Renek Gaszewski [Blog]

Fine Art Nude Models Photographer

Not your average bowl-of-fruit painting

Muara Johnston describes figure drawing as Pilates for painters. Any painter, regardless of skill and experience level, can benefit from the presence of a live model from which to draw. Which is why the assistant director for the SLO Art Center selected two documentaries featuring nude models to screen in conjunction with the Art Center’s exhibit, Corpora in Extremis (Bodies to the Limits). The public is invited to view The Nude Model and Art is an Attitude: The Art of Drawing the Nude as part of the Art Center’s movie night June 15 at 7 p.m., a program that began last October with the purpose of enhancing the exhibits.
“The centerpiece of art has always been human beings,” said Bill Buchman, director and featured artist of Art is an Attitude. “And, particularly, the nude, throughout the entire history of art. I think that the human figure is the basis for our concept of beauty.”
Buchman, of Florida, created the 93-minute instructional video in the summer of 2007 (it is now available for sale on Amazon.com for $34.95). He hired a co-director, who assumed responsibility for the technical aspects of the shoot. They filmed for two days in Buchman’s studio. For the sake of simplicity, he worked primarily with a single female model, an actress and dancer he had used before and selected because he knew that she would be comfortable in front of the camera. All told, the project was finished within three months.
Using a style that he describes as expressive and gestural—the middle ground between representational and abstract—Buchman’s purpose for the film was “to take [his] teaching technique out of the studio and to the larger public and to take people inside a first-hand experience of what drawing the human figure was about.” He sketches quickly, sticking to the fundamentals, as an hourglass figure most closely resembling a fertility goddess emerges from his brush. Heads rarely follow, and faces almost never. Working to maintain a spontaneous flow—Buchman doesn’t like art to be overworked or laborious—he strives for a universality that might be undermined by the addition of a face, and the expression and personality that a face conveys.
“I love the human face,” he said. “I started out doing street portraits in Denver, Colorado. But with everything else, you have to specialize. Even Picasso said, ‘I’ve ruined a lot of drawings by putting the head on them.’ People think it’s about something called realism or reality whereas it’s really about making magic.”
In his film Buchman draws the human figure in a variety of styles, from cubist to abstract, using tools that include Conté crayon, gel pen, ink wash, Sumi brush, soft pastels, watercolor crayons, and reed pen. He works in conjunction with European companies that import water-based drawing tools and media. His models in the film are exclusively female, although he does work with male models when he can find them (a task he says is not altogether simple in Florida). For painters who are interested in figure drawing but embarrassed about the prospect of working with a nude model, Buchman, who has been drawing from live models since he was 16, recommends participating in a class with a group of artists to minimize both cost and awkwardness.
“Anyone who wants to draw the figure would quickly realize what a normal thing it is and how comfortable everyone is,” he insisted. “The whole experience is on another level than purely voyeuristic. There is something naturally clinical that arises in a setting like that.”
But Rob Thompson, one of four producers of The Nude Model, approaches the subject from a different perspective. His film crew recruited artists and models to participate in a staged figure drawing class in a rented theater space, filming in a single afternoon. They researched the history of nude modeling, discovering that many of the models who now grace the walls of the world’s most prestigious museums were considered morally inferior to prostitutes. In the film, models discuss the physical and emotional discomfort that attends their profession.
“Unless you do a life drawing class, people have no idea what it’s like for the models,” said Thompson. “Some people felt very awkward about telling people they were nude models. There’s still a lot of prudery.”
Their models were both male and female, and sometimes their stories about nude modeling differed accordingly. One woman talked about modeling through her seventh month of pregnancy; a male model recounts an unfortunate incident in which he became aroused while posing. But the discomfort was balanced against the benefits of collaboration and the inspiration of the human form.
“It’s a different energy from drawing a bowl of fruit,” said Thompson, who has participated in an art class with a nude model.

