You Can Start A Small Revolution Just By Drawing A Vagina (NSFW)

Artist Stephanie Sarley is challenging the ubiquity of d**k pics, and encouraging young girls to draw along the way.

Warning: This article contains many images of vulvae and, alas, may not be suitable for some environments. 

Since what seems like the dawn of time, drawings of penises have been both omnipresent and hysterical (the latter, at least, to men). Memories of first sleepovers are tied to fears of falling asleep too early, lest you wake up with the image of a dick across your cheek. A silhouette of a penis is as recognizable as a stick figure or happy face, and has reared its head (literally) everywhere from films like "Superbad" to mischievous artworks by artists like Paul McCarthy. 

Compared to the near ubiquity of the simple dick pic, illustrated vaginas are hard to spot. Women's private parts got a head start in the game when the earliest cave drawing ever, made approximately 37,000 years ago, depicted a simple vulva, but ever since, vaginal renderings have remained few and far between. 

There are, of course, some artistic exceptions -- mostly made by men including Gustav Courbet and Egon Schiele. And there are the gloriously yonic flowers of her majesty Georgia O'Keeffe. Perhaps Tee Corinne's Cunt Coloring Bookoriginally used in sex education classes, is the closest example. But where are the haphazard doodles of vulvae or the playful cartoon vaginas? The elementary sketches that aren't necessarily sexual or political but just there, because vaginas, you know, exist? 

Oakland-based artist Stephanie Sarley is the patron saint of vagina drawings. With supreme sophistication and economy of line, Sarley drafts inspired lady parts smoking cigarettes, sipping martinis, and blowing kisses. There's nothing particularly radical about the drawings, aside from the fact that they're vaginas. But they are pretty captivating, just by virtue of their unmufflered existence.

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Fuck it

"It’s important for me to portray that vaginas aren’t something to be ashamed of, protect, hide away or control," Sarley explained in an interview with The Huffington Post. "Vaginas are really important to me. That’s why I do all these split leg caricatures with all these cunts of different shapes and sizes. It’s just fun. It’s how I deal with all this bullshit women have to deal with on a daily basis."

Sarley grew up in Berkeley, California, in a family of artists and has fond memories of visiting museums including San Francisco's Legion of Honor. Inspired by the Japanese woodblock prints and medieval tapestries she encountered, Sarley knew she wanted to be an artist by the time she was 11 years old. "When I was young, I studied the masters but I didn’t realize at the time the masters were only men," she said. "I didn’t have that perspective at the time."

Now, at 27, Sarley is more than aware of the gendered biases that order the art world, and she's determined to do her part to subvert them. "Women should be represented in the arts more," Sarley said. "You've got to be mad about it. We haven’t been represented in the arts and now it’s just normalized. Even in other industries -- law or medicine -- you see so many more women. But in the arts and music, it’s still so normal to see things completely dominated by men. Be the art you want to change. That’s what drives me. Being a woman artist in this world."

Sarley's work can most easily be divided into three categories, all wonderfully vagina-centric. First are the "crotch monsters," anthropomorphized vulvae that drink, smoke and sass on the regular. Then there are the "orcunts": part orchids, part vaginas, that are basically George O'Keeffe's horny cousins. The flowers blossom between spread thighs, turning innuendo into something more graphic. 

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Crotch Monster 2

Finally, there are Sarley's fruit art videos, which gained a following on Instagram after art critic Jerry Saltz commented "You. Are. Genius." on one of them. In each video, a particular fruit -- a blood orange here, a honeydew melon there -- takes center stage, while a finger proceeds to sensually stroke and penetrate the sugary flesh. Despite the fact that you're staring at a piece of citrus, you may feel a bit tingly as you watch a hand slowly caresses its folds, eventually going in and causing a rush of juices to surge out in response. 

"The fruit videos were like a primal urge," Sarley said. "I was hanging out with my boyfriend and he handed me a half of a fruit and I went at it for the fun of it. I love freaking people out. The fruit means so many different things to so many different people -- they’re grossed out, disgusted, turned on."

Since Sarley started uploading her fruit videos, which are often censored by Instagram despite being botanical seed-bearing structures, she's received responses from fans making fruit art videos of their own. This, for Sarley, is the goal. "It's not about popularity or fame for me. It’s about inspiring young girls, like, you can fucking do it. I just want young girls to draw more." 

