The
History of Men in Suits and Why and How its Sexy!
Why do we have such contradictory ideas about suits? I hear from
one side that society is getting away from suits, and that fewer
and fewer men are really bothering to dress in them, opting, in
the name of comfort, for open-collar shirts and jeans or khakis.
Yet, from the other side, I open my eyes and see that we're in
an exciting time for the suit.
Taking, for instance, the most popular mass medium -- television
-- as our looking-glass, we see amazing suits all over the place.
Letterman, of course, is one of the best dressed men on TV, gorgeously
draped in miles of double-breasted suits that are conservative
yet manage to pack a swanky punch. Virtually all the late-night
hosts wear great suits, with Conan O'Brian snappily dressed in
a permanent post-college résumé suit, and Leno invariably
in a three-button suit that, though not quite ideal for his body
type, is still stylish.
Prime time, though, is where the suit shines. If the 80s were
all about families and sweaters (Cosby, Full House, Family Matters,
Mr Belvedere...), the 90s are all about friends and suits. A good
majority of the male characters on every show spend at least some
time every episode in a suit. Just flipping through, we see David
Spade and his office mates (wearing suits of varying innovativeness),
the "Veronica's Closet" guys (the flaky white guy wears smooth
up-to-the second suits, and the black guy wears more outre rigs
-- orange with orange tie and orange shirt -- both stunningly well-chosen),
of course Frasier and his brother Niles (who are practically advertisements
for the classic suit). Even "Friends" characters are finding excuses
to suit up. And if there is a best dressed man on television, it
has to be Eric McCormack, who plays Will on "Will & Grace":
every week he's so impeccably dressed he may reach Cary Grant status
(perhaps the reason he, a gay leading man, is acceptable to the
middle American audience is that he is so consistently armored
in the uniform of the alpha male).
And what are women wearing? Is there any force so powerful happening
in women's fashion? Again, a brief click through prime time shows
that, for the most part, women quite simply don't have a thing
to wear. That lament, so scorned by boyfriends and husbands, turns
out to be true in the deepest sense: there is very little a woman
can wear that will speak to the moment the way a man's suit does.
(The perennial Little Black Dress is about the closest thing there
is, but it is, by definition, somewhat limited.)
It could be argued that the rich lives of prime time characters
have little to do with the average American. Nonetheless, this
explosion of suits couldn't happen if it were unacceptable to us.
We want to see men wearing them.
Which is actually a strange thing. Jesse Jackson was presumably
unaware of the irony as he picketed Columbia University, chanting, "Hey
hey ho ho, Western Culture's got to go," wearing: 1] a shirt that
had an extra appendage forming two triangles at the base of the
neck; 2] a brightly colored strip of cloth tied around the neck
and hanging down the front; 3] leg-coverings that loosely approximate
and define the individual legs; 4] an over-the-shirt garment that
goes slightly below the buttocks, made of the same cloth as the
pants, and cut with a kind of collar of its own that reaches down
the front and bends back flat against itself. Anyone observing
on that day could have predicted that his anti-Western Culture
agenda was doomed to fail, because it was insincere: he himself
was clad in the very symbol of the Western male.
It takes us a moment to realize that the suit isn't the only choice
for men to wear: we could be wearing robes, or Shakespearean-style
leggings with poofy shorts, or strategically placed gourds. But
for some reason this same overlapping outfit has been with us for
over 200 years.
A few years back, the art critic Anne Hollander turned her perceptive
eye to the history of the suit, and came up with some surprising
ideas: that men's fashion is actually ahead of women's fashion,
and has been for some time; that men's fashion has been about the
human body as idealized by Greek sculpture (v-shaped torso, articulated
legs, flat stomach), while women's fashion has been about variously
displaying and concealing the neck and shoulders and decolletage,
while shrouding the legs; that when we began giving women power,
we gave them legs, in the form of higher skirts or pants; and,
most compellingly, that the suit allows a man to be "sexy and serious" at
the same time.
