Photography: Aaron McPolin
Art doesn't just decorate a room. It tells the room what it's allowed to be.
Most people are afraid of erotic art. They imagine something crude. Something they'd have to explain to guests. Something that belongs behind a closed door. But that's not what erotic art is. Not the good kind. The good kind is beautiful first. Powerful second. It catches you off guard. It makes you feel something you weren't expecting to feel. It gives a room permission. That's the phrase I use with my clients. Art gives a room permission. Permission to be sensual. To be intimate. To be honest about what happens there and what it means to the people who share it. The pieces on this page do exactly that.
Aaron McPolin's photography is some of the most breathtaking intimate art being made today. He's award-winning for a reason. I've had the privilege of working closely with him to bring several of my clients' rooms to life. His work doesn't shout. It whispers. And that whisper stays with you.
If you would like to learn more about Aaron, visit "Tea For Two" with Melanie Rose click here
If you would like to learn more about Aaron, visit "Tea For Two" with Melanie Rose click here
Turn Intimate Moments Into Timeless Art with the Love Is Art Kit Collection! A one-of-a-kind experience designed for couples to create abstract art through connection, movement, and intimacy. Each kit includes everything you need to paint on canvas using your bodies as brushes!
Couples Kit starts at $99
To purchase Click here
Couples Kit starts at $99
To purchase Click here
Q&A
Q: I love the idea but I'm worried about what people will think if they see it.
This is the most common thing I hear. Here's what I tell every client: erotic art exists on a spectrum. Some of Aaron's work reads as fine art photography to anyone who doesn't look closely. Others are more explicit. You choose what feels right for your space. None of it needs to be on display in your living room. Your bedroom is yours. What hangs in it is your business.
Q: How do I choose the right piece for my room?
Think about the feeling you want the room to hold. Something tender and intimate? Look for softer compositions, figures at rest, connection over action. Something bold and charged? Look for contrast, tension, energy. I'm also available for consultations if you want guidance on what would work for your specific space.
Q: Can art really change how a room feels?
Walk into a room with bare white walls. Then walk into the same room with one powerful image on the wall. Your body responds differently. Your eyes land somewhere. Your brain receives a signal about what kind of space this is. Art is not decoration. It's communication. Choose what yours says carefully.
This is the most common thing I hear. Here's what I tell every client: erotic art exists on a spectrum. Some of Aaron's work reads as fine art photography to anyone who doesn't look closely. Others are more explicit. You choose what feels right for your space. None of it needs to be on display in your living room. Your bedroom is yours. What hangs in it is your business.
Q: How do I choose the right piece for my room?
Think about the feeling you want the room to hold. Something tender and intimate? Look for softer compositions, figures at rest, connection over action. Something bold and charged? Look for contrast, tension, energy. I'm also available for consultations if you want guidance on what would work for your specific space.
Q: Can art really change how a room feels?
Walk into a room with bare white walls. Then walk into the same room with one powerful image on the wall. Your body responds differently. Your eyes land somewhere. Your brain receives a signal about what kind of space this is. Art is not decoration. It's communication. Choose what yours says carefully.