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Thursday, October 9, 2025

Poem of the Day - Part 76

I'm a Little Teapot

I'm a Little Teapot was a song written by George Sanders and Clarence Kelley in 1939.  Kelley ran a dance school for children, and I'm a Little Teapot provided a routine of minimal difficulty for the younger children.  The song was recorded and played on the radio, and it became a hit.  In 1941 Newsweek called it "the next inane novelty song to sweep the country."

My interpretation of the lyrics is for a slightly older generation.

I'm a little teapot short and stout.

Note: I got this photo from Vellohomo (gracias, Franco) as a black-and-white photo, which I colorized.

Here is my handle

And here is my spout.

Wednesday, October 8, 2025

Artists - Part 79

 Gonzalo Orquín

Gonzalo Orquín is a Spanish realist painter.  Born in Seville, Spain in 1982, he studied Fine Arts at the University of Seville, then transferred to the University of Perugia in Italy in 2005.  He has lived and worked in Italy ever since.

Orquín is fond of painting naked males, and he is unashamed to be seen naked himself.  Above, Orquín poses with his painting Model at the Horse.

Here's a rear view of Orquín.

Let's look at some of his work.  Above, Icaro, 2005 recalls the legend of Icarus, the boy who could fly but flew too close to the sun.

Nu a la fenetre, 2009.  The French title means Naked at the Window.

Another French title: Apres l'amour, apres Fabbri (After Love, After Fabbri), 2011.  Fabbri is an Italian company that sells gourmet foods like chocolate covered cherries.

Grande Inferno Romano (Great Roman Hell), 2011.

Orquín is a photographer as well as an artist.  In 2013 he was about to open an exhibit of photos of same-sex couples kissing in beautiful Baroque Italian churches.  One of the photos is above.  Then the gallery received a letter directly from the Vatican threatening legal action, saying the Church was against the exhibit because it showed "expressions of affection that do not belong in a place of worship."

The gallery cancelled the exhibit.

In 2014, Orquín and another artist painted this street art in Rome called La Cappella Porcina (The Pigs' Chapel), perhaps expressing his opinion of the Church.

Back to realistic portraits: this is Il Ragazzo dei Cardellini (The Goldfinch Boy), 2021.

We end with Jaceck, 2022, a portrait so realistic, I thought it was a photograph.  But it's not a photo, it's a painting measuring 80 x 60 cm (30 x 24 inches).

Tuesday, October 7, 2025

Beach Bums - Part 73

Kings Beach, NSW Australia

Kings Beach is a small sandy beach near Byron Bay, south of Brisbane, Australia.

Looking toward the other end of the beach.  Some friends gathered for a game of beach volleyball.

Kings Beach has been used as a nude beach since the 1930s.  By the 1970s it was often used by gay men, because it was a secluded and safe place at a time when homosexuality was a crime in New South Wales.  It has now become a notable gay naturist destination.

Although it's not an official clothing-optional beach, local police did not bother it, and by the 1980s they even encouraged naturists to use it instead of other Byron Bay beaches.

There was one official clothing-optional beach in the area, Tyagarah Beach, but in 2024 the National Parks and Wildlife Service revoked its clothing-optional status, making Kings Beach the only remaining nude beach around.  Above, a "nude not lewd" rally at Tyagarah Beach to protest closing it as a nude beach.

Kings Beach is still used as a nude beach, especially by the gay community.

Whether for sunbathing, swimming, surfing, or boogie-boarding (above).

A massage on the beach.

We end with a Kings Beach photo for Big Dude, who likes penis shadows.  This is Tariq Sims, professional Australian rugby player.  What the hat conceals, the shadow reveals.

Monday, October 6, 2025

Gods, Myths and Heroes - Part 70b

Odysseus/Ulysses, part 2

We continue the story of Odysseus from Homer's epic poem The Odyssey.

After Odysseus has been living with the nymph Calypso for seven years, the gods intervene and let Odysseus build a raft to sail away.  However, the sea god Poseidon still has a grudge against Odysseus, because the Cyclops, whom Odysseus had blinded in order to escape, was Poseidon's son.  Poseidon destroys Odysseus' raft with a storm.

Above, Neptune (the Roman name for Poseidon) by Giambologna c. 1565.

Odysseus swims ashore to the land of the Phaeacians.  Above, detail from Ulysses Among the Phaeacians by Jean Broc, 1771-1850.

Odysseus meets Nausicaa, queen of the Phaeacians, and he tells her the whole story of his adventures.  Above, detail from Odysseus vor Nausicaa (Odysseus before Nausicaa) by Pieter Lastman, 1619.

After hearing his story, the Phaeacians take Odysseus back to his home kingdom, Ithaca.

