Allie Leggett by Jonathan Leder

18th December 2015 | Alice Taylor

Original Polaroids of former Miss USA Kentucky Allie Leggett as photographed by Jonathan Leder – a photographer we’ve admired for quite some time.

The book is published by Imperial Pictures Publishing, Art Directed by Amy Hood, signed by Jonathan Leder and is a very Limited Edition run of just 500 copies.

This is the second issue of the Limited Edition Solo Photo book series.

Pre-order the book here.

Megan Eagles

14th December 2015 | Alice Taylor

Photography by London based Megan Eagles has a nostalgia of vintage erotica with warm, muted tones offered by her Pentax MX 35mm.

“My work is an homage to 60s and 70s erotica and a drive to go back to times before Photoshop. I love tan lines and body hair and my intention is to present female sexuality, intimately from a female gaze. To give a glimpse into the world of female sexuality from a woman’s point of view and to show my subjects as strong and with sexual agency – something that is powerful and bad-ass.” she told Dazed.

Via: Megan Eagles, Dazed

Bastiaan Buijs Wind Up Sex Toy

23rd October 2015 | Alice Taylor

Check out this beautiful wind-up hand-blown glass dildo…

Via Dezeen:

This “aesthetically pleasing” glass vibrator by Design Academy Eindhoven graduate Bastiaan Buijs is powered by clockwork.

Buijs created the Grandfather Clock dildo from a hand-blown glass vessel so the brass and metal mechanism that causes it to vibrate is visible from the outside.

“People use vibrators all over the world but are most of the time they are ashamed about it,” Buijs told Dezeen. “With this vibrator, that feeling disappears.”

“Lust is as normal as feeling hungry or thirsty, and the attributes people use to indulge it need not be hidden away,” he continued.

Blown glass was also used by Michael Reynolds and Jeff Zimmerman to create a collection of “high-fashion sex toys”, with integrated accessories including horsehair tails and a candle holder.

Turning the wind-up key at the end of Buijs’ toy enables the vibrating mechanism in its tip to move backwards and forwards at a quick pace for four to five minutes.

Buijs hopes to reduce the stigma of women’s self-pleasure through apparatus, using luxurious materials such as ebony wood for the stopper to catch the eye of the opposite sex.

“Men are looking at this sex toy with a different feeling, and thinking holy f*ck this looks great,” said Buijs. “Grandfather Clock is meant to be on top of your night dresser, not hidden away inside it.”

Read more at Dezeen.

Zana Bayne

23rd October 2015 | Alice Taylor

I just had to show you some of the beautiful pieces by New York based designer Zana Bayne who makes artisan leather accessories for women and men.

From her website: 

Zana Bayne began her namesake brand in NYC with her debut handcrafted leather collection in 2010. She moved to NYC and made it her permanent residence in 2009 where she began developing her leather accessories and harnesses after graduating with a BFA in Conceptual Art from San Francisco Art Institute and having lived in Berlin for some time. What initially began as a project requiring Bayne to single-handedly create leatherworks out of her apartment has quickly grown into a brand which is produced by a team in Manhattan’s “Garment District”. Throughout the company’s growth, Zana Bayne has remained a fiercely independent female designer.

Zana Bayne’s designs are known for their quality and artisanship as much as for their shapes and how they play on the lines of the body. Her signature and defined hourglass silhouette evokes a sense of refinement accentuating the style of the individual wearer. The Originals Collection was first introduced in 2010 with its unique high-end take on S&M-inspired aesthetics. The brand has since expanded into glamorous seasonal and permanent collections of ornate and embellished leather works including skirts, bustiers, bras, and belts along with a Men’s collection and a complete line of handbags.

Her leather works have been worn by celebrities and icons of art and culture including Madonna, Marina Abramovic, Rei Kawakubo, Debbie Harry, Nicki Minaj, Lady Gaga, and more.

Follow Zana on Instagram & Twitter

via: Zana Bayne

Body Of Art

23rd October 2015 | Alice Taylor

Body Of Art is an eagerly anticipated book from Phaidon celebrating ‘the beautiful and provocative ways artists have represented, scrutinized and utilized the body over centuries’:

Examines art through that most accessible and relatable lens: the human body.

There are no directly comparable titles in the market; this is the only book to examine the subject in such depth and scope.

Diverse and multi-cultural, it explores the manifestations of the body through time, cultures and media.

Visually arresting, this book will surprise, inspire and inform art lovers everywhere.

Over 400 artists featured: works range from 11,000 BC hand stencils in Argentine caves to videos and performances by contemporary artists such as Marina Abramovic, Joan Jonas and Bruce Nauman.

Follows in the tradition of bestsellers such as The Story of Art, The Art Book, The Photography Book, and 30,000 Years of Art.

The images taken from the book are:

Orgy Composition (2008) by George Condo

Detail from untitled (double-sided), illustration for In the Realms of the Unreal (mid 20th century) by Henry Darger.

