Joseph Pujol (1857-1945), better known as Le Pétomane, was a professional farter from France, who headlined at the Moulin Rouge. His stage name combined the French verb péter, "to fart" with “mane”, meaning "maniac", “fartomaniac”.
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Apparently, Le Pétomane was not passing intestinal gas, but had such fantastic control of his abdominal and rectal muscles, he could effectively suck air into to his rectum and expel it at will.
He discovered this talent as a small child. According to his biographers Jean Nohain and F. Caradec, the young Pétomane went swimming in the sea when he suddenly felt a very cold sensation in his bowels.
When he ran ashore, he pushed nearly litres of water out of his behind. Apparently the family doctor laughed this off & told him not to worry about it. As an adult, Pétomane started to perform his trick in front of his friends & realised he could also suck air in & fart at will
He took the name Pétomane and started touring his act in provincial towns. He quickly became a sensation and was soon heading for the bright lights of Paris.
He was soon the Moulin Rouge’s most profitable act, pulling in 20,000 francs a show. Not only could he fart popular show tunes, but he could smoke a cigarette, play the flute, and extinguish a candle from a metre away - all with his bottom.
He toured his act all over the world & even opened his own theatre. He performed in front of Edward, Prince of Wales, King Leopold II of Belgium, and Sigmund Freud.
By 1914, at the outset of World War I, Le Petomane retired from showbiz and ran bakery in Marseille. He passed away in 1945 at the ripe old age of 88 and was buried in the cemetery of La Valette-du-Var.
Only a few seconds of Pétomane exist on film, which you can see here. Unfortunately, the footage is soundless.
This is John Singer Sargent’s “Madame X” (1884). Although it doesn’t look remotely controversial today, when it was exhibited at 1884 Paris Salon, the public were so shocked & disgusted that Sargent moved out of the country, and his model’s reputation never recovered.
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The sitter was the socialite Virginie Amélie Avegno Gautreau, wife of the French banker Pierre Gautreau.
Gautreau was an American expatriate, known in Paris as a ‘professional beauty’, meaning she used her looks to advance her social status - which she did exceptionally well
Her husband was much older than she was and very wealthy. Paris was awash with rumours about her multiple infidelities, but the social elite clamoured to be around her, nonetheless.
“The Hangover”, by Hangover
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (1889)
Edit. “The Hangover”, by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec. (As you may have guessed, I am slightly hungover.) I think we need a drinking / hungover art thread to help me out. Here are some of my favs, hit me up with yours below!
Antonio Casanova y Estorach, Monk Testing Wine (1886)
This is a watercolour painting of a condition known as ‘Chimney Sweep's Cancer’, also called soot wart, on a 32yo man. Soot warts are a squamous cell carcinoma of the skin of the scrotum & it was the first reported form of occupational cancer.
(gruesome) Thread!
Sweep’s cancer was a common condition in 18th century Europe, but it was particularly prevalent in Britain where the flues were much narrower. Adults couldn’t fit inside, so very young boys aged between 4 and 7 years were apprenticed to sweeps to do the work.
It was extraordinarily dangerous. These ‘climbing boys’ could get jammed in the flue, suffocate or burn to death if their master lit a fire beneath them to speed things up. Its likely this is where the expression to 'light a fire' under someone comes from
Erotic pottery made by the Moche, the society that dominated Peru’s northern coast for 800 years until about A.D. 800. The invading Spanish were deeply shocked at the Moche’s sexual attitudes & set about stomping them out.
Mini thread
In 1590, Jesuit Jose de Acosta, a famous colonial-era churchmen, wrote that “virginity, which is viewed with esteem and honor by all men, is deprecated by those barbarians as something vile.”
“Except for the virgins consecrated to the Sun or the Inca, all other women are considered of less value when they are virgin, and thus whenever possible they give themselves to the first man they find”
The philosopher Diogenes (c.412-323 BCE) was described by Plato as ‘a Socrates gone mad'. He lived in a barrel & believed man must embrace nature & reject shame. He openly masturbated in public, saying “If only it were so easy to soothe hunger by rubbing an empty belly”.
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Diogenes rejected all of the norms of “civilised” behavior. He urinated, defecated, and masturbated in public. Later images of him often showed him carrying a lamp in the day, to symbolise his futile search for an honest man.
He was hugely influential and inspired a school of philosophy called the cynics. The name of comes from the Greek κυνικός (kunikos), meaning “dog-like”.
This is an advertisement for the famous “Coraline Corset”, patented by two brothers, Dr Ira & Dr Lucien Warner in 1873. They marketed it as a “health corset”.
Corsets were a staple of women’s fashion (and some men’s) since the 16th century & stayed in fashion until the early 20th century. Corsets were generally made from a stout fabric, with bone or metal inserts. Fastening at the front with hooks, the back closed with adjustable laces
*They are lovely things and everyone should have one.*