Nude at NY Fashion Week is not what you think

Nude - not naked - is what’s sexy for spring.
As New York Fashion Week came to a close on Friday, the Band-Aid color dominated the runways as a modest substitution for the bare skin and cleavage that are often designers’ favorite accessories.
The stripped-down approach has been a popular strategy for designers battling it out in a weak economy, but these looks are anything but dull. Narciso Rodriguez and Herve Leger opted for nude-colored beads, while Ralph Lauren presented liquidlike satins in a sophisticated palette from light sand to olive and gold.
Of course, nude doesn’t match most people’s skin, but that’s a good thing. Traditional “skin” tones work best on women with olive and darker complexions, says Suze Yalof Schwartz, executive fashion editor at Glamour magazine. For paler skin, try pink or gold.
More than 100 designers previewed their spring collections during New York Fashion Week’s eight days of runway shows. Other trends to emerge were a casually elegant draped look, including a popular one-shoulder goddess style, harem-style pants, corsets and beachy shades of blue, violet and marigold.
RALPH LAUREN
If there is such a thing as “refined ruggedness” Ralph Lauren found it: Think “Raiders of the Lost Ark” with a Moroccan-Egyptian theme.
He captured a weathered spirit with safari and bomber jackets and even a ripped cotton-gabardine shirt, but, of course, the core of the Lauren label is luxury, so most of the outfits were ramped up with beautiful beadwork, liquidlike satins and a sophisticated palette.
Lauren also offered both the harem and modified track pant silhouettes, with billowy legs and tight, tapered hems, that have been all over the runways.
“My new rule is, if you’re going to wear harem pants and you’re over 40, make them eveningwear and make them Ralph Lauren,” Yalof Schwartz said.
PROJECT RUNWAY
The women ruled the “Project Runway” finale Friday, leaving the reality competition’s remaining male designers in the dust of jewel toned silks, vintage inspirations and dramatic showpieces.
For most of the show’s alums, the clear favorite was Portland, Ore.-based designer Leanne Marshall, the quiet, bespectacled brunette who was one of six designers to present before an audience that included stylist Rachel Zoe, a bevy of former “Runway” contestants, studio exec Harvey Weinstein and actress Michelle Trachtenberg.
Marshall sent down a beautifully crafted collection of separates and dresses draped in large panels of white, cream and shades of turquoise. Korto Momolu, another tent favorite, had a collection of halter dresses and minis with balloon sleeves in bright green, khaki and yellow.
Kenley Collins sent down vintage silhouettes in bright prints inspired by painting, fantasy and “Alice in Wonderland.” The men - who included Jerrell Scott, Joe Faris and the mohawked Suede - showed far less inspiring and innovative pieces. “I thought Leanne’s was fabulous,” said last year’s winner, Christian Siriano. “She has to be winner, because everything else was not cute.”
CHRISTIAN SIRIANO
The “Project Runway” winner showed his debut collection Thursday and wants the fashion world to know he’s not a flash in the pan.
“I just think there are so many reality shows that people become famous but they’re not really famous for anything,” Siriano said in a phone interview Monday while casting models. “At least people on ‘Project Runway‘ are talented.”
His namesake line, shown to an audience of the show’s alums and judges, along with actresses Elise Neal and Amanda Setton, featured futuristic skinny pants and ruffled blouses along with looks that are already his signature styles, like layers of chiffon circles.
The theme of a stormy night was repeated in dresses covered with layers of chiffon circles like groups of dark rain clouds. A one-shoulder mini dress made from diagonal tiers of gray and neon yellow chiffon strips looked like a rainy sky lit up with lightning bolts.

Do thin models warp girls' body image?

