Tuesday, April 01, 2025

NUDE ART DRIVES DIFFERENT THOUGHTS AND SENSATIONS

The naked model makes the girl who draws smile, but embarrasses the dressed boy. Are they a couple, just friends? Would she like to see him naked too? The model seems indifferent, but the students who draw have many different feelings.




 

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

J’adore poser nu. J’ai posé pour 15 élèves 8 filles et 7 garçons plus la professeur de dessin ☺️

Slippered Hero said...

I love the drawerS body language . Left to right,
OMG!, can you see this, he's naked.
If I cross my legs it should hide me erection, I must not look at his cock.

Slippered Hero said...

(posted before id finished)
I so want that cock.
I've got the worse seat here, I can hardly see his cock. I should have brought some bigger paper, the others might guess I only came to look at cock.

Anonymous said...

A very accurate depiction of life art years ago, before the boom and general acceptance we have today. Some of my early experiences were very similar to this, in a small room with first year students. All a bit seedy really, and with similar mixed reactions from the students.

Nowadays, life art is usually performed in a built for purpose studio within a college or university. Gone are the uncomfortable communal benches, and the drawing while resting your paper on a book. Today the model will be in the centre of the room, with the artists surrounding and all using easels, as in the photo a few days ago. Usually the first pose is the easiest, and the longest, about 25 minutes. Then a slightly harder pose for about fifteen, finishing off with a few difficult 5 minute poses.

The model will rotate their stance each time by about 90 degrees, giving the artists a different perspective each time. Also the change in time available means the artists have to use different approaches to their art.