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Artworks

Bruce Weber, Blake, Palm Beach, Florida, 1987.

Bruce Weber American, b. 29/3/1946

Blake, Palm Beach, Florida, 1987.
Gelatin Silver Print.
.
11 x 14 in / 27 x 35 cm
Edition of 15
.
50.8 x 61 cm / 20 x 24 in
Edition of 5
.
Hand-signed by artist, titled, numbered and dated on print verso.
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Blake, Palm Beach, Florida, 1987 In the late afternoon light of Palm Beach, Bruce Weber captured something both elemental and impossibly refined. Blake, photographed for Calvin Klein's Obsession campaign, sits...
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Blake, Palm Beach, Florida, 1987


In the late afternoon light of Palm Beach, Bruce Weber captured something both elemental and impossibly refined. Blake, photographed for Calvin Klein's Obsession campaign, sits alone with head bowed, a towel pressed against his face, his muscular frame folded into itself between the water's edge and something internal, unknowable.


Weber's genius resided in transforming commercial photography into intimate revelation. By 1987, he had revolutionized how masculinity appeared in public spaces, beginning with his 1982 Times Square billboard of pole vaulter Tom Hintnaus. But this photograph operates differently. Where that image declared, this one whispers. The towel obscuring Blake's face creates privacy within the frame itself, a moment stolen rather than staged.


The monochromatic palette strips away distraction, leaving only form, light, and texture. Blake's wet skin catches light differently than the roughened towel or the worn bucket beside him. His slicked-back hair creates architectural lines against the smooth geometry of his shoulders and spine. This is a body at rest yet on display, vulnerable yet powerful, sensual without performance. Weber understood that desire lives in contradictions, in the space between viewer and viewed, in what is revealed and what remains concealed.


Palm Beach provided the perfect stage for Weber's mythology of American masculinity—sun-drenched, nostalgic, tinged with old Hollywood glamour. Yet Blake appears almost ascetic, stripped to essentials: water, skin, the simple act of drying oneself. Weber's refusal to anchor the scene transforms it into archetype. This man could exist anywhere, caught in that universal gesture of temporary retreat.


What makes Weber's work culturally significant is how it opened spaces for looking that had previously existed only in coded subcultures.


These were images of men as objects of desire—frankly, unapologetically beautiful. Weber created photographs existing in liminal space between heteronormative aspiration and homoerotic appreciation, allowing multiple gazes to coexist. Blake becomes whoever the viewer needs: an ideal, a fantasy, a reflection, a longing.

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