When Frederique van der Wal, a former Victoria’s Secret model, attended designers’ shows during New York’s Fashion Week this month, she was “shocked” by the waiflike models who paraded down the catwalk. They seemed even skinnier than in previous years.
“This unnatural thinness is a terrible message to send out. The people watching the fashion shows are young, impressionable women,” says van der Wal, host of Cover Shot on TLC.
Psychologists and eating-disorder experts are worried about the same thing. They say the fashion industry has gone too far in pushing a dangerously thin image that women, and even very young girls, may try to emulate.
“We know seeing super-thin models can play a role in causing anorexia,” says Nada Stotland, professor of psychiatry at Rush Medical College in Chicago and vice president of the American Psychiatric Association. Because many models and actresses are so thin, it makes anorexics think their emaciated bodies are normal, she says. “But these people look scary. They don’t look normal.”
The widespread concern that model thinness has progressed from willowy to wasted has reached a threshold as evidenced by the recent actions of fashion show organizers.
The Madrid fashion show, which ended Saturday, banned overly thin models, saying it wanted to project beauty and health. Organizers said models had to be within a healthy weight range.
That means a 5-foot-9 woman would need to weigh at least 125 pounds.
Officials in India, Britain and Milan also have expressed concerns, but some experts say consumers in the USA will have to demand models with fuller figures for it to happen here.
“The promotion of the thin, sexy ideal in our culture has created a situation where the majority of girls and women don’t like their bodies,” says body-image researcher Sarah Murnen, professor of psychology at Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio. “And body dissatisfaction can lead girls to participate in very unhealthy behaviors to try to control weight.”
Experts call these behaviors disordered eating, a broad term used to describe a range of eating problems, from frequent dieting to anorexia nervosa (which is self-starvation, low weight and fear of being fat) to bulimia nervosa (the binge-and-purge disorder).
Girls today, even very young ones, are being bombarded with the message that they need to be super-skinny to be sexy, says psychologist Sharon Lamb, co-author of Packaging Girlhood: Rescuing Our Daughters From Marketers’ Schemes.
It used to be that women would only occasionally see rail-thin models, such as Twiggy, the ’60s fashion icon. “But now they see them every day. It’s the norm,” Lamb says, from ads, catalogs and magazines to popular TV shows such as America’s Next Top Model and Project Runway. “They are seeing skinny models over and over again.”
On top of that, gaunt images of celebrities such as Nicole Richie and Kate Bosworth are plastered on magazine covers, she says.
What worries Lamb most is that these images are filtering down to girls as young as 9 and 10. Some really sexy clothes are available in children’s size 6X, says Lamb, a psychology professor at Saint Michael’s College in Colchester, Vt. “Girls are being taught very young that thin and sexy is the way they want to be when they grow up, so they’d better start working on that now,” she says.
Lamb believes it’s fine for girls to want to feel sexy and pretty when they are teenagers, but that shouldn’t be their primary focus. “If they are spending all their time choosing the right wardrobe, trying to dance like an MTV backup girl and applying lip gloss, it robs them of other options.”
Some girls don’t want to participate in sports because they’re afraid they’ll bulk up. Some won’t try to play an instrument such as a trombone because it doesn’t fit their image of what a “girly girl” should do, she says.
It begins in youth
There’s no question younger girls are getting this message, says Murnen, who has studied this for 15 years. “We have done studies of grade-school girls, and even in grade 1, girls think the culture is telling them that they should model themselves after celebrities who are svelte, beautiful and sexy.”
Some girls can reject that image, but it’s a small percentage: 18% in Murnen’s research. Those girls were shown to have the highest body esteem. Murnen and her colleagues reviewed 21 studies that looked at the media’s effect on more than 6,000 girls, ages 10 and older, and found those who were exposed to the most fashion magazines were more likely to suffer from poor body images.
Societies throughout the ages have had different ideals for female beauty, says Katie Ford, chief executive officer of Ford Models, whose megastar models include Christie Brinkley and Rachel Hunter. “You can look as far back as Greek statues and paintings and see that. It’s part of women’s fantasy nature,” Ford says. “The question is: When does that become destructive?”
She doesn’t buy into the idea that fashion models are creating a cult of thinness in the USA. “The biggest problem in America is obesity. Both obesity and anorexia stem from numerous issues, and it would be impossible to attribute either to entertainment, be it film, TV or magazines.”
Anatomy of a runway model
This year’s fashion shows in New York featured a mix of figure types, some of them a little more womanly and some thin, says Ford, whose agency had about 20 models in shows of top designers, including Ralph Lauren, Bill Blass, Marc Jacobs and Donna Karan. “Our models who did very well this season were not super-skinny. However, there were some on the runway who were very thin.”
Cindi Leive, editor in chief of Glamour magazine, says some models were teens who hadn’t developed their curves yet, which is one reason they appeared so thin. “You do see the occasional model on the runway looking like she should go from the fashion show to the hospital. You hear stories of girls who come to model and are collapsing because they haven’t eaten in days. Any responsible model booker will tell you they turn away girls who get too thin.”
Runway models have to have a certain look, says Kelly Cutrone, owner of People’s Revolution, a company that produces fashion shows around the world. Her company produced 16 fashion shows in New York, including one for designer Marc Bouwer.
The runway models this year were no thinner than years before, she says. “I didn’t see any difference in the girls at all. When they bend over, are you going to see the rib cage? Yes, they are thin naturally.”
Women shouldn’t be comparing themselves with these girls, she says. “These girls are anomalies of nature. They are freaks of nature. They are not average. They are naturally thin and have incredibly long legs compared to the rest of their body. Their eyes are wide set apart. Their cheekbones are high.”
Most runway models are 14 to 19, with an average age of 16 or 17, she says. Some are older. Many are 5-foot-10 or 5-foot-11. They average 120 to 124 pounds. They wear a size 2 or 4. “If we get a girl who is bigger than a 4, she is not going to fit the clothes,” Cutrone says. “Clothes look better on thin people. The fabric hangs better.”
Stephanie Schur, designer of her own line, Michon Schur, had her first official runway show in New York a few weeks ago. When she was casting models, she looked for women who had “a nice glow, a healthy look.”
She encountered a few models who looked unhealthy. “They tend to be extremely pale, have thin hair and don’t have that glow.”
But many of today’s runway models look pretty much alike, Schur says. “They are all pretty girls, but no one really stands out. For runway it’s about highlighting the clothes. It’s finding the girls that make your clothes look best.”
Schur says she doesn’t believe many young girls today are going to try to imitate what they see on the fashion runways. She says they are more likely to look to actresses for their ideal body image.
It’s not surprising that women want to be slender and beautiful, because as a society “we know more about women who look good than we know about women who do good,” says Audrey Brashich, a former teen model and author of All Made Up: A Girl’s Guide to Seeing Through Celebrity Hype and Celebrating Real Beauty.
For several years, Brashich worked for Sassy and YM magazines and read thousands of letters from girls and teens who wanted to become a famous model, actress or singer.
And no wonder, she says. “As a culture, we are on a first-name basis with women like Paris Hilton or Nicole Richie,” she says. “The most celebrated, recognizable women today are famous primarily for being thin and pretty, while women who are actually changing the world remain comparatively invisible. Most of us have a harder time naming women of other accomplishments.” The idolizing of models, stars and other celebrities is not going to change “until pop culture changes the women it celebrates and focuses on.”
Women come in all sizes
Glamour’s Leive believes the media have a powerful influence on women’s body images and a responsibility to represent women of all sizes. “We do not run photos of anybody in the magazine who we believe to be at an unhealthy weight. We frequently feature women of all different sizes. We all know that you can look fabulous in clothes without being a size 2.”
Ford believes the trend next year will be to move toward more womanly figures. Model van der Wal agrees and says she’s trying to include women of varying figure types in Cover Shot. “Women come in lots of different sizes and shapes, and we should encourage and celebrate that.”
Cutrone says models will become heavier if that’s what consumers demand. “If people decide thin is out, the fashion industry won’t have thin models anymore. Have you spent time with fashion people? They are ruthless. They want money.
“And the one thing they know is people want clothes to cover their bodies,” Cutrone says. “Unfortunately, most people aren’t comfortable with their bodies.”

