Hair is considered sexually attractive on women’s heads, but ugly and ‘unfeminine’ when on their bodies. But body hair emerges at a woman’s sexual maturity, so, like menstruation, it speaks of burgeoning sexual maturity, and reproductive ability, but archetypal images of Venus tell us that the sexually mature female body needs to be stripped of any evidence of its hormonal readiness to reproduce. And so our patriarchal Venus hands women an inescapable paradox: that they should be sexually available yet ashamed of the things that signal their sexually mature bodies. From her motherless birth to her hairless bloodlessness to her passive objectification, what Venus images seem to symbolise is the suppression of women’s real sexuality.