Philia/Fetish
Agalmatophilia
Short Definition
Agalmatophilia is an attraction to statues, dolls, mannequins, or other inanimate human-like figures. It is often considered part of object sexuality.
Detailed Explanation
Agalmatophilia is an attraction to statues, dolls, mannequins, or other inanimate human-like figures. It is often considered part of object sexuality.
People with this interest may be drawn to:
- The appearance of still, perfectly posed bodies.
- The lack of movement or response.
- The aesthetic or artistic qualities of the figure.
It can involve interaction with objects, fantasies about them, or transformation fantasies where one becomes the doll or statue.
The attraction can focus on real objects (statues or mannequins), fictional or imagined figures, or scenarios where a real person is immobile or statue-like.
This fetish overlaps with:
- Transformation fetishes (turning into a statue)
- Objectification fantasies
- Robot or doll fetishes
- Hypnosis or paralysis fantasies
### Origins of the Term
Agalmatophilia comes from Greek, where "agalma" means statue and "philia" means love or attraction. The word is a modern scientific/clinical term, not something used in ancient Greece. It began appearing in 20th-century sexology and psychiatry to describe specific types of attraction.
One of the most famous examples is the Greek myth of Pygmalion, a sculptor who fell in love with a statue he created. As a result, the fetish is sometimes also called pygmalionism.
### Agalmatophilia Statistics
- Less than 5% of fetishes focus on objects not related to the body (like statues.)
- There are only a few documented cases of this fetish, but many other publicized examples online.
- More than 175 people on FetLife are into or curious about this agalmatophilia.
Source
This entry is based on an article from the FetLife Kinktionary. The content has been translated and adapted for the Kinky Circle Wiki.