The Nude Model

Nude man sitting

Modeling nude was a way for French Husband to make money. It was as simple as that. Or at least to me it was. How hard could it be, you take off your clothes, people look at you, then you put your clothes back on, collect $200 and go home. An easy way to make money.

French Husband didn't think it was that easy.

 

 

French antique nude men charcoals

 

Shortly, after French Husband arrived in San Francisco to live his "California Dream", he looked forward to calling it his home for a few months. Needing a place stay and money he found an au-pair job (live-in nanny) in Cole Valley in San Francisco. The family: Two doctors living in a restored Victorian with three young children. The two doctors worked endless hours. They desperately needed someone to care, take to school, pick up, fed, and put their children to bed. Oh and they wanted their boys to learn French. For this they gave French Husband a small stipend and a place to live (a small cottage in their backyard). It was exactly what French Husband had hoped for.

 

Nude men for the bathroom 2

 

 

His Au-pair job was ideal, paying for his basic needs and giving him a place to live. Though he had no extra cash. He asked his new found friend (Madame H.'s niece) Francoise, if she knew of anything that he could do for a few hours a week where he did not have to talk too much to make some cash… like washing dishes or something. Francoise was an art student in San Francisco, she told French Husband that her art class was looking for models. French Husband applied and got the job. They sketched his feet, his face and his hands holding a book.

After weeks of hanging out at the I-Beam I agreed to met French Husband at a Burrito joint. He was more handsome than I had imagined. I thought to myself, "The outdoor light has its advantages."

We talked in simple verse:

"How old are you?"

"Me tunty-tree, a you?"

"I am TWEN-TY– seven."

"What are you doing in San Francisco?"

"What? Rahpeet slow-ly peas?"

I pointed to him, "You," then I looked around the burrito joint, "San Francisco, why?" as I lifted up my hands with my palms up.

"I like you."

"Okay. Oh? No- I mean WHAT…are…YOU… DOING in San Francisco?"

"Oleeday. And you?"

Those early days were a lesson in patience. French Husband would say his head felt like it was going to explode with the overload of another language. I knew I had to speak slower, simpler, and memorize what words he knew. Sign language works wonders.

 

NUDE-MALE-STUDY-in-CHARCOAL-BY-SABATINO-ABATE-2

via artist Sabatino Abate

French Husband's English improved. He told me the Art class at the school had asked him if he wanted to model nude. That they would pay him a $100 an hour. All he had to do was stand still with a sheet draped over his shoulder. 

"What should I do?"

"One hundred dollars an hour?"

"Yes."

"Strip."

"What?"

"Do it."

"But what if someting, you know, eh, goes up, poof?" he asked pointing his finger by his pants.

"Oh, don't worry, it won't be the first time any of them saw something go up," I made a funny face, giggled, "it will give them a different angle!" cracking up over my own joke. I knew he didn't understand anything I said.

"Why do you laugh? You tink it not good I do this?"

"No, do it."

"Yes."

"Yes."

And he did and nothing ever went up.

————Note————-

As French Husband modeled at an art school photos were not allowed. Phone cameras and digital weren't around, thank God. He saw some of the drawings: Mostly modern art were you could not tell if he had an eye, or an elbow, or an ear or corn.



Comments

16 responses to “The Nude Model”

  1. Yet again you have started my day with laughter!

  2. I’m sure this was a frustrating time, but I love reading and laughing along as you both struggled to get to know one another. Thanks you for sharing 🙂

  3. Jacqueline

    I looove your story. You should write the book. It would be a bestseller.

  4. Well, I suppose corn is one way to call it… although I am partial to weenises myself.

  5. I thought I knew San Francisco but I had to Google Cole Valley. What a great location that is, next to Haight Ashbury, Castro, Golden Gate Park.
    Good that he modeled before the advent of iPhones. The poor models today for art classes could have their pictures circle the globe before class is over, lol.

  6. The I-Beam? I used to go to the I-Beam in 1978-79. If I remember it was in the Haight, and I thought it was a gay bar. Isn’t it?

  7. I loved this post!(And the series) I am able to see the scene from the models perspective rather than the students. As a graduate of an Art School, I had many life drawing classes. Quite quickly, the subject becomes much like a still life. Concentration was focused in getting the correct contours, lines and shadows. But in my very first life drawing class, we new students were nervous and embarrassed. We focused on hands and feet, afraid to look any further.

  8. I love this post series! It is so interesting and the language stuff is making me laugh out loud. I love the early pix of you and Yann also-you look so cute and so in love in the one of you two looking out the shuttered window. I really want to see one of the drawings from the art class;)

  9. Rebecca from the pacific northwest

    And to this day you wish you had a drawing (realistic though) of your darling husband from back when he talked like that, in Frenglish at best, and was tunty-tree.
    Which may be why you decorate with nudes?
    Poof! Hahahaha. Great story.

  10. Cute! Love your early language, but I can imagine it was frustrating at times.

  11. Wouldn’t it be great if you had some of those drawings of Yann now?

  12. This is such a funny story! The last sentence is really funny!

  13. Chico Sue

    This post is so very amusing! When I was in art school, the male models were required to wear something covering their private parts, but the females were not. It seemed so terribly unfair. I wish I had been in Yann’s class! Hahaha

  14. What a funny story!
    Having taken many life drawing classes, I always thought it must be hard, at least at first, for the models. We had all ages and shapes and sizes — it was wonderful. It is true — they were like moveable still lifes! The only time it was a little odd was when one of the models was an artist herself, and during the breaks, she would walk around, often still nude, critiquing our drawings of her. And then next term, she showed up in a couple of my classes…
    I have to admit that at the time, by boyfriends wound up in my work quite a bit. I was a drawing/photography double major, and still have nude photos of exes somewhere in the basement!

  15. Nice remembrance. Thanks for writing about the beginning of your French journey

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