When painting the nude figure in the studio I tell the model to twist and turn as she pleases. In the fleeting second that the she moves from one position to the next I see a position that would otherwise have eluded me. But even even with that freedom, the pose is to some extent concocted. The studio isn't the real work-a-day world. It's better that the model is doing something, and better still, if she has to contort her body in doing it. Those "ungainly'' positions are what Degas was after. But other than when bathing they seldom reveal the nude.
By chance, an opportunity presented itself some years ago when my wife took a break from painting the studio balcony rail to model. The offer was unexpected and I needed ten minutes to prepare my materials. In the meantime Denise, with her working clothes cast aside in readiness for modelling, returned to painting. By the time I was ready she was upside down painting the underside of the rail. What was to have been a session, like any other, painting the reclining nude in the studio became an inspirational session painting and sketching the unabashed nude working in the sunshine.
The rail benefitted from a coat of paint. Denise benefitted from accomplishing two tasks in one, and I benefitted from some rare insights into depicting the nude figure.


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