Friday, September 29, 2017

The Art of Guglielmo Plüschow


Notes Alistair Crawford in the Encyclopedia of Nineteenth Century Photographers:

Wilhelm Plüschow (1852-1930) was born in Mecklenburg, Germany in 1852. By the 1870s he had a photographic studio in Naples trading in studio portraits and occasional journalism. He was a first cousin to Baron Wilhelm von Gloeden whom he assisted in turning his interest in photography into a business in Taormina, Sicily in 1888. By now both were photographing the male nude.

Influenced by Gloeden's style, by the time Plüschow moved to Rome as 'Guglielmo Plüschow,' he was producing male and female nudes which gained a reputation throughout Europe and America for overt homoerotica.

Much praised by author John Addington Symonds who lived in Rome, Plüschow, along with his Sicilian assistant, Vicenzo Galdi [left] (1856-1931), often avoided the more romantic trappings of Gloeden's classical props, in favor of realism, with an emphasis on the sexual promise of male peasant youth.

Forerunners of Pier Paolo Pasolini (1922-1975) and his love of ragazzi, Plüschow and Galdi's overt depictions of potent male sexuality, many said pornography, landed both of them in trouble and Plüschow was forced to return to Berlin and obscurity in 1910.

Even now, while Gloeden can still be read as the poetic homoerotic dream, Plüschow, with his once only photographed models in highly suggestive poses, still challenges and he rarely enters the directories. However, he can be regarded as a pioneer of contemporary gay culture, perhaps in time more relevant than Gloeden.

– Alistair Crawford












See also: The Art of Vilela Valentin | Dante Cirquero | Nebojsa Zdravkovic | Brenden Sanborn | Wilhelm von Gloeden | Richard Haines | John MacConnell | Leo Rydell Jost | Jim Ferringer | Juliusz Lewandowski | Felix d'Eon | Herbert List | Joe Ziolkowski

Related Off-site Links:
The Arcadian Shepherds: Vincenzo Galdi, Wilhelm (Guglielmo) (von) Plüschow, and Wilhelm von GloedenPhotography Now (2017).
Guglielmo Plüschow – Matt and Andrej Koymasky (The Living Room, February 23, 2012).

Saturday, September 23, 2017

Autumn Hare


Image: Michelle Bennett Oates.

See also the previous posts: Autumn Hare (2008) | Autumn Hare (2013) | Autumn Hare II (2013) | Autumn Hare (2014) | Song in Autumn | Autumn Beauty | Welcoming the Autumn Equinox | Autumn Hare (2016)

Related Off-site Link: A Time of TransformationThe Wild Reed (September 22, 2017).

Monday, August 28, 2017

Bel Homme


Image: Subject and photographer unknown.

Friday, August 25, 2017

Reflection


Image: Photographer unknown.

Thursday, July 20, 2017

Morning Light


Image: Subject and photographer unknown.

Monday, July 10, 2017

(Potential) Troublemaker


The following article by Danielle Grindlay is about hares in Australia. It was first published by ABC News on June 1, 2014.

________________________________


If farmers compiled a list of pests wreaking havoc at their place, it’s unlikely hares would even get a look in.

But could Australia be faced with plagues in the future?

Adelaide University’s Dr Philip Stott has been researching hares for the past 20 years and readily admits he can’t answer that question.

"I don’t know what keeps the lid on the hare population, they breed well enough. It could be fox predation, for example, and if we manage to eradicate foxes, we could end up with massive hare plagues on our hands once again."

Dr Stott says he is the only person in Australia trying to understand the species’ population growth. Much of his research has focussed on three high-density areas, in western Victoria and eastern South Australia.

"They were first introduced [successfully] to 10 places in Australia. "On the western tablelands of New South Wales in the 1890s and also in north east Victoria, from about 1915 to about 1940, there were plagues of hares. Most of the population’s just forgotten about them."

Dr Stott says adult females, called 'Jills', have the capacity to produce nine young every year and eat four times that of rabbits. He also discovered hares are carriers of sheep worms, which establish inside them and lay eggs.

"A farm isn’t quarantined as far as sheep worms are concerned," he says. "You can have a wind-break, for example, with fences three metres apart and you might think the worms can’t get across that barrier. But they can, they are getting across that barrier."

Hares are officially regarded as a minor pest and therefore Dr Stott says, research funding is hard to come by. But he predicts, should the lid be taken off Australia’s population, it will only take a couple of years before farmers are faced with plague numbers.

"You won’t know in advance, you’ll just suddenly see there’s all these hares around the place. I see them as a species that’s out there and that has the potential to cause a lot more trouble down the track."


Image: Richard Taylor/Flickr.

Saturday, July 1, 2017

Wednesday, June 28, 2017

Thursday, June 22, 2017

Colin












Related Off-site Links and Updates:
Colin Kaepernick Is a Real American – Tim Keown (The Undefeated, 2017).
ESPN The Magazine's Body Issue Shows Jocks in the Buff – Jim Buzinski (OutSports, July 9, 2013).
Colin Kaepernick: I Won't Stand "to Show Pride In a Flag for a Country That Oppresses Black People" – Charles Curtis (USA Today, August 27, 2016).
Colin Kaepernick Finds His Voice – Michael Powell (The New York Times, September 13, 2016).
Kneeling Kaepernick Becomes National Symbol – Matt Barrows (The Sacramento Bee, September 22, 2016).
Something to Think AboutThe Wild Reed (September 23, 2016).
Shaun King on Colin Kaepernick: He Is Enormously Courageous and Has Sparked a Movement Among AthletesDemocracy Now!, October 21, 2016).
Colin Kaepernick Has Not Stopped Fighting Injustice Just Because He’s Stopped Kneeling – David Zirin (The Nation, March 6, 2017).
Colin Kaepernick Is Being Blackballed by Billionaire NFL Owners. Here’s Why – Colin Jenkins (TruthDig, June 14, 2017).
Kaepernick Compares Modern Cops to Runaway Slave Patrol After Castile Verdict – John Breech (CBSSports.com, June 18, 2017).
The NFL Can’t Handle the Political Radicalism of Colin Kaepernick – Eric Draitser (Mint Press, June 23, 2017).
The NFL’s Race Problem Is Deeper Than Colin Kaepernick – W.B. Whitted (The Root, June 26, 2017).
How Much Do Black Folks Owe Colin Kaepernick? – Stephen A. Crockett Jr. (The Root, July 5, 2017).
Cleveland Browns Players, Kneeling In Prayer, Stage NFL's Largest Anthem Protest to Date – Tom Withers (National Post, August 21, 2017).
First White NFL Player Kneels During National Anthem: "I Want to Do My Part" – Brian Flood (The San Francisco Chronicle, August 22, 2017).
In New York City, More than a Thousand People Rally to Support Colin KaepernickDemocracy Now!, August 24, 2017).
Kaepernick, Activism and Politics. The NFL Doesn't Know How to Stop This Row – Les Carpenter (The Guardian, August 23, 2017).
Progressive Perspectives on Colin Kaepernick and the "Take A Knee" MovementThe Wild Reed) September 27, 2017).
Colin Kaepernick Is Named Citizen of the Year by GQ Magazine – Chuck Schilken (Los Angeles Times, November 13, 2017).
Colin Kaepernick is Recipient of 2017 Sports Illustrated Muhammad Ali Legacy Award – Michael Rosenberg (Sports Illustrated, November 30, 2017).

See also the previous posts: Luis | Nyle | Philip | Charlie | Sukdeep | Rafael | Mon Bel Ami