Though male physique photography pioneer Bob Mizer set out to define masculinity in post-war America, his idea of the perfect male body was a somewhat different one from that of previous centuries. There were similarities, of course, but Mizer’s works – and those works of more recent artists – showed but a snapshot of what society deemed the ideal male form.
Mizer’s earlier models embodied the physical perfection of men throughout antiquity. According to a series of articles published by the BBC, ancient Romans and Egyptians highly valued youth and facial symmetry. Statues from the Greco-Roman world, from Apollo to Alexander the Great show men possessing low percentages of body fat, as well as lean to lightly muscular bodies. The overmuscled bodies with protruding veins of today’s bodybuilders would have looked quite out of place in ancient Greece or ancient Rome, according to the articles.
Art in the Dark Ages and the Middle Ages touted virtue and moral cleanliness, with little attention paid to the subject’s body.
The Renaissance period saw a harkening back to the more traditional standards of male beauty portrayed in the ancient world. Michelangelo’s David is perhaps the most well-known depiction of the ideal male body in all of Western civilization.
“Humankind in general was becoming more enlightened, and so we began to see this marvel of man as being the pinnacle of the wonders of nature and creation,” Foote notes. “Artists were easily able to find young males to model for them, because any artist worth his salt in the Renaissance had an apprentice.”
Throughout the course of the next 300 years, from the 1600s to the early 19th century, nudity and the depiction of the nude male body were viewed as backward and savage, with an emphasis on clothes and fashion becoming more prominent among Western males. Colorful, elaborate outfits (and wigs) were the order of the day for the rich elite, with the male body nothing more than a vehicle through which to showcase the wealth that one wore literally on his shoulders.