles Dana Gibson who had been seen as “the earliest standard of feminine modernized attractiveness in the nation("Pin up girls:," ). The Gibson girl was urbane in nature, always dressing fashionably. Women admired the fact that this girl was seen as being on the same page as a man.
            During World War I, the pin up girl was somewhat absent from society. It wasn’t until World War II that it made a rather large comeback and the women had a whole new look. The “more womanly” pin up girl transformed to a “manlier outfitted pin up design and style” ("Pin up girls:," ). This became so popular during this time period because the men out at war fawned over these images that were found on planes, cigarette boxes, calendars, etc.
            The Vargas girls were developed by Joaquín Alberto Vargas y Chávez, an artist from Peru who moved to America in 1916. These girls fit the ideal representation of a pin up girl because of the use soft watercolors and the combination of personas – saint and sinner ("Pin up girls:," ).
            In the latter decades of the 1900s, the voluptuous and blithe aspect of pin up girls seemed to have dissipated and was replaced with the pressure to be thin and fit the “fashion model physique” and standard society had created at that point in time ("Pin up girls:," ).


Analysis:

            The first image of the pin up girl has come a long way. It began with the image of a woman who had been free-spirited and very feminine with Cheret’s work. It then transformed to a more sophisticated and eloquent look with the Gibson girl. After the pin up disappeared for a little while, it’s reappearance in World War II came with a new style consisting of pin up girls dressed in manlier attire. After that, the vintage style of the pin up girl was essentially lost with the influence of Playboy Magazine and the changing standards of the fashion model physique. The vintage pin up has not been forgotten, though, and is seen today, slightly modernized.

Reflection Questions:

1.      What caused all of these transformations of the pin up girl style?

2.      Why did Playboy feel the need to provide “a more in depth glance at the female body”?


Pin up girls: Additional information. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://articlevolcano.net/pin-up-girls-additional-information.html