This article adds to my original A-Z review of Oliver Frey's work
Frey - Tennis Victory |
This image was my first glimpse of Oliver Frey's incredible talent for portraying the energetic wrestling of men gripped by lust. The image of bare buttocks pressed against the net still sends a shiver up my spine! In 1970's Britain, visualising gay sex taking place in front of a audience and in a setting of a place like Wimbledon Tennis Club, the epitome of the Establishment, was defiant indeed.
He also applied his imagery to the equally unlikely sports of Golf and Cricket.
Frey - Bikers in a Dark Alley 1 |
This image of bikers getting hot in a dark alley was closer to reality but it's frankness also struck a blow for gay freedom of expression. It was gay art of a sort never seen before - high quality and spelling out what gay means without pussy-footing innuendo.
Frey - Bikers in a Dark Alley 2 |
Frey revisited the biker subject in many other images of varying degrees of raunchiness which were, astonishingly, published in glossy, top shelf gay magazines without attracting reprisals from the Police, despite the efforts of conservative pressure groups.
Frey - Leather Lube, Biker Oil |
The biker persona was perfect for expressing a boisterous, roughly expressed, bursting out of the closet and entering into forbidden places that reflected the spirit of those heady days when gay men felt that even if they weren't completely free exactly, not really able to realise these fantasies in real life, they nevertheless finally had a legitimacy that would enable them to push open doors that had been closed for all those years.
Frey - Biker Elopement |
Frey's pictures did not just express excitement, there was an exuberant joy in them.
Imagining the trappings of conventionality and self -restraint being ripped apart.
It was an exciting time to be gay.
He also showed a vision of gay love as a beautiful thing,
performed by beautiful people, beautiful men.
Frey (as Zack) - Splash |
His artistic skills here transform the old, tentative, AMG, shower hook-ups into something much more memorable. A loving shared experience of cleansing vitality with fierce, needle-like sprays of water battering and enveloping the two lovers.
Frey - Chains Broken |
Frey's character rogue set the scene for a series of gay, comic book heroes whose masculinity was unquestionable and who were assertive and comfortable in their gay sexuality. Rogue's apparent taste for young virgins seems dubious in retrospect, but at the time reflected the common experience of a youth lost to unrequiteable desire. At that time most gay men of all ages probably were virgins or not long out of it and many no doubt saw themselves as his willing victims, given the chance.
Bill Ward's later creations - Drum and King - were able to be more balanced characters in that respect
Frey - Hard Wrestle |
Frey's depictions of hard, rough sex were about showing the inherent masculinity of gay men,
a reaction against years of being universally labelled as effeminate and soft.
Frey - Devilry |
If homosexuality was the Devil's work, Frey's men boldly embraced that identity
Frey - Mortal Combat |
That vision of gay toughness also pervades his non-gay, fantasy work.
Frey - Tribal 2 |
Oliver Frey 1948 - 2022
A gay hero
This article adds to my original A-Z review of Oliver Frey's work
see also Night Visitor in the 'targeted' series
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