GEORGE PITTS 2026We’re taking a little trip through the photography of
George Pitts (1951–2017), an American photographer, editor and teacher widely recognized for the huge influence he had on
editorial and contemporary photography.
About 11 years ago I already invited you to check out his Tumblr, but between one thing and another, a lot of images were left sitting in the drawer. So today felt like the perfect excuse to recover part of that material and also revisit his
photographic career, his style, and that very particular way he had of capturing bodies, scenes and moments with a mix of eroticism, naturalness and aesthetics that’s incredibly hard to imitate.
# View photographs
You can already smell summer in the air.
TIK HOT VOL338We live in a strange time. Never before has there been so much body exposure, so much public sensuality, and so much constant
sexualization across social media, advertising, streams, music videos, and the internet in general… yet at the same time it feels like the burden of sexual desire falls entirely on us, as if wanting someone were something you almost need to apologize for.
And that’s, at the very least, pretty
contradictory.
Because all you have to do is open
Instagram,
TikTok, or any platform and you’ll instantly find thousands of profiles where aesthetics, teasing, and eroticism are clearly part of the content. Impossible cleavage, see-through outfits, suggestive dancing, perfectly calculated poses, leggings painted onto the skin, and cameras positioned so strategically it’s like coincidence itself became a creative director.
And look, there’s nothing wrong with that. Quite the opposite. Everyone is free to present themselves however they want, play with their sensuality, and use physical attraction as a social, artistic, or even economic tool. The problem appears when
male desire suddenly starts being treated like some kind of system error.
Because we’re constantly being sold this weird idea: women can sexualize their image, monetize it, exploit it, perfect it, and use it to attract attention… but we’re supposed to pretend none of that produces any effect. As if male attraction should exist silently, discreetly, almost apologizing for functioning exactly the same way it has for thousands of years. And no,
reality doesn’t work like that.
Sexuality has always been a kind of dance between supply and demand. A constant interaction between the person who wants to look and the person who enjoys being looked at. Between the one provoking and the one responding to that provocation. Pretending one side doesn’t exist while the other constantly puts itself on display is, at the very least, pretty hypocritical.
Of course, there’s a huge difference between attraction and losing control, disrespecting people, or turning desire into obsession. That’s obviously the line separating a normal person from an idiot. But feeling attraction, getting distracted, looking, or reacting to stimuli specifically designed to grab attention really shouldn’t surprise anyone.
Because in the end,
internet works exactly like any other market in the world: if there were no demand, the supply would disappear on its own.
We generate the
demand… and they simply respond to it with
supply.
# Watch videos

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Fucking cat!