Henry Scott Tuke  

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'''Henry Scott Tuke, [[RA]]''' ([[12 June]] [[1858]]–[[13 March]] [[1929]]), a [[British painter]] and photographer, is best remembered for his [[Homoeroticism|homoerotic]] paintings of [[naked boy]]s and young men, which have earned him a status as a pioneer of [[gay|gay male]] culture. His nude adolescent boys were depicted doing [[everyday]] activities; his images were not [[overt]]ly [[erotic]], nor did they usually [[frontal nudity|show their genitals]]. '''Henry Scott Tuke, [[RA]]''' ([[12 June]] [[1858]]–[[13 March]] [[1929]]), a [[British painter]] and photographer, is best remembered for his [[Homoeroticism|homoerotic]] paintings of [[naked boy]]s and young men, which have earned him a status as a pioneer of [[gay|gay male]] culture. His nude adolescent boys were depicted doing [[everyday]] activities; his images were not [[overt]]ly [[erotic]], nor did they usually [[frontal nudity|show their genitals]].
-During the [[1880s]] Tuke also met [[Oscar Wilde]] and other prominent poets and writers, most of them [[homosexual]] (then usually called [[Uranian]]) who celebrated the adolescent male. He wrote a "sonnet to youth" which was published anonymously in ''[[The Artist]]'', and also contributed an essay to ''[[The Studio]]''.+During the [[1880s]] Tuke frequented [[Oscar Wilde]] and other prominent poets and writers, most of them [[homosexual]] (then usually called [[Uranian]]) who celebrated the adolescent male. He wrote a "sonnet to youth" which was published anonymously in ''[[The Artist]]'', and also contributed an essay to ''[[Studio Magazine|The Studio]]''.
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Henry Scott Tuke, RA (12 June 185813 March 1929), a British painter and photographer, is best remembered for his homoerotic paintings of naked boys and young men, which have earned him a status as a pioneer of gay male culture. His nude adolescent boys were depicted doing everyday activities; his images were not overtly erotic, nor did they usually show their genitals.

During the 1880s Tuke frequented Oscar Wilde and other prominent poets and writers, most of them homosexual (then usually called Uranian) who celebrated the adolescent male. He wrote a "sonnet to youth" which was published anonymously in The Artist, and also contributed an essay to The Studio.



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