Troy Caperton is a 59 year old artist working in Austin, Texas. He is a master painter and offers his own work and his reproductions on eBay and at his website,
Also see this previous post on Troy Caperton’s work.
.
.
.
.
Troy Caperton is a 59 year old artist working in Austin, Texas. He is a master painter and offers his own work and his reproductions on eBay and at his website,
Also see this previous post on Troy Caperton’s work.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
From the earliest era of fine art, when great artists concluded that beauty in the natural world begins with the human form, the vast majority of them focused on females. No longer. We’re now living in an era of artistic discovery. Creative pioneers, those adventurous enough and driven by the beauty of the masculine form, have been blazing new trails for a while. Painters, sculptors, photographers, writers and choreographers, artists of all kinds are following their inspirations and giving us the magic and mystery of men in the form of art. Add to this list of pioneers a man that publishes a quarterly magazine that presents the art of man, the artists and their stories.
E. Gibbons may be the most eclectic person you’ll ever meet. He’s an artist (some of his work is pictured below). He has placed in the top 10 of a national invention contest with a product in the market for several years via “Staples.” He is considered an origami master, composer of original works for piano, and he is the author of over 25 books using many different pen names. He is a participant in both the NJ and NYC 9-11 memorial competitions, and founder of a small gallery in NJ that is a former firehouse. If that’s not enough, he’s also a teacher.
By E.Gibbons from the Cube Series
No, this isn’t a photograph, which you might have assumed on first glance. Gibbons is considered a passionate master of monochromatic oil painting with neoclassical roots. His work has been featured in exhibitions from coast to coast, and internationally in such places as Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, Paris, France, Seoul, Korea, Osaka, Japan and Alexandria, Egypt. 
By E. Gibbons, Tim (oil on canvas)
.
The Art of Man is a fine arts quarterly journal that seeks to bring balance to a genre of art that overwhelmingly favors the female figure. Every edition includes an historical reference, article on the fine art of the male figure, a directory of over 150 artists, and in-depth interviews with 5 artists that are courageous enough to focus on the male figure as a significant portion of their portfolio.
This journal does NOT include erotic imagery, photography, cartoons or digital art but focuses instead on classical images in traditional media like painting, drawing and sculpture.
A sample page from The Art of Man
.
You’ll read insightful artist’s interviews in every issue:
Excerpt from an interview with Ron Griswold.
Art of Man: Why do you paint the male form?
Ron Griswold: Painting the male form is simply one of the genres with which I am comfortable. First of all, the human form is a challenge to draw and paint and I like a challenge. Second, the female form has so much history. When I work with the male form I can get closer to a personal expression without influence. Third, I use the figure studies to free my hand. Having a general tendency to get really tight, with the figure studies I allow myself to be loose. They are probably closer to drawing than painting, which is the edge I explore a lot when I’m working with the figure.
Art of Man: Have you encountered resistance or acceptance in having the male figure in your work?
Ron Griswold: Both. However there are a lot of people who are happy that the male form is being seriously explored as a subject. A market is definitely there, maybe even a bit pent-up.
Art of Man: Do you see a change in the resistance or acceptance of the male figure as subject?
Ron Griswold: Well, yes. Times change. There are a lot more artists working seriously with the male form today. Back when I first started working with the male figure, eBay had just started up and that is where I sold my first figure works. There were only a couple of artists selling on eBay at the time and there is a better than fifty-fifty chance that I was the first to discover the “male nude” category. Now there are a lot of good artists offering work there. So things move forward and a general acceptance is the track we’re on.
Samples of the artist’s work accompany each interview:
By Ron Griswold, The Damnation Continue reading
Here is a man that I have become quite fond of in a short time. Don’t ask me why. Maybe because something comes through his personable face. Maybe because his photographs reveal an interesting man. Maybe because we have walked down some of the same roads during our decades of life. I’ll never meet him because he lives too far away. But one thing I can do is imagine the great friendship he and I might otherwise have.
Edward is an “amateur” photographer. You might think “highly skilled” photographer would be a better way to put it after looking at his stunning work.
.
We bantered about the condition of our asses, mine being so much less photogenic than his. But then he’s out taking pictures while I sit on mine writing all day, which probably explains it.
.
Is it the pose that makes this photograph so appealing? Is it the natural lighting Edward has captured? Those things are certainly part of it. But it’s also the the male beauty, the man at one with his body and with Mother Earth. It’s the subtle suggestion that it’s the simple things in life that count.
