Just to play devil's advocate for a moment, the intention of the art matters a lot. If you're doing a highly stylized art form and the drawing looks like a highly stylized art form, then there's nothing wrong. If, on the other hand, you're doing a realistic art form and aiming for something that looks like reality, and you're drawing all the women to look like a 15 year-old boy's sexual fantasies, and all the men to look like a 15 year-old boy's sexual power fantasies, then something wrong is going on.canadamus_prime said:Once could make the argument that it's art and therefor doesn't have to be realistic.
Frankly, hypersexualization in art bothers me a lot less when the creator just owns it - there's nothing wrong with drawing sexy women in sexy spine-breaking poses because you like sexy women in sexy spine-breaking poses. Exuberant sleaze is always better than phoned-in sleaze (for example, see Piranha 3D, which is both over-the-top sleazy and awesome fun). The pretense that you're actually trying for gritty realism while claiming that a female character has a legitimate reason for wearing something that no sane person would ever wear when fighting crime is insulting and offensive, particularly when you're supposedly reaching out to a female audience while treating female characters as sex objects.
Or, put another way, pure sleaze is fine, adult fun. Sleaze masquerading as gritty realism is a disservice to the characters and the readers.
And on a semi-related note, if you ARE going to draw your characters in poses that require spines to do things that spines do not do, you should be prepared for people to poke fun at the silliness of it all (I mention this because it really was intended as a light-hearted thread, and I'd prefer to try to keep it that way).