Monday, April 20, 2026

Quaintance


George Quaintance (1902–1957) sits in that same mid-century orbit as Paul Cadmus, Jared French, and George Platt Lynes—even if their circles didn’t fully overlap. What they did share was a fascination with the male body and the blurred line between fine art and physique culture from the 1930s through the 1950s. 


1. Jim Glasper - George Quaintance



2. George Quaintance aka Quaintana (would love a better quality version if out there)



3. Ken Irby - George Quaintance


Quaintance came up through illustration, dance, and commercial work before landing in that sweet spot of bodybuilding magazines and homoerotic fantasy painting. Two parallel worlds, really—Cadmus/French/Lynes on one side, Quaintance and the physique publishing scene on the other—circling the same subject with different lenses.


4. Kanaka Fisherman - George Quaintance


One interesting wrinkle: the photography often attributed to Quaintance may not have been shot by him at all. His partner, Victor Garcia, is widely believed to have taken many of those images as reference material for the paintings. And honestly, that kind of authorship blur isn’t unusual in this space—credit also gets fuzzy with figures like Kovert or even the PaJaMa collective. 


5. Submit Depths - George Quaintance


6. Bob Spahn - George Quaintance


What matters is that the images exist as part of a larger creative engine. Quaintance also connects to the next wave through Bob Mizer and the early days of the Grecian Guild, so you start to see how these networks overlap, even if the aesthetics don’t always match.


7. The Falconer - George Quaintance


And Quaintance absolutely had a look. His men are polished, glossy, hyper-defined—equal parts cowboy, sailor, bodybuilder, and Greek statue. There’s a theatricality to it: the eye lines, the posing, the subtle (and not-so-subtle) pull toward the pelvis. It’s fantasy, clearly coded, and very intentional. 


8. Bill Bredlau - George Quaintance (thank you, Jerry;)



9. Sunset - George Quaintance

He did depict a range of ethnicities, though through a very specific, idealized lens—and by today’s standards, some of that veers into stereotype, especially in his treatment of Native American figures. Still, his visual language is unmistakable. If Cadmus gives you tension and satire, Quaintance gives you desire, dialed all the way up and lit for the camera—even when it’s a painting.


10. Sunrise - George Quaintance


Thoughts?

Anyone have any better shots of Quaintance himself?  The only other one I could find was the one I shared in my April 14 post, but there has to be more out there.  Would also love to collect more stories about him if you have any to share.  He's another giant in our history.


6 comments:

  1. Glad to see you mention Victor Garcia's photography. A lot of bloggers have overlooked that, including me in my early years of posting. Mr. Quaintance's style of painting doesn't appeal to many modern eyes, but it was groundbreaking, and I'm happy to see you feature it here.

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    1. Thanks, Jerry. Great to know. Enjoying the learning as I go. bns

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  2. You are stepping up the game here, and I for one am enjoying it. A nude is a nude, but I love the history that goes along with it. The story, the model, the inspiration that created it.

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    1. Awe! So sweet! Thank you, Pat! Your encouragement is felt. I appreciate you. bns

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  3. I support Pat's comment as well! And I appreciate that you have moved the photo credits to below the photo. Thankyou! You are a great addition to the "blog" photo culture!!

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    1. Nice to hear that. Thank you for the feedback. Finding my beat here so all tips and ideas are appreciated.

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