In Ithaca, Odysseus is reunited with his son Telemachus.  Above, Odysseus and Telemachus by Bill Littlefield, 1939.  It looks a bit more friendly to me than a typical father-son reunion.

Aided by Athena, Odysseus disguises himself as a beggar.  Only his faithful dog Argos recognizes him.  Odysseus had been gone for twenty years – ten years fighting in the Trojan War, and ten years sailing home.  The ancient dog, joyful to see his master after waiting so long, wags his tail and then dies.  Argos has become a symbol of faithfulness, in contrast to what was going on at the royal court.

Another beggar, Irus, picks a fight with Odysseus, and Odysseus knocks him out with one blow.  Above: The Fight Between Ulysses and Irus by Jan Muller, 1589.

Meanwhile, at the royal court, suitors had been pestering Odysseus' wife Penelope to remarry, assuming that Odysseus was dead.  Penelope announces that she will marry the winner of an archery contest with Odysseus's bow.  None of the suitors can even string the bow (which requires strength).  Odysseus, still in disguise, strings the bow, wins the contest, and then kills the suitors.  He and Penelope are then reunited.

Above, Ulysse et Télémaque massacrent les prétendants de Pénélope (Ulysses and Telemachus massacre the suitors of Penelope) by Joseph-Ferdinand Lencrenon, 1812.

The next day, Odysseus reveals himself to his father, Laertes.  Laertes had been king of Ithaca, but had abdicated in favor of his son Odysseus when Odysseus came of age.  Odysseus reuniting with Laertes marks the end of this complicated story.

Above, Odysseus with Laertes on a fragment of a Roman sarcophagus, c. 150 AD.

Sunday, October 5, 2025

Gods, Myths, and Heroes - Part 70a

Odysseus/Ulysses, part 1

Odysseus was one of the heroes of Greek myth.  In Homer's epic poems, The Iliad is the story of the Trojan War, and The Odyssey, which we will look at today, is the story of the adventures of Odysseus, king of Ithaca, returning from the Trojan War and trying to get back to his kingdom.  Ulysses is the Roman name for Odysseus – he's the same guy.

Above, a 1932 statue of Odysseus by Czech artist Jakub Obrovsky.

In The Odyssey, Odysseus is aided by some gods and opposed by other gods.  Above, Odysseus is is protected by the goddess Athena, depicted by Hans Scherfig, 1954.

Odysseus' journey in The Odyssey is long, with so many episodes that we're going to take two days to look at them.

After leaving Troy, Odysseus and his men visit the island of the lotus-eaters.  Despite the image of the lotus-eater with flowers, above, the lotus in The Odyssey is not the lotus flower that we know today; it's an intoxicating fruit whose effects are somewhat like pot, making Odysseus' men feel good and forget about going home.  Odysseus has to force the men back onto the ship.

Then they sail to the island of the Cyclops, a one-eyed giant named Polyphemus who captures them.  Above, Odysseus arrives on the island of the Cyclops.

We have seen Odysseus and the Cyclops in a previous post in this series.  For now, we'll just say that Odysseus outwits Polyphemus and escapes.  Above, Ulysses Fleeing the Cave of Polyphemus by Christoffer Wilhelm Eckersberg, 1812.

Then they sail to the island of the sorceress Circe, who transforms Odysseus' men into pigs.  The god Hermes intervenes, helping Odysseus defeat Circe's magic using a magical herb.  Circe is forced to return the men to their human form.  But instead of sailing away, Odysseus becomes Circe's lover, and he and his crew stay on Circe's island for a year.

Above, Hermes (left) shows the herb to Odysseus (right), in a painting by Friedrich Preller the Elder, c. 1835.

Eventually they leave.  They sail past the Sirens, beautiful naked nymphs who sing enticing songs that lure sailors to their deaths.  Having been warned by Circe about the Sirens, Odysseus plugs up the ears of his crew, but he wants to hear the Sirens' songs, so he doesn't plug up his own ears.  He has his men tie him to the mast so he cannot escape, no matter how alluring the Sirens are.

Today, a "siren song" means an appealing and alluring proposal for something that is actually dangerous or destructive.  For example, Russia's proposals for peace in Ukraine have been described as a siren song.

Above, Odysseus and the Sirens by Otto Greiner, c. 1900.

After sailing past the Sirens, Odysseus' men land on the island of Thrinacia, where there are cattle belonging to the sun god Helios.  Circe had warned them not to harm these cattle, but while Odysseus sleeps, his hungry men kill and eat some of the cattle.

Well, it's not a good idea to anger a god.  When they sail away, Helios complains to Zeus, who destroys their ship with a thunderbolt.  All the men die except Odysseus, who is not guilty because he was asleep when the cattle were killed.

