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Monday, June 17, 2019

CLEANING & Worshipping the Treasure TRAIL

Thank you, Kevin.  Bon voyage! Get inspired by male beauty on your travels!

Reader, I suggest that you click on this photo (depending on your device) to see it in all its remarkable natural and artistic beauty.

This is an artistic study of the male form and art technique.  Sorry, no boring porn tonight.

This artist highlighted some of the most amazing aspects to this specimen.
1.  the jawline
2.  the right clavicle
3.  the left shoulder
4.  the chest (and a perfect nipple)
5.  the sexy abs and soapy TT leading to a natural full bush
6.  a remarkable birth mark, that breaks my heart.  It is exquisite, no?

Is this a painting?  It looks like a Caravaggio, my favorite artist?  He drew inspiration from Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo

And he inspired a cadre of artists, including Rembrandt and Rubens a cadre of  artistic masters.

I have always been drawn to this style of chiaroscuro or the study of light and darkness.  It is simply one of mankind's few accomplishment.

I am an idiot, I know.  But I took a few classes, read a few books, visited quite a few museums.  I have always been obsessed with interplay of light and darkness, which always animates and makes art magical.  It continues throughout art history, particularly in works by modern artists in the late 19th and early 20th century, although in a different way.

This is a very current photo (or is it a [aomtomg?) that, IMHO, is a brilliant study of chiaroscuro.  And the essence of male beauty.






4 comments:

  1. Very beautiful. It is the highlighting which the contrast provides that makes a photo or painting artful. I agree that this one is really well done!

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  2. A beautiful piece of artwork that should grace the walls or bedside of any gay guy...!

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  3. We disagree about some things from time to time but your comment about the similarities between this work of photographic art and the paintings of Caravaggio is spot on. Might be my favorite artist, or at least right up there with Ingres and Georges de la Tour. Of course it helped that the photographer here had such a magnificent man to work with.

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