Ist michelangelo gay
What Happened When a Homosexual Communist Wrote to Stalin
Published: May 5, written by Stefan Guzvica, PhD History, MA Comparative History
During his lifetime, the Soviet autocrat Joseph Stalin received many unusual letters: this rehearse of writing directly to their leader had its roots in Tsarism, and it continued after the Russian Revolution. It was not even uncommon to receive letters from eccentrics abroad. In , for instance, an anonymous Egyptian wrote to Stalin asking if the Soviet Union had any interest in the development of his design for “death rays.” Nonetheless, the letter he received in the spring of must have stood out as questioning the stance of homosexuality in the Soviet Union. Wasting no time, the writer opened with a bombastic question, “can a lgbtq+ be considered someone worthy of membership in the Communist Party?” The author of the letter, Harry Whyte, was protesting a decree, passed just a month earlier, which proscribed criminal liability for lgbtq+ acts.
Harry Whyte was a working-class gay man from Edinburgh, Scotland. Born in , he left college at the age of sixteen to pursue a career in journalism, a rather unusual choice for young people of his o
Michelangelo: The love poet
Last Sunday was the annual Gay Pride Parade here in West Hollywood, the city with the top percentage of openly lesbian citizens in the society. And in the midst of all the continued controversy over gay marriage, as well as this recent brouhaha over including historical figures' sexual preferences in school textbooks, I thought I'd pay a little tongue-in-cheek tribute to the cause by listing who I think might just be the nine gayest men through the ages.
- Plato. Sexuality in ancient Greece was a lot more fluid than it is today; it was not seen as a taboo for an Athenian gentleman to cavort publicly with teenage boys. So while it's a toss-up between choosing between Socrates and Plato as the "gayest" man from this era, I'll go with Plato. Many of his writings are based on his theories of queer love, and even to this day, for a man to love a woman platonically means that he has no sexual interest in her.
- Hadrian. Ancient Rome also had more tolerance for same-sex attraction than later societies, but while the sexual preferences of most Roman emperors remain matters of argue (the general belief was that most were, in modern parlance, straight - with a boy on the
Was Michelangelo Gay? Let’s Inspect the Evidence
Published: Feb 15, written by Rosie Lesso, MA Contemporary Art Theory, BA Fine Art
The wonderful and monumental Michelangelo, master of the High Renaissance, produced some of the most famous and memorable artworks of all moment. From his colossal statue of David to the incredible Sistine Chapel ceiling, his artwork is a testament to the scope and ambition of human achievement. A deep sympathetic of the human body was at the core of Michelangelo’s art, and almost all his paintings featured, or were based on the male body. This has led many to speculate about his sexuality. Can we expose any truths that propose Michelangelo was gay, or is this one of those mysterious questions that will never be answered? Let’s have a glance at the evidence and see…
Some Say Michelangelo Was Gay Because His Art Was So Focused on the Nude Male Body
Although Michelangelo painted a gigantic variety of figures throughout his incredibly prolific career, his most notable and ambitious works of art are undoubtedly dominated by the male form, which has led many to speculate about whether or not this is evidence he was gay. His David, for example, is considere
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