Showing posts with label Peter Gordon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peter Gordon. Show all posts
Friday, June 15, 2012
Peter Gordon by Spartan
A shot of Peter with sword -- I've only ever seen this pose in very poor quality before (which I posted here in November of 2007) -- nice to finally find an excellent clear scan!
Friday, November 23, 2007
Peter Gordon by Spartan - a few final shots...
Peter Gordon by Spartan - at age 19
This image is from the "Physique Pictorial" issue of October, 1953. In the text not included in the scan we learn that Peter was "age[d] 19, ht 6', wt 170#. A former art student at UCLA, he is now a U.S. Air Corps cadet." One must assume that Mizer is giving his age in the photo, for in the December, 1953 issue (sorry, no scan available) Peter is shown in a photo at the given age of 18, and Mizer also tells us that
young Gordon served for two years as an air cadet in Texas and from there to Korea where he received injuries resulting in his discharge. Pete has now entered advertising, which promises to be a very successful career for him.
Peter Gordon by Spartan - "Spartan #1" part 1
It is no secret that physique studios would flog their photos years after they were taken, most often never giving a timeline to their work, making it very hard to deduce when they were actually taken.
Case in point -- "Spartan" #1 was published in 1962, at a time when classic physique stylings were giving over to a preponderance of skinny twink and rough trade magazines, less than six years before the advent of full-on nudity. The roster of models in the magazine (Gordon, Bob McCune, Gene Eberle, Rex Ravelle and more) though, were almost all shot in the early 50s, nearly ten years before the magazine was published.
The identity of Spartan (Constantine) is one of the great unknowns we face in this hobby. Three people are listed in the indicia of the magazine -- John Willson, J. Melvin Sawyer and Henry Maxwell. Could one of these men by Spartan? They could just as easily be totally phony names in an effort to hide from the pervasive Postal Police doing their best to run all "pornographers" out of business...
Thanks to Tim Wilbur for sharing his scans of this magazine with my v-m-p Yahoogroup a couple years back...
Peter and Sandy Gordon by Spartan
One of the great brother posing teams from the golden age of physique photography, Peter and Sandy only posed together for Spartan, aka Constantine. The solo series of Peter are noted for the grace and elegance that was a hallmark of the late 40s/early 50s muscle mag/physique cross-over period. Sandy, better known as Hugh Pendleton, would go on to pose for AMG and Bruce of LA and others following his Spartan sessions, most famously posing nude (and erect!) for Bruce Bellas' camera.
Spartan photographed the brothers more than once, first as young teens (in solo sessions) and then later, together, in their early twenties. The first of two "Physique Pictorial" pages posted here notes
Peter & Hugh Pendleton come from a family all enthusiastic about health and physical training. Peter had just been discharged from the Air Force shortly before these shots were made, and his duties had not given him the opportunity to train as much as he desired. Many readers will remember the early pictures of Hugh released under the name of Sandy Gordon. Hugh likes his physique much better now, but we are inclined to prefer his earlier proportions. But nothing can stop time (except photography), and athletes as well as the rest of us continue to evolve and change with each passing day. In so-far-as we can control our environment and other conditions, it is in our realm to make that evolution one of ever increasing perfection.
This first page was published in 1955, which would have made Hugh about 24 at the time of publication, though it is impossible to say exactly when this photo was taken (and I do not know if Peter was the older or younger brother).
The second PP page is from 1959, featuring a solo shot of Hugh by Spartan at the age of 16. Bob Mizer makes mention in the text that at the time of publication, Hugh "[would] soon be 28" from which we can figure out that this posing session was held in 1947. Mizer continues to lament that Hugh's "genteel sweetness is all gone, and is replaced by an almost brutally hard masculinity."
Labels:
AMG,
Bob Mizer,
Bruce Bellas,
Bruce of LA,
Constantine,
Hugh Pendleton,
Peter Gordon,
Sandy Gordon,
Spartan
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