Which is exactly the problem with what women have to wear: what
do you wear to the office? A man can wear a suit and be sexy and
serious; but only recently, and unevenly, have women begun wearing
things that are both. Usually, a woman has to choose between frilly
sexiness and sterile seriousness. This leads to, or at least reinforces,
a major aspect of society's sexism: that men's sexuality is "central,
serious, and interesting," whereas women's is "irrational, shallow,
and dangerous."
As usual, in books like this, it ends with some prophecies about
the future of the suit. But, amazingly, they don't seem false or
unrelated to the trajectory of the book: her predictions are quite
plausible and intelligent, and in fact we can already see some
of them coming true.
:: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: ::
B y the turn of the [nineteenth] century, elegance
had shifted entirely away from wrought surfaces to fundamental
form, and away from courtly refinement to natural simplicity. And
so tailors elevated the unfitted rough country coat into a triumph
of art, whereby crude natural man became noble natural man, with
references to ancient sculpture built into the structure of his
clothes. With the help of nearly imperceptible padding, curved
seams, discreet darts and steam pressing, the rough coat of dull
cloth was gradually refined into an exquisitely balanced garment
that fitted smoothly without wrinkles and buttoned without strain,
to clothe what appeared to be the torso of a Greek athlete.
....The subtle lines of the coat formed an abstract design based
on the underlying curves of human bone and muscle, and the matte
texture suggested the smoothness of skin. The careful modelling
allowed the actual body to assert itself only at certain places
when the wearer moved, to create a vital interaction between costume
and person, a nonchalant counterpoint again with echoes of an animal
easy in its own skin. The discreet padding in the upper chest and
shoulders was carefully thinned out over the chest and back and
disappeared in the lower half of the coat, so that the effect was
of a wholly unpadded garment, and apparently natural covering.
To go with this apotheosis of rough gear, the plain linen shirt
and cravat, which might have been worn soiled and sloppily knotted
by rough-living country gentlemen, were laundered into incandescent
whiteness, lightly starched, and then folded with a sculptor's
care around the neck and jaw, to produce a commanding set of the
head on the heroic shoulders.... Adding spice to this potent mixture
was the exciting urban contribution from across the Channel, the
sans-culotte costume of the Revolutionary laboring classes. This
similar Neo-classic "natural" mode could eventually be blended
with the English version, refined and translated from the barricades
to the drawing-room, bringing the spirit of revolt and suggestions
of plebeian effort to the already powerful combination of ideas
embodied in the new masculine costume.
....His garments made him look honest, since the seams showed
and the weave was apparent in the plain fabric -- and rational,
because of the perfect cut, fit, and proportions, which also gave
him his artless good looks. The whole achievement had been accomplished
entirely by simply reworking the old seventeenth-century scheme
of coat, waistcoat, and breeches, with a shirt and some kind of
cravat. It replaced the same scheme made of nude muscles that had
been the Classical expression of the same virtues, and now gave
the impression that the nude hero was even more natural when dressed.
:: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: ::
T he modern masculine image was thus virtually in
place by 1820, and it has been only slightly modified since. The
modern suit has provided so perfect a visualization of modern male
pride that it has so far not needed replacement, and it has gradually
provided the standard costume of civil leadership for the whole
word. The masculine suit now suggests probity and restraint, prudence
and detachment; but under these enlightened virtues also seethe
its hunting, laboring, and revolutionary origins; and therefore
the suit still remains sexually potent and more than a little menacing,
its force by no means spent during all these many generations.
Sexy Suits, Men Naked Gay
In the second act of modernism, during the first
quarter of this century, a new radical view of the beauty of form
was again accompanied by a certain retreat from color. The most
extreme visions of Cubism tended to eliminate vivid hues in their
concentration on the multiple truth of form. In architecture a
new respect for the intrinsic beauty of naked steel, glass, and
concrete helped to revive a taste for formal value uncluttered
by busy adornment, including the distracting beauty of color; and
this taste was further supported by masterpieces of black and white
photography and cinematography that celebrated only shape, line,
and surface texture. All this helped to keep the new versions of
the modern masculine suit, now celebrating formal abstraction in
new ways, on the same path toward muted color that they had originally
taken during their first Neo-classic appearance.