Above, a statue of Helios in Vienna.  If this reminds you of the Statue of Liberty, it's because both statues were inspired by descriptions of the Colossus of Rhodes, a statue of Helios that was one of the seven wonders of the ancient world but no longer exists.

Odysseus washes ashore on the island of the nymph Calypso.  He becomes her lover and stays for seven years, supposedly against his will, until the gods intervene again.  Then Calypso lets Odysseus build a raft, and he sails away.

Above, Odysseus and Calypso by Frank Buscher, 1872.

Tomorrow: the completion of the story of Odysseus.

Saturday, October 4, 2025

World Naked Bike Ride - Part 79

Guadalajara 2018

Today we look at the World Naked Bike Ride held in Guadalajara, Mexico on June 16, 2018.

The riders gathered before the ride in a local park.  This guy is wearing bunny ears.

As with other World Naked Bike Rides, not everyone had to be naked, and not everyone had to ride a bike.  This guy accompanied the bike riders on skates.

The words painted on him say "Now you see me."  It reflects one of the main goals of the World Naked Bike Rides: asking drivers to pay attention and drive safely around bike riders even when they're not naked.

This guy is getting a slogan painted on his back.

And here's his slogan: "This exhaust does not contaminate."  It reflects the other main goal of the World Naked Bike Rides: trying to get people to ride bikes instead of driving cars, because it's better for the environment.  Driving a car that burns fossil fuel generates harmful exhaust gases like carbon monoxide, as well as CO2 that contributes to global warming.  While it's debatable that the bike rider's "exhaust" does not contaminate, it is certainly far less in volume that what a car generates.

This guy's painted sign just says "L".  That's because he's part of ...

this group of riders who led the bike ride.  Their chests spell out "¡liberate".  There was another "E" at the end who didn't make it into this photo.

And they were off for another World Naked Bike Ride.

Friday, October 3, 2025

Estonian Photos - Part 35

Estonian Photos

We continue our series of photos from the Tartu Ülikooli museum of anthropology in Estonia.

For those who haven't seen my previous posts in this series, a few words of explanation.  The museum provides no information about the men, other than the photos came from the Institute of Anatomy at the University of Tartu.  In particular, it does not say who these men are, or when or why the photos were taken.  However, the photos are labeled "Füüsilise antropoloogia pildistus" (physical anthropology photography).

Who are these men?  My best guess is that they are military recruits.  The very short haircuts suggest that these photos were taken during or shortly after the enlistment process.

When were the photos taken?  My best guess is between World War I and World War II, when Estonia was an independent country with its own military.  Before WWI, Estonia was part of the Russian Empire, and after WWII, Estonia was part of the Soviet Union until 1991.

A clue to the time frame is that these photographs were made on glass plates, not film.  Dry glass-plate photography started in 1871 and began to fall out of use in the 1920s.  I found some references to it in Estonia through the 1930s.

One other clue to the time frame of these photos is that in a previous batch, one of the men is wearing a wristwatch.   Wristwatches were considered to be for ladies before World War I.  (Men used pocket watches.)  However, during the war, wristwatches proved very useful for soldiers and pilots.  After WWI, wristwatches came into fashion for men.

Although wristwatches were evidently rare in Estonia (only two men wore a wristwatch among the hundreds that were photographed), it suggests that these photos are post-World War I.

Since the use of glass plates fell out of use in the 1920s, I think the photos were most likely taken shortly after World War I.

Although these appear to be military recruits, these are probably not military photos.  We know that the museum that currently has the photos got them from the Institute of Anatomy at the University of Tartu.  If these are military photos, why would they end up at the Institute of Anatomy?

I believe the photos were taken by academics doing a study of physical anthropology.  Scientists at the Institute of Anatomy were trying to measure what they considered racial characteristics of the population by measuring the body, including phrenology (measuring the skull), ideas which are now discredited.

I think that the scientists at the Institute of Anatomy may have persuaded the military to let them take photographs of the naked new recruits for "research" purposes.  I have no written evidence to support this idea, but since the photos were at the Institute of Anatomy, and the photo subjects appear to be military recruits, it's now my best guess as to what happened.

One other question that perennially arises from these photos is: why were the men photographed in pairs?  Was it to save film?  (#321 above is an exception; I don't know what happened to #320.)

The answer is that these photos were made on glass plates, not film, but glass plates were more expensive and involved more labor than film, so yes, it's likely that the men were photographed in pairs to save on glass plates.

So, bottom line: My best guess is that these photos were taken after World War I, the subjects are new or recent Army recruits, and the Estonian military allowed scientists from the Institute of Anatomy to take photos of the naked recruits for a study of physical anthropology.