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"The
Traveling Padded Brassiere Salesman"
Hands von Achin'
Although strictly speaking
a Badmannerist, von Achin' is sometimes included in the canon of Depressionists
because of his fixation with women's undergarments and because of the general
air of depravity and sordidness often found in his works, as well as the
embedded spittle.
Here we see a typical theme: a less-endowed young girl being pressured to expand
her frontage by a high-pressure travelling salesman. Achin' was something of a
visionary, and apparently coined the term "maidenform" (jungfrauformen in
the original German) at some point during the 16th century to describe his
preferred subject matter. See also "Wardrobe Malfunction with Pallas Athena,
Venus and Juno," and "I Dreamed I was Rescued," also in the Museum's collection.
Achin' rarely paid attention to backgrounds, preferring to concentrate on the
undraped female form and the male leer. He considered his greatest work to be
the now-lost "44DDD with Still Life" which was destroyed during the
Berlin Moral Rearmament Crusade of the early 1950s.
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The Museum gratefully acknowledges the
generous support of Frederick's of Hollywood in the acquisition of this
painting.
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