Temper Tantrums #37 - Clothing Conspiracy

Temper Tantrums (the GBAtemp webcomic) - issue #37 "Clothing Conspiracy"

By GB [prebreak][/prebreak]

< Previous comic | Next comic >

37.jpg


< Previous comic | Next comic >
 

Draxzelex

Well-Known Member
Member
Joined
Aug 6, 2017
Messages
19,019
Trophies
2
Age
29
Location
New York City
XP
13,408
Country
United States
I don't get it
Trying not to get too deep into the meaning, the act of obscuring skin is usually more provocative than not concealing it in a general sense. The theory is that not seeing a naked body allows one to imagine what is underneath which is more attractive than seeing the naked body itself.
 

kuwanger

Well-Known Member
Member
Joined
Jul 26, 2006
Messages
1,510
Trophies
0
XP
1,783
Country
United States
Trying not to get too deep into the meaning, the act of obscuring skin is usually more provocative than not concealing it in a general sense.

Try drawing anatomically correct male animal characters* and get back to me on that. For that matter, one could argue not drawing them anatomically correct is a form of concealing. Then again, most child dolls (Barbie and Ken) aren't formed as anatomically correct.

I'd tend to argue the real truth is more obvious: you accept a person or character as they are from the start if you don't perceive their appearance as intended to be provocative. When they change appearance is when you wonder if their intention is provocative. Hence, there is more room to making characters provocative with clothing. To achieve the same without clothes involves in some fashion changing the art style, and that'll get detractors of a whole other kind.

* Or generally pose them in a fashion that their general lower body is the center of attention...
 
Last edited by kuwanger,

Kioku

猫。子猫です!
Member
Joined
Jun 24, 2007
Messages
12,009
Trophies
3
Location
In the Murderbox!
Website
www.twitch.tv
XP
16,160
Country
United States
Try drawing anatomically correct male animal characters and get back to me on that. For that matter, one could argue not drawing them anatomically correct is a form of concealing. Then again, most child dolls (Barbie and Ken) aren't formed as anatomically correct.

I'd tend to argue the real truth is more obvious: you accept a person or character as they are from the start if you don't perceive their appearance as intended to be provocative. When they change appearance is when you wonder if their intention is provocative. Hence, there is more room to making characters provocative with clothing. To achieve the same without clothes involves in some fashion changing the art style, and that'll get detractors of a whole other kind.
....from way out in left field..... What Drax said makes sense. You're explaining what seems like an entirely different concern? Why would they draw "anatomically correct" anthromorphs?..............
 

kuwanger

Well-Known Member
Member
Joined
Jul 26, 2006
Messages
1,510
Trophies
0
XP
1,783
Country
United States
Why would they draw "anatomically correct" anthromorphs?

The question is, "why wouldn't they draw anatomically correct anthromorphs, humans, etc?" It'd be considered lazy to not draw hands, eyes, etc (in general). Even a simple line or some circles would be equal conveyance of a more complete appearance of a character, right? Maybe draw in a few lines to signify muscles or not. Obviously there's some sort of taboo there.

PS - I know it can actually be laziness or an art style choice. The thing is, though, that a large part of what was considered the rebirth of art in Europe was being willing and able to accurately depict the human form. No doubt a large part of this was merely to demonstrate an ability to truly capture what is seen and not merely a caricature of what is seen. There's definitely something to be said about art evolving beyond merely depiction of what is. I don't think, though, that's the overriding motive for generally drawing female characters with breasts* and drawing male characters with nothing. Of course, like most things, there are exceptions.

* A very human trait.
 

Sakitoshi

GBAtemp Official Lolimaster
Member
Joined
May 8, 2012
Messages
2,257
Trophies
2
Age
33
Location
behind a keyboard or a gamepad
Website
sakiheru.blogspot.com
XP
2,927
Country
Chile
Trying not to get too deep into the meaning, the act of obscuring skin is usually more provocative than not concealing it in a general sense. The theory is that not seeing a naked body allows one to imagine what is underneath which is more attractive than seeing the naked body itself.
while you are completely right, I think this comic is trying to say another thing.

it seems to be about how getting proper clothes gives her a different treatment compared to other characters wearing little to nothing, adding the argument that it only happens to female also makes it contemporary for the latest trends of genre equality of rights, #metoo and that stuff.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Draxzelex

Site & Scene News

General chit-chat
Help Users
  • No one is chatting at the moment.
    Veho @ Veho: Her boob is the cause of all this current shit :angry: