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Topics

Nudes and models

  • Summary
The Deluge
Image credit: Victoria and Albert Museum, London

The Deluge

William Etty (1787–1849)

Paintings Collection

For artists, the nude has two principal meanings. From classical Greek times the nude has been the ideal form, as seen in the sculpture and vase paintings of ancient Greece. But the study of the naked human form was also an essential part of artistic training, to enable convincing depictions of clothed figures, at rest and in action.


Stories from mythology, such as the Judgement of Paris, often contain nude figures, referring to Greek ideals.

Read more
However they also allowed sensual images to be openly appreciated, though some were intended for private enjoyment. When sufficiently idealised, nude statues and paintings were surprisingly acceptable to an otherwise prudish Victorian public. William Etty’s more realistic naked figures did however sometimes cause controversy.

Artworks

  • JYM1
    JYM1 Frank Helmuth Auerbach (1931–2024)
    Southampton City Art Gallery
  • The Australian
    The Australian Stephen Conroy (b.1964)
    Southampton City Art Gallery
  • The Toilet of Venus
    The Toilet of Venus Duncan Grant (1885–1978) and Vanessa Bell (1879–1961)
    Southampton City Art Gallery
  • Father and Child
    Father and Child Duncan Grant (1885–1978) and Vanessa Bell (1879–1961)
    Southampton City Art Gallery
  • Daydream
    Daydream Michael Randall (1947–2000)
    Southampton City Art Gallery
  • Gbenga Sitting on the Stairs
    Gbenga Sitting on the Stairs Nahem Shoa (b.1968)
    Southampton City Art Gallery
  • Nude with a Hat
    Nude with a Hat Philip Sutton (b.1928)
    Southampton City Art Gallery
  • 989 more

Stories

  • Nina Hamnett: portraying the spirit of her age

    Alicia Foster

  • Woman of mystery: the model, the artist and the defrocked priest

    James Trollope

  • Northern Bather
    Gareth Reid: an interview with Sky Arts' Portrait Artist of the Decade

    Dickon Hall

  • Calm and precise: Euan Uglow and post-war figuration

    Kate Aspinall

  • Girl
    Nude and naked: a stripped down look at post-war sculpture

    Julia Carver

  • Queering the collection: Elizabeth Raikes' 'Nude Study'

    Renee Vaughan Sutherland

  • John Duncan Fergusson: the artistic evolution of a Scottish Colourist

    Lydia Figes

  • Gustave Courbet's realism: knowledge made visible

    Adam Wattam

  • The paintings and passion of Dora Carrington

    Jessica Boyall

  • Sexist Crabs Performance, Portland Bill Sculpture Park
    Neo Naturists at Towner: Christine and Jennifer Binnie curate an exhibition

    Philomena Epps

  • 'Muse' by Ruth Millington
    Eight muses who inspired art history's masterpieces

    Ruth Millington

  • Euan Uglow's 'Curled Nude on a Stool'

    Tom Robinson

  • Strike a pose: a brief history of posture in art

    Avesta-Saule Zardasht

  • The shock of the nude: celebrating the 'fleshiness' of William Etty

    Sarah Turner

  • By Patricia Rubin, published by Yale University Press
    Bum notes: the cheeky side of Renaissance art

    Patricia Rubin

  • Women drawing nudes: a history of forbidden bodies

    Eliza Goodpasture

  • Lucian Freud: a short introduction

    Rebecca Nicholl

  • Sitting for Lucian Freud

    Sue Tilley

  • A surprise behind the canvas

    Hazel Buchan Cameron

  • Fanny Eaton: Jamaican Pre-Raphaelite muse

    Lydia Figes

  • Painting practice: the preparatory drawings of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood

    Robert Wilkes

  • Henry Scott Tuke: capturing light and the homoerotic gaze

    Flora Doble

  • What is life drawing? A history of drawing the nude

    Dominic Blake

  • First class: overlooked women artists of the Slade School of Fine Art

    Helen Downes

  • Roger Hilton's energetic dance between abstraction and figuration

    Louise Jacquier

  • Linder and the subversive art of photomontage

    Lexington Davis

  • Why are hands so difficult to draw? Using the failures of AI to understand

    Alice Read

  • Luca Giordano: fame and fortune in Baroque Europe

    Jonathan Hajdamach

  • Who was Laure? Manet's model and black women in nineteenth-century Paris

    Zaria Ware

  • Stanley Cursiter: models, muses and Edinburgh interiors

    Janette Ayachi

  • The Queen of Time
    The Queen of Time at Selfridges to exhausted washerwoman: the women who inspired early twentieth-century art

    Lucy Merello Peterson

  • Write on Art: 'Self Portrait aka The Model' by Laura Knight

    Tavishi Gupta

  • The naked muse: to see or be seen?

    Kelley Swain

  • The importance of being Fanny: embracing a relatable Pre-Raphaelite muse

    Kirsty Stonell Walker

  • Portrait photograph of French sculptor Auguste Rodin (1840–1917) at Meudon
    Breathing life into clay: Rodin and modern sculpture

    Julia Carver

  • 'Abiku (Born to Die)' by Rotimi Fani-Kayode: displacement, belonging and the Black male body

    Ian Sergeant

  • Why are artists infatuated with red hair?

    Rachael Gibson

  • Bottoms up! Top bums on Art UK

    Jack Shoulder and Mark Small

  • Study for 'Branded'
    Women painting women

    Venetia Berry

  • Walter Richard Sickert's 'Reclining Nude (Le lit de cuivre)' at the Royal Albert Memorial Museum, Exeter

    Andrew Graham-Dixon

  • Scandalous nudes: what's all the fuss about?

    Andrew Shore

  • Untitled
    Ernst Ludwig Kirchner and Die Brücke: diagnosing modernity and dystopian idylls

    Alice Theobald

  • John Gibson and Penry Williams: queer Welsh artists in Rome

    Norena Shopland

  • Nude women bathing: Susanna, Bathsheba and the troubling male gaze

    Jonathan Hajdamach

  • Vandalised 'Rokeby Venus', 1914
    Fighting for representation: suffragettes and art vandalism

    Victoria Ibbett

  • Bohemians revisited: deconstructing the myth of the muse

    Alicia Foster

  • 1928, pencil on paper by Dorothy Hepworth (1898–1978)
    Patricia Preece and Dorothy Hepworth: love, art and deception

    Jade King


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® is a registered trade mark of the Public Catalogue Foundation.
Art UK is the operating name of the Public Catalogue Foundation, a charity registered in England and Wales (1096185) and Scotland (SC048601).