Here Edward is having fun experimenting with pixel manipulation. He told me his Photoshop skills are not great. Like me, he doesn’t have the patience.
.
The male form in silhouette. The model: Edward Po. The mood: intoxicating … at least for those who know how to appreciate it. How many men half his age would envy his body?
.
A winter day in upstate New York. A man alone in a hot tub, contemplating, so it would seem, the gift of life, captured for posterity by an “amateur” photographer. I personally would call him a thoughtful and imaginative photographer. What Edward is showing us is nudity is natural. He’s showing us that it’s okay to be in touch with your body and enjoy living in it.
During the course of our email discussions, Edward said this: “I love the capture of the play of light and shadows, as well as capturing the human form – male or female. I use myself as model most of the time as I am available and cheap and willing to put up with a demanding photographer.”
So you may wonder why I call Edward Po an intriguing man … this photograph helps explain it. When I saw it, my imagination ran amuck. Though he probably did all of this alone, I pictured two men painting each other, then photographing the results. Continue reading
Roberto Ferri (born 1978) is an Italian artist and painter from Taranto, Italy. His stunning work is represented in important private collections in Rome, Milan, London, Paris, New York, Madrid, Barcelona, Miami, San Antonio (Texas), Qatar, Dublin, Boston, Malta, and the Castle of Menerbes in Provence.
As a modern-day talent, painting in a classical style, Roberto Ferri is giving the world an artist’s view of the beauty of the human form. His work is stunning.
.
.
.
.
Subscribe to Enlightened Male2000 by Email
To leave a comment, click the symbol in the upper right hand corner
There are photographers that have a gift for putting us in touch with the sensuality inherent in men and the beauty of the male form. They understand raw masculine emotion stripped of autocratic indoctrinations and frivolous material pursuits. They breathe with such creativity, they see things the rest of us can’t, then they capture it on film. Artists such as Robert Siegelman, Terry Cyr, Alejandro Caspe, and of course Jim Ferringer comes to mind. Tom Clark ranks among them.
Tom has led an eclectic, interesting life. He grew up in Rome, where art and an appreciation for the human form are part of everyday life. As a kid, traveling throughout Europe with his family, he had the habit of capturing images with his Kodak. Later, while giving piano lessons and studying music, he realized his love for photography was more than a hobby. There was only one thing to do: pack up, move to southern California, invest in some first class photographic equipment and get started. The rest is history. Tom is currently adventuring in Utah.
Click here to visit Tom’s website, to see more or buy a print.
.
.
.
.
Model Kevin Lawrence from the Mulholland Series
.
Creativity often lurks in the shadowy recesses of the human mind, manifesting in lyrics and musical notes, or images captured by a camera, or brush strokes on a canvas, or replications of life in the performing arts. Jenny Saville uses the canvas. Her creativity has combined with ghosts from her youth and a fascination with the physical drama of the human condition.
Jenny Saville was born in Cambridge, England in 1970. In 1990, midway through her BA course at the Glasgow School of Art, Jenny Saville exhibited in Contemporary ‘90 at the Royal College of Art. In 1992 she completed her degree as well as showing in Edinburgh and in Critics Choice at the Cooling Gallery, London. Following the success of her show at the Saatchi Gallery in 1994, which generated a great deal of publicity for her work (the images were ubiquitous that year), Saville went on to take part in the exhibition American Passion, which toured from the McLellan Gallery, Glasgow, to the Royal College of Art and the Yale Center for British Art in New Haven, Connecticut.
Saville’s fascination with fat appears to have formed during her youth while sitting on the floor watching her piano teacher. Her view from there was big, thick thighs, a thick tweed skirt and tights. The image stuck in her mind as she stared at the way the teacher’s thighs never parted and how the flesh would rub against the tights, which is a similar experience some have by looking at one of the big early Savilles. Saville wanted to capture a mix of awe and intimacy. “I wanted both in those pictures. A large female body has a power, it occupies a physical space, yet there’s an anxiety about it. It has to be hidden.” She believed part of her endeavor was a search for intimacy, “as if being in a mother’s arms”, whereas part of it was discomfort, “the anxiety that comes from living with flesh”.
.
Subscribe to Enlightened Male2000 by Email
To leave a comment, click the symbol in the upper right hand corner
.
.
.
.
.
.