Tossup

Renaissance paintings of Christ with this trait inspired a two-word Latin phrase coined by Leo Steinberg in a book partly titled for “Modern Oblivion.” Ten men with this title trait fight in front of dense vegetation in an engraving by the Florentine goldsmith Antonio del Pollaiuolo (“poll-eye-WO-lo”). John Berger wrote that one term for this trait is a state of being whereas a synonym is a conventionalized artistic construct, responding to a “Study of Ideal Art” titled for a subject with this trait by Kenneth Clark. Daniele da Volterra removed depictions of this trait, earning the nickname (10[1])Il Braghettone, (10[1])in edits to Michelangelo’s Last Judgment made after the Council of Trent condemned this trait’s depiction (10[1])in religious art. For 10 points, (10[1])Renaissance artists often (10[1])avoided depicting what trait via the inclusion of fig leaves? ■END■ (10[1])

ANSWER: nudity [or being nude; or nakedness; accept equivalents like being unclothed; accept answers mentioning display of the genitals or equivalents; prompt on sexuality or sexualized by asking “as depicted via what visual characteristic?”] (Leo Steinberg coined the phrase ostentatio genitalium, or “display of the genitals,” in The Sexuality of Christ in Renaissance Art and in Modern Oblivion.)
<TM, Painting and Sculpture>
= Average correct buzz position

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