aka Douglas Gervasi but wanted to be simply known as METROV. Featured on this website, April 2006, Metrov wrote about the early years in New York City, starting P.W.B.B.A. school, “Post War Baby Boom Artists”. Since then, we’ve kept in touch through emails and using Facebook. I had been trying to contact Metrov for some time now, I would check out his FB page, would see people wishing him HB and other posts, I thought Ok, just busy, will try later. Today, I decided to keep scrolling and found a post regarding his passing. Metrov left this world in 2020, sad day when anyone passes, just a little sadder when a contemporary passes, RIP.
Metrov wrote one of the best pieces describing his days as an artist from the 1970’s to the new millennium, it’s a great read letting you inside an artist’s world and thoughts.
“By nature, a sentient creature requires the means to pass on that information which he receives, much in the way a lake requires an inlet and an outlet lest it become stagnant. Naturally, that which stagnates becomes toxic. A sentient with no outlet becomes a candidate for insomnia, a crucible for the ulcer, a garden for cancers, perhaps even an instrument of violent psychosis” METROV
Sexuality has been a primary subject in art since antiquity, spanning fertility rituals, divine mythology, and explicit eroticism. While often suppressed or censored, erotic depictions reflect changing cultural conventions, power dynamics, and human desire across nearly all civilizations. – Wikipedia
In psychology, the connection between art and sex is deeply rooted in psychoanalytic theory, particularly the concept of sublimation. This is the process of channeling socially unacceptable sexual drives or psychic tension into constructive, creative, and culturally celebrated outlets like painting, writing, or performance. Art provides a safe space for catharsis. Erotic or unconventional expressions, such as kink, can be safely externalized, analyzed, and transformed, allowing individuals to process complex emotions in a non-linear way. – AI
Happy Valentine’s, Mixed Media – Rick Santiago 2024
The Difference between Sex and Art is a very very thin line
As young artist, a well done piece from start to finish was as gratifying as incredible sex. Maybe more so, since my personal satisfaction and rewards only mattered. Every piece was a precious creation from my imagination. Every piece needed to find its place. I knew which pieces were strong and would have no problems. While others were not as pleasing and would need to shine a little brighter to find that place.
As I grew better at my craft, the thrill, the romance and the satisfaction became less and less intense, like bright sunshine fading at dusk. Pieces became predictable, not out of sameness but because of personal growth as an artist and experience. Being better and knowing better made projects almost routine.
I found this to be the reason my work morphed, changed and moved on so much over the years. At times the change could easily be described as conflicting. Sometimes going full circle and returning to a previous style. Sometimes never revisiting that cycle again. I caught myself continually searching for that new high, new thrill and challenge.
There was always a constant effort to find my own personal dopamine, I was addicted. Today, I still search, I still seek out the pleasure and the satisfaction of a new challenge. Whether it ends in success or failure, it is this new challenge that keeps me moving forward with anticipation.
Favorite Quotes
“Everything in the world is about sex except sex. Sex is about power.” – Oscar Wilde
“All art is erotic.” – Gustav Klimt
“Sex: the thing that takes up the least amount of time and causes the most amount of trouble.” — John Barrymore
“Sex without love is as hollow and ridiculous as love without sex.” — Hunter S. Thompson
“An intellectual is a person who’s found one thing that’s more interesting than sex.” – Aldous Huxley
“Love without Lust is simply dessert.”
“Sex and art are the same thing.” Picasso
“Sex is more exciting on the screen and between the pages than between the sheets.” – Andy Warhol
“A woman is the most powerful drug in the world”
“The difference between sex and love is that sex relieves tension and love causes it.” – Woody Allen
“To me, sex is power. It’s empowering when you do it because you want to do it.” – Rihanna
“Art is like masturbation. It is selfish and introverted and done for you and you alone. Design is like sex. There is someone else involved, their needs are just as important as your own, and if everything goes right, both parties are happy in the end.” – Colin Wright
“A man who asks questions, explores, and adjusts is more attractive than a man who believes he knows everything. Curiosity demonstrates humility and makes her feel like an adventure rather than an obligation”. – unknown
Curiosity is the lust of the mind
“Your imagination is a powerful tool for sexual pleasure, allowing you to create your own stories and understand what turns you on.” – Gina Gutierrez
Many psychological theories and artists themselves note a distinct crossover between sexual drive and creative drive.
Both sexual intimacy and deep artistic creation require a sense of “attunement” – losing oneself entirely in the present moment to manifest something raw and vulnerable. – Zesty Life
Psychological studies have historically noted that highly creative individuals often possess personality traits like charisma, high emotional sensitivity, and openness to experience, which frequently correlate with active, bohemian, or non-traditional sex lives. – Deviantart
In Western art traditions (from the Renaissance through the 19th century), the “female nude” became a highly sanitized, conventionalized way for male artists to present the female form as an object of desire for male spectators, often masking it under the guise of mythology. – Sexuality in Art
Artists from marginalized communities and female painters are actively rewriting how the body is viewed. For example, Jenna Gribbon paints raw, intimate portraits from her own perspective to flip the script on how queer women are perceived. – CAI magazine
Here are a few pieces and photographs…
Feel free to message Rick Santiago at 443-390-6599 or theunartist@outlook.com