From trauma to triumph, queer artist and activist Maxwell Alexander continues to redefine what it means to create from the body, the soul, and the scars. His latest collection, Red Velvet, is more than a visual experience—it’s a resurrection.
Red Velvet by Maxwell Alexander: The Series of Erotic Masterpieces You Can Now Own – Homoerotic Art – Presented by Duncan Avenue Studios
This new chapter in Maxwell’s explosive Cocky Cowboy series is a testament to erotic power and emotional resilience. Drenched in lustrous reds, glossy black leather, cold steel, and the weight of lived experience, these images don’t just seduce—they speak. And now, for the first time, collectors can own the prints as luxurious museum-quality canvas editions, perfect for lovers of fine art with edge, soul, and a raw erotic heartbeat.
Born and raised in an oppressive, orthodox environment, Maxwell endured not only the emotional erasure of queer identity, but the physical violence that often comes with being visibly different. Red Velvet was born from that crucible. These aren’t just pretty pictures—they’re sacred wounds wrapped in silk and sweat.
“I survived by becoming my art,” Maxwell says. “Every time I was told to hide my queerness, I added another layer of leather. Every time I was hurt, I picked up the camera. Red Velvet is me reclaiming the very things they tried to beat out of me: sensuality, power, softness, pleasure.”
The result? A series of jaw-dropping, high-contrast portraits of the hyper-sexual, ultra-confident Cocky Cowboy—his cock ring gleaming, his visor futuristic, his body a living sculpture of erotic freedom. This is where male boudoir photography becomes fine art. Where queer masculinity takes the spotlight and demands to be admired, collected, and remembered.
Each print in the collection is crafted on rich canvas to amplify the textures and tones of every flexed muscle, every glint of chrome, every drop of sweat. These aren't just prints—they’re artifacts of queer liberation. Perfect for collectors of homoerotic art, luxury wall décor, and those who understand the political power of unapologetic sexuality.
“Red Velvet is not just about sex,” Maxwell adds. “It’s about reclaiming a body that was once a battlefield. It’s about turning desire into resistance. And for the first time, you can take that message home, hang it on your wall, and let it stare down anyone who ever told you to dim your light.”
Don’t miss your chance to purchase these photo prints from Duncan Avenue Studios Gallery on Fine Art America and own a piece of erotic, emotional, and visual history. Because when the patriarchy has always tried to erase your story, putting it on canvas is the most luxurious kind of rebellion.