And if they're drawing vaginas -- smirking or smoking or crying or just chilling out -- all the better. 

Crotch Monster 1
Fuck it
Orcunt
Extra Dry
Crotch Monster 2
Blood Orange
Orcunt 2
Worms
Whiskey Sour
Dick Dog

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Before You Go

Books By Women For A Feminist Bookshelf
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The Argonauts is a hybrid memoir-essay by Maggie Nelson that digs deep into our entrenched expectations of motherhood, gender, and human relationships, and asks us to look at these issues from a new angle. (credit:Graywolf)
(02 of18)
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Alexandra Kleeman's debut is impossible to put down, or stop talking about, as she weaves questions of intimate female friendships and unhealthy body image into a bizarre, alternate-universe thriller. (credit:HarperCollins)
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If you haven't yet read popular poet Patricia Lockwood's poem "Rape Joke," don't wait another second; this mind-warping, culturally questioning collection is a conversation-sparker even for those who're intimidated by the poetry form. (credit:Penguin)
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Leslie Jamison's acclaimed essay collection may be deeply personal, but it also offers food for thought on more universal issues, like how we talk about women's pain. (credit:Graywolf)
(05 of18)
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Asali Solomon's recent novel Disgruntled is a classic coming-of-age story, but also offers readers insights into what challenges come with growing up as a black woman in America, and how parents' ideologies can help and, unintentionally, hurt the children they're trying to protect. (credit:Farrar, Straus and Giroux)
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Why is it so hard for people to say they just don't want kids? Sixteen writers honestly and eloquently explain the societal pressures and gendered expectations, and why they decided to flout them, in this thought-provoking collection. (credit:Picador)
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This unsettling crime novel by Ottessa Moshfegh centers on a young, self-loathing young woman and her troubled relationship with her own physicality. (credit:Penguin)
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Americanah would be a delightful read if nothing more, but it's also a thoughtful parsing of cultural differences, race, and the seemingly small factors that can define our career and relationship choices. (credit:Knopf)
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Mrs. Dalloway may be Virginia Woolf's novel about a society woman throwing a party, but, of course, it's also about submerged sexuality, the demands of marriage and motherhood, and the unlauded arts performed by women of Woolf's time. (credit:Mariner Books)
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Helen Oyeyemi uses her gift for weaving powerful truths into fantastical fairy tales in this parable about the fraught dynamic between the male writer and the female muse. (credit:Picador)
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Mia Alvar's lovely stories of the Filipino diaspora highlight the gulfs found between socioeconomic classes all over the world and the weight of family ties. (credit:Knopf)
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Mary Gaitskill's debut collection Bad Behavior has become a modern classic, in large part for not pulling any punches in depicting isolated, self-destructive, and desperate characters. (But also because her writing is lethally precise.) (credit:Simon )
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Okay, this is almost too easy to include, but it definitely gets the feminist-conversation juices flowing. (credit:Harper Perennial)
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A gritty, unflinching novel centered on a young girl captured by a war photographer being blown forward in an Eastern European bomb blast, The Small Backs of Children hones in on the uncomfortable places where sex and violence meet, and the moments of grossness and cruelty and suffering that are usually too painful to depict in fiction. (credit:Harper)
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The Bluest Eye was Toni Morrison's first novel, and the first to explore the themes of black femininity and its particular traumas, which she has gone on to heartwrenchingly lay bare the rest of her work. (credit:Vintage)
(16 of18)
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Nobody Is Ever Missing isn't the first novel in which a woman gets to be the unmoored protagonist in search of meaning, but it's still a genre that takes more kindly to men. Catherine Lacey's novel poignantly, in dazzling prose, tells the story of a woman who wants a divorce from her husband, from her life, and from everything, even, in a way, herself. (credit:Farrar, Straus and Giroux)
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This odd, heavily stylized novel juxtaposes two women -- one so beautiful she disguises herself as a plain woman to discern suitors with pure intentions, the other so ugly she composes music that will seduce men for her -- to tease out the many ways in which women are influenced by society's value for physical beauty. (credit:Norton)
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This is a four-fer! The Neapolitan novels by Elena Ferrante are the literary world's current obsession, and they're packed with the stuff of feminist discussion: ambitious women thwarted by societal circumstances, a strong but fraught female friendship, and romantic relationships that prove less egalitarian than anticipated. (credit:Europa)