Sex and Americans . . .

When did we become so prudish? Was it the Puritans? Does it have a religious base? When I was in Paris recently, I had the privilege of touring the Louvre and the Musee D’Orsy and was reminded of the beauty of the human body and how artists used to celebrate it in sculpture and in painting in all its nakedness. It wasn’t considered shocking or something to cover up. Not to mention none of those models were skinny little things, they are all voluptuous, even the men are well built without being six-packed.

It just struck me as kind of odd that in the “old days” the human body was something glorified and now we go into a full twitter when too much skin is shown and it is suddenly all about sex. What if it weren’t about sex at all, but about form, shape, movement, and experience?

It it weren’t taboo in the country, it wouldn’t be shocking! MG

Mask group (2)

GET MORE OF MELISSA, ON THE PODCAST!

Subscribe to the podcast, Design Business Freedomâ„¢, and get the best in smart systems, proven processes, and the right strategies and resources to take your design practice to the next level.

1577_1686642088cjxinterior-design-marketing-luxury_1 1

Marketing Luxury Design: Attracting Affluent Clients

The Design Trade’s One-of-a-Kind Guide to Working with the Best

121 21212

The Language of Success

Your One-Of-A-Kind Guide To Greater Confidence and More Success