Register Now!
Link To: Home
 
featured personal

search articles

media blogs

  • scanner
    scanner
  • screengrab
    screengrab
  • modern materialist
    the modern
    materialist
  • 61 frames per second
    61 frames
    per second
  • the remote island
    the remote
    island
  • date machine
    date
    machine

photo blogs

  • slice
    slice with
    american
    suburb x
  • paper airplane crush
    paper
    airplane crush
  • autumn
    autumn
  • chase
    chase
  • rose & olive
    rose & olive
Rose & Olive
Houston neighbors pull back the curtains and expose each other’s lives.
Scanner
Your daily cup of WTF?
Date Machine
Putting your baggage to good use.
The Modern Materialist
Almost everything you want.
Autumn Sonnichsen
A fashionable L.A. photo editor exploring all manner of hyper-sexual girls down south.
ScreenGrab
The Hooksexup Film Blog
Chase
The creator of Supercult.com poses his pretty posse.
The Remote Island
Hooksexup's TV blog.
61 Frames Per Second
Smarter gaming.
ScreenGrab
The Hooksexup Film Blog
Slice
Each month a new artist; each image a new angle. This month: American Suburb X.
Paper Airplane Crush
A San Francisco photographer on the eternal search for the girls of summer.

new this week
Family Vacation by Joe Lazauskas
Who's the last person you'd want to take to a sex resort? /personal essays/
Dating Confessions by You
"It's been five years since a man has told me he loved me. I don't think I can wait five more."
Miss Information by Erin Bradley
My wife speaks in tongues in bed. Totally normal, right? /advice/
March Madness by Jen Matlack
I went to Spring Break a virgin. . . /personal essays/
Horoscopes by the Hooksexup Staff
Your week ahead. /advice/
Nudists by Luke Gilford
/photography/
Dating Advice from . . . Irish Bartenders by Stephanie Emma Pfeffer
Q: What's one major difference you've noticed between Irish and American girls? A: Ooh, I'm going to get in trouble for this one!
After School by Keith Banner
I had one thing in common with the homecoming king. /personal essays/
 PERSONAL ESSAYS


getting around

  Send to a Friend
  Printer Friendly Format
  Leave Feedback
  Read Feedback
  Hooksexup RSS
He's really thin. He's naked. He's two-dimensional. If it weren't for the fact that he's lacking a head, he would be six-foot-one. My height. He looks just like me.

My girlfriend, Gabriela, takes a drag of her cigarette, blows the smoke across her Greenpoint studio, turns to look at the real Ryan and asks,

"Do you like it?"

"It looks like me," I say. But I'm lying just a little bit, because while this painting — entitled "White Bread" — has my chest, arms, legs and neck, his penis is bigger than mine.


promotion
Dating an artist is tricky. On the one hand, this proportional aberration could be a compliment — maybe this is how Gabriela really sees me. Or it might not mean anything at all, just benign artistic license. Gabriela wore the pants in our relationship and my old, dirty dress shirts to her studio. She would wake up at 8:30 every morning with her short black hair sticking straight up, giving her the appearance of a sexy mad scientist. Without adjusting her coiffure, she would march out of her apartment, mount her bicycle and pedal toward her studio. If it weren't socially frowned upon, I think Gabriela would have left the house naked.

In her past, she'd done nude modeling for art photography. She'd painted abstract canvases depicting the backs of eighteen-wheelers. She was raised in Israel, travels constantly and speaks three languages. I don't need to tell you she's into a lot of bands you've never heard of.

I speak English. I've never left the continental United States. I love Ray Bradbury, and my favorite band is the Beatles. The "White Bread" painting conveys the message that one could surmise all these things just by looking at my skinny white body: this guy might be an okay lover, it says, but he'll start talking about Star Trek as soon as the sex is over. Eventually, Gabriela decided not to render this message as abstractly as she had in "White Bread." Why imply that I talked about Star Trek in bed, or that I cried more than she did, when she could make a whole series of drawings illustrating it explicitly? So she did, and now the story of our romance is forever preserved in a group of gallery-exhibited drawings collectively titled The Ryan Series.




The Ryan Series is twenty-two monochromatic drawings, each depicting a moment from our relationship. Accompanying each piece is a prominent title at the top of the drawing. And while I had my favorites, like "Ryan in the Shower Telling Me He Loves Me Too," the really good ones were less complimentary: "Ryan Crying on the Subway Platform," "Ryan Crying on the L Train," "Ryan Crying on My Couch."

We'd almost broken up several times before she drew "White Bread" and The Ryan Series.
Why imply that I talked about Star Trek in bed when she could make a whole series of drawings illustrating it explicitly?
During one of these breaks, Gabriela revealed she'd started making drawings about our relationship as a farewell present, a way of preserving her feelings for me within her own craft. But as it turned out, this first group of drawings was the beginning of a burst of productivity. I had become a muse, so we stayed together.

About some of the drawings: "Ryan in the Shower Telling Me He Loves Me Too" was fairly romantic, even though Gabriela's opinion of American romance was extremely low. She once told me she thought of Americans as emotionally infantilized, always afraid to say it when we love someone. She was infuriated by the fact that couples could be together for months or years without saying "I love you." I began to suspect her assessment of American romance was correct — at twenty-five, having weathered a few blows from the Ryan-I-don't-know-what-to-say monster, I'd become reluctant to say "I love you" first. And though I did whisper it once into Gabriela's ear as we passed out in her loft bed after a night of whiskey and billiards, I'm forced to conclude she doesn't remember, or chose not to remember, when she created this drawing. It's a faithful rendering of her shower floor, depicted from a skewed angle, like a shot of the Riddler's lair. Integral to this title was, of course, the word "too," indicating that she'd said it first.



           
promotion
buzzbox
partner links
VIP Access
This click gets you to the city's hottest barbells.
The Position of The Day Video
Superdeluxe.com
Honesty. Integrity. Ads
The Onion
Cracked.com
Photos, Videos, and More
CollegeHumor.com
Belgian Nun Reprimanded for Dirty Dancing
Fark.com
AskMen.com Presents From The Bar To The Bedroom
Learn the 11 fundamental rules to approaching, scoring and satisfying any woman. Order now!


advertise on Hooksexup | affiliate program | home | photography | personal essays | fiction | dispatches | video | opinions | regulars | search | personals | horoscopes | retroHooksexup | HooksexupShop | about us |

account status
| login | join | TOS | help

©2009 hooksexup.com, Inc.