'Top Model' to try NY casting call again

America’s Next Top Model has just announced it is returning to New York City to hold an open call for Cycle 13, since the show was unable to complete casting after last month’s melee. It will be held Saturday, April 11 and it’s open to girls 18 to 27, 5′7” or under. Wristbands will be handed out to indicate scheduled audition times. The location will be posted to rg4m.com later this week. Meanwhile, check out Clay Aiken, who sits in as guest judge on Wednesday’s show.

Glitzy rebellion at L.A. Fashion Week

Human bones on the catwalk. Models in dagger-emblazoned silk dresses strutting while talking on cell phones. Bauhaus blaring overhead.
Tara Subkoff’s Imitation of Christ brought some gothic glitz to L.A. Fashion Week on Monday, with Ed Hardy’s tattoo-based casual wear adding to the cool-teen party. Read the rest of this entry »

Renek Gaszewski Fine Art Nude Models Photographer

Welcome to Renek Gaszewski's Blog! As you probably already know we offer the largest, freshest, classiest collection of nude art and fine photography in the world. Our daily updated site offers beautiful, natural, nude girls captured in sensuous, professional, dazzling photos of the highest aesthetic quality by the World's best photographers! Renek Gaszewski also has an extensive archive of high quality movies GModels is a complete immersion in flawless beauty. Welcome to the most imitated nude art site in the World. See more at Web Site: Gaszewski.com...

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Renek Gaszewski Fine Art Nude Models Photographer

Welcome to Renek Gaszewski's Blog! As you probably already know we offer the largest, freshest, classiest collection of nude art and fine photography in the world. Our daily updated site offers beautiful, natural, nude girls captured in sensuous, professional, dazzling photos of the highest aesthetic quality by the World's best photographers! Renek Gaszewski also has an extensive archive of high quality movies GModels is a complete immersion in flawless beauty. Welcome to the most imitated nude art site in the World. See more at Web Site: Gaszewski.com...