Skin (English edition April 2025) by writer Mieke Versyp and illustrator Sabien Clement is the second book in two weeks that I have read that features “life drawing” (or live modeling for art classes, which often seems to feature nude models, endlessly fascinating as a practice to non-artists). The first, Life Drawing, by Jaime Hernandez, plays it for laughs, and Skin decidedly does not, as it exposes--makes “naked”--the initially fragile self-perceptions of our mc, Rita.
Rita is an empty-nester, middle aged, her mother having passed away recently, so she's a bit emotionally vulnerable and raw, but she nevertheless throws caution to the wind to model nude. There she befriends Esther, an artist who likes to draw the feeling she gets from the figures more than the “correct” photographic representation of the figures. The soul of the figures. So two souls become entwined, and they learn to accept each other and themselves.
True to Esther’s approach, Sabien Clement’s approach to illustration is more emotional, reflective, pencils and crayons and watercolors, sometimes sketchy and immediate, such as is consistent with a life drawing class, inviting us into the friends’ intimacy. And friendship is what it is, not romance, in case you were wondering. They learn together to accept "the skin they are in."
I sometimes had to work to engage with the slow, reflective pace (just me, world events, whatever, probably), but I liked it and recommend it.