Mizer starts to gesture, then stops—no use from this angle.
“Turn your hips left… flatten your back to the camera… now look over your right shoulder.”
Wally shifts—just enough—and the light breaks across him, everything suddenly clear...perfect.
Mizer stills behind the lens, breath catching, a tear forming in his eye--David freed from the marble.
1. Walter Fife aka Bob Brown (gobo background)
Today’s theme was inspired by my friend Jerry at VintageMuscleMen and a recent post of Alvin Soco by George Dureau—a stunning study of the male back. It got me thinking about why this angle holds so much power. Without a face, there’s nothing to read, nothing to charm us. No chest, no front-facing cues. Just form.
2. Jack Harris (profile)
3. Jack Harte (in nature)
And that’s the point. The back becomes pure sculpture—the taper of the waist into the sweep of the lats, the shoulders widening out, the head resting on top like a final, quiet shape. Physique photographers knew this well, often cropping the image to focus only on those lines and volumes.
4. Don Fuller (window)
5. Bill Melby (on the beach)
6. Bob McCune (gun show)
In the posing-strap era, this was also one of the few angles where nothing had to be hidden—technically nude, but still passing as form, not obscenity. It’s less about identity and more about structure, balance, proportion—light and shadow doing all the work.
7. Bruno (hairy bunz)
8. Davlin (curved seat)
There’s something else too. The back carries both strength and vulnerability. It’s where we bear weight, where labor shows, but also the place we can’t see or defend. I like these images for that reason—and for their simplicity. The way the light falls, the way the eye moves across the surface. And maybe because it feels safer to look…to take it in without being seen.
9. Ed Ninakos (tiled roof)
10. Harvey Catrell (in the pool)
Thoughts?
Thanks again, Jerry, for the inspiration;). If you have a better version of the Melby image #10, please send my way.








I do have a couple images of Bill Melby.... where do I send them?
ReplyDeleteHey, Boz. That would be great. Please send to bushnstache@gmail.com. Much appreciated!
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