Skip to content
Category

Nudity

page 1
nudity
thumb|right|Naturists in a river, 2014 Nudity is the state of being in which a human is without clothing. While estimates vary, for the first 90,000 years of pre-history, anatomically modern humans were naked, having lost their body hair, living in hospitable climates, and not having developed the crafts needed to make clothing.
bathing
thumb|360px|Detail of Jean-Pierre Norblin de La Gourdaine's Bath in the Park (1785) thumb|Astronaut Jack R. Lousma taking a shower in space, 1973
exhibitionism
thumb|Nudity|Naked exhibitionist woman on a Budapest street in 2007 Exhibitionism is the practice of exposing one's intimate parts – such as the breasts, genitals, or buttocks – in a public or semi-public environment. This can be done live or virtually as with nude selfies using technologies like smartphones to take nude pictures of oneself for show.
toplessness
thumb|upright|Topless woman at the 2008 Oregon Country Fair
nyotaimori
thumb|In , a nude woman's body serves as a food plate.
streaking
alt=|thumb|250px|upright|A streaker at the 2006 Harvard–Yale football rivalry|Harvard–Yale game in [[Cambridge, Massachusetts]]
public sex
sexual activity that takes place in a public place or in a private place which can be viewed from a public place
clothing in ancient Egypt
aspect of history
Umhlanga
ceremony
art model
person who poses for any visual artist as part of the creative process
Anasyrma
thumb|Copy of a Hellenistic period|Hellenistic [[Aphrodite Kallipygos at The Hermitage in St. Petersburg]] Anasyrma (, composed of and ; plural anasyrmata ), also called anasyrmos (), is the gesture of lifting the skirt or kilt. It is used in connection with certain religious rituals, eroticism, and lewd jokes (see, for example, Baubo). The term is used in describing corresponding works of art.
indecent exposure
public indecency involving nudity of some sort
breastfeeding in public
the social attitude and legal status regarding the practice of breastfeeding in public
heroic nudity
concept in classical scholarship to describe the use of nudity in classical sculpture to indicate that a sculpture's apparently mortal human subject is in fact a hero or semi-divine being
Orsippus
Orsippus () was a Greek runner from Megara who was famed as the first to run the footrace naked at the Olympic Games and "first of all Greeks to be crowned victor naked." Others argue that it was Acanthus instead who first introduced Greek athletic nudity. Orsippus won the stadion of the 15th Olympic Games in 720 BC.
naked party
alleged type of college party
Akanthos of Sparta
8th-century BC Greek athlete
intimate part
place on the human body which it is usually customary to keep covered with clothing in public areas
Joshua Milton Blahyi
Liberian warlord and general
history of nudity
Aspect of history
Gymnopaedia
The Gymnopaedia was an annual festival celebrated exclusively in ancient Sparta, which helped to define Spartan identity. It featured generations of naked Spartan men participating in war dancing and choral singing, with a large emphasis placed on age and generational groups. It is believed that celebration of this festival began in 668 BCE to honour a Spartan victory in Thyrea. The festival likely evolved over time to celebrate other Spartan victories such as that over the Argives in the Battle of the Champions. The Gymnopaedia was primarily in honour of Apollo, but also celebrated Artemis an
strip search
practice of searching a person for weapons or other contraband
Rockbitch
Rockbitch were a British rock band, composed mostly of female, lesbian and bisexual members, who performed nude and incorporated sexual acts and Pagan rituals into their performances.
wardrobe malfunction
euphemism, or slang term, for accidental nudity in public
nude wedding
Nude marriage where all (or some) people are naked.
nudity and sexuality
social phenomenon
no-pan kissa
type of maid café in Japan
Friday
Robinson Crusoe character
Childhood nudity
about the everyday situations where children may be without clothes
Battle of Tordesillas
1812 siege during the Peninsular War
Hadaka no tsukiai
Japanese cultural idea