GAY MEN IN SUITS SEXY AND FETISH!"
I would claim that the naked male body, coherent and
articulated, must still be the ghostly visual image and the underlying
formal suggestion made by any ordinary male Western costume, however
closely the surface is covered, just as it was made by the suit
of plate armor or the first Neo-classic suit. The modern suit survives
partly because among all the more showily revealing varieties of
current male dress, it has kept its ability to make that nude suggestion.
FETISH SUITS SEX!
I t's clear that modernizing clothes for women has
meant copying men's clothes, directly or indirectly, one way or
another. To even the balance, however, we can see that many men
in the last third of this century have already taken up the the
formerly female game of finding pleasure in expressive multiple
guises. In one man's closet, the new, colorful leisure versions
of active gear make sharp contrasts with well-cut business suits
and formal sportswear like tweed jackets, classic shirts lie next
to extreme sweatshirts, and everything is meant for wear in the
same urban milieu. We may now find the curious spectacle of a man
privately at ease fifteen stories above the city street, sipping
wine and reading Trollope in a warm room furnished with fragile
antiques and Persian rugs, dressed in a costume suitable for roping
cattle on the plains or sawing up lumber in the North woods. Once,
only women and children offered such visual effects.
SUITS SEX, GAY MENS FETISH SUITS SEX!
I t's in fact clear that "uniforms," so vigorously
despised in much current rhetoric about clothes, are really what
most people prefer to wear, garments in which they feel safely
similar to their fellows. Once in uniform, they can choose their
personal details, feel unique, and then sneer at the members of
other tribes who all seem ridiculously alike in their tribal gear.
For the past two centuries, men have dreaded looking like fools
much more than women have; and so the dress of the male tribe has
had a somewhat stronger uniform quality than the female one.....One
known reason for fashion's deep appeal is the way it provides the
ability to look like everyone else, in the ancient tribal way;
but at the same time, it provides a choice of tribes.
SEXY MEN IN SUITS
F ashion has been the modernizing agent for clothes,
the system that has made it possible for form in clothing to keep
generating its own development and refer to itself -- to turn dress
into a modern art. When we study the dynamic modern form that dress
has acquired in the West, we soon notice that it engages mainly
with the temporal phrasing of sexuality. It doesn't just define
differences between male and female dressed bodies, but describes
a sexual relation that has a changing temporal life. The social
meaning is dependent on the sexual one, because the sexuality is
what gives the form its force, its power to have social meaning
at all.
Modern masculine tailoring has been one salient example of the
way form has been developed by fashion. It began by taking a set
of standard, desirable kinds of masculinity, and unifying them
in a modern way into a well-integrated abstract visual scheme.
The formal composition had both a fundamental sexual charge and
sufficient flexibility to take on changing social meaning -- to
appear inclusive or exclusive, snobbish or democratic, stuffy or
easy, to be grim and boring or to be sleek and subtle, to stand
for ruthlessness and deception, or for candor and integrity --
but also to pursue an independent and dynamic formal trajectory
that has yet to reach its end. Hot, Naked and Straight
Sexy City Men.

Men in Suits - Horny and "On the Job"!
If you've ever fantasised about the cute office boy while you
watch him doing the photocopying, his tight grey pinstripe
trousers perfectly framing his juicy buns; or you've been nursing
a secret hardon each time the boss gets angry and pulls you into
his office for a dressing down - then this is exactly the site for
you.
Packed with regularly updated galleries of sexy suited boys and
men getting down and dirty in the office. Watch them strip for
you, tantalising you with their sexy smiles; their stiff, white
collars and immaculate ties being ever so slowly removed for your
pleasure.

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