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LeRoy Neiman’s legendary Femlins and his racy artwork for Playboy magazine
02.21.2018
10:12 am
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LeRoy Neiman’s legendary Femlins and his racy artwork for Playboy magazine


One of artist LeRoy Neiman’s famous Femlins on the cover of Playboy magazine.

“I‘m not a scene painter; I‘m the scene painter.”

—American artist LeRoy Neiman in an interview with Cigar Aficionado magazine.

Whenever the Olympic Games roll around, I am often reminded of one of my favorite artists, LeRoy Neiman, who was the official painter for the Olympic Games for several years and widely painted and illustrated vibrant images of nearly every sporting event known to man. Neiman has also painted a massive number of portraits of celebrities and sports superstars such as Frank Sinatra, golfer Arnold Palmer, and boxer Muhammad Ali. Neiman’s exuberant, colorful take on American culture was everywhere during the 70s and 80s and beyond—including in the pages of Playboy magazine.

In 1954 Neiman joined forces with Hugh Hefner after running into him while he was strolling around Chicago (the pair had previously met while Neiman was an illustrator for the Carson Pirie Scott department store chain where Hefner was a copywriter). Neiman would go on to provide paintings and illustrations to the magazine for decades, including the cheeky creation of the Femlins—an adorable group of illustrated girls with black hair, clad in long gloves, thigh-high stockings, high heels—and nothing else. The Femlins came to be in 1955 after Hefner proposed that Playboy’s regular feature Party Jokes needed some visual stimulation to go along with the feature’s bawdy giggles. Eventually, Neiman’s naughty nude pixies would become twelve-inch clay models with high-gloss paint jobs which were photographed for the magazine including its coveted cover. Then, in 1963, Playboy published a pictorial called “The Femlin Comes To Life” which featured a well endowed, naked Femlin model.

If you’re acquainted with the history of Playboy and their exhaustive marketing, then you might also know there was a time when you could purchase twelve-inch Femlin figures in various poses as well as other Femlin-themed merchandise. If you are lucky enough to come across one of the figures these days, obtaining one for your collection will likely run more than a grand depending on their condition. Original Femlin artwork done by Neiman won’t come cheap either; paintings routinely sell more than ten grand and simple Femlin illustrations signed by the artist list for nearly a thousand bucks. I’ve included some fantastic images of Neiman’s work for Playboy below, pretty much all of it is NSFW.
 

A collectible Femlin figure and a cocktail glass.
 

 

A painting by LeRoy Neiman of two Playboy Bunnies playing pool.
 

More Bunnies painted by Neiman.
 

A collection of various collectable Femlin figures.
 

A photo of Hugh Hefner haning out with LeRoy Neiman in pajamas and a bird friend.
 

 

Neiman painting a large portrait of a Playboy Bunny.
 

Here is an example of a Femlin with pubic hair. For years the Femlin was devoid of hair-down-there, but that changed when Penthouse started publishing images of nude women with their pubic hair exposed when it debuted in the U.S. in 1969. In an effort to compete with Penthouse publisher Bob Guccione, Hefner told Neiman (as noted in Neiman’s book, ‘All Told: My Art and Life Among Athletes, Playboys, Bunnies, and Provocateurs,’ that in order to stay “abreast” of the times, the Femlins must have pubic hair. This interesting time in nudie magazine history is known as the “Pubic Wars.”
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The ace of spades in a Femlin-themed deck of vintage playing cards.
 

More Femlins figurines.
 

Neiman hanging at the Playboy mansion in Chicago back in the day.
 

 

A photo from the series “The Femlin Comes To Life” published in Playboy magazine in May of 1963. Images from the rest of the series follow.
 

 

 

 

 

 

The man himself, LeRoy Neiman.

Previously on Dangerous Minds:
Climb aboard ‘Hare-Force One,’ Hugh Hefner’s $5 million DC-9 jet with its own discothèque
Bunny Hop: Peep inside the Playboy Clubs of the 60s, 70s & 80s
Playboy Playmates recreate their iconic covers 30 years on
Salvador Dali’s bizarre but sexy photoshoot for Playboy, 1973
Woody Allen gets into a pillow fight with a six-foot brunette in the pages of Playboy, 1969

Posted by Cherrybomb
|
02.21.2018
10:12 am
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