Pygmalion and Galatea (1890) by Jean-Léon Gérôme

Blue Nude III (1952) by Henri Matisse

Three Women (1921-2) by Fernand Léger

Still from Painter (1995) by Paul McCarthy

Via: Phaidon

Pirelli Calendar 2016

30th September 2015 | Alice Taylor

2016’s Pirelli Calendar has bypassed it’s traditional approach of featuring the world’s sexiest women and instead focuses on intimate portraits of 13 women who are shaping the world today, clothed and photographed by a female photographer. It’s about time.

Via Vogue:

It’s not just a step in a new direction, but a giant leap. Shot by Annie Leibovitz, who also lensed the 2000 edition, the calendar features Yoko Ono, Patti Smith, Serena Williams, Fran Lebowitz, Amy Schumer, Tavi Gevinson, Ava DuVernay, Natalia Vodianova, Agnes Gund, Kathleen Kennedy, Mellody Hobson, Shirin Neshat, and Yao Chen as the women changing society today.

“I started to think about the roles that women play, women who have achieved something. I wanted to make a classic set of portraits. I thought that the women should look strong but natural, and I decided to keep it a very simple exercise of shooting in the studio,” Leibovitz said in a release. “This calendar is so completely different. It is a departure. The idea was not to have any pretense in these pictures and be very straightforward.” Needless to say, those looking for tropically set nude photos are in for a surprise.

Linked Memories

30th September 2015 | Alice Taylor

A beautiful outdoor rope bondage shoot between Nicolas Guerin and Sheri Chiu (who featured in Quite Lovely, shot by Anne Constance-Frenoy).

The shoot is featured on Fashionising.com which describes the editorial ‘in between Nicolas Guerin’s and Sheri Chiu’s realms many stories have been written, and in their latest editorial work, an exclusive for Fashionising.com, they bond over memories the way they know best’.

Credits:
Photography: Nicolas Guerin www.nicolasguerin.com
Ropes: Jessica Rispal www.jessicarispal.com
Model: Sheri Chiu instagram.com/nakiesheri

Myla Dalbesio

14th September 2015 | Alice Taylor

‘Myla Dalbesio on how to photograph real women’ featured in Dazed digital:

American artist and photographer Myla Dalbesio is mainly known as a model, or, more precisely, the girl from the 2014 Calvin Klein campaign who sparked the debate on whether a woman of a UK size 12 should be considered a plus sized model. Her courage to start a conversation and to take pride in who she is brought her well-deserved recognition from all over the world. But, more importantly, there is more to Dalbesio’s input in the contemporary visual manifestation of feminism than just her looks. She’s been exploring femininity, sexuality, American mysticism and high school aesthetics through performance art, collage, writing and photography for over four years. Her recent photographic project “Some Girls” is an answer to the two dimensional standards of the fashion and beauty industry, an enchanting example of female gaze and a love note to all the real girls out there.

“What I am aiming to show is something very real,” explains Dalbesio. “It’s a snapshot of current femininity, of beauty that other women can connect with, that has no artifice or pretension. It’s a portrait of a new generation of feminists!” We asked Dalbesio to take us on a tour of her creative universe and share the secrets of how to shoot real girls.

GRAB YOUR FRIENDS AND CREATE SOMETHING TOGETHER

“I had a couple girlfriends (also models) who had been asking me for a long time to shoot together. Once we finally made it happen, I realised how much I loved the experience. Going to a friend’s apartment, having a cup of coffee and catching up, creating something together. I wanted to do it again, so I started shooting more friends, and the project began to evolve and take shape.”

CREATIVE PROJECTS ARE A GREAT WAY TO MEET NEW AND INSPIRING PEOPLE, AND VICE-VERSA

“Most of the girls are friends, someone I know and love, who inspire and understand me, although some of the girls are (or were, I should say) strangers, girl crushes I found on Instagram or knew of from the downtown NY scene. I like that I can use this project as a path to meet and interact with more interesting women. It’s really important to me that the girls I work with are multi-dimensional. I need to be able to talk to them while we shoot, I want to be able to connect with them on a personal level. That kind of connection plays a big role in how the photos turn out. If we aren’t vibing it will show in the photos. When I’m casting I look for confident girls that have something going on, something to say.”

RESPECT OTHER MODELS AND THEIR BOUNDARIES

“I try to never pressure anyone into doing something they are not comfortable with, I always ask permission, and if anyone shows slight hesitation I let it go and move onto a different shot. Because I shoot on film and the girls can’t see what it looks like until later, sometimes I’ll take a quick picture on my iPhone to show them what it looks like. If they don’t like it, I don’t shoot it. I also try to be very vocal about what I like about them, what I think looks beautiful. I have an advantage with that though, because I am a woman. Sometimes those kinds of compliments can come off in a different way when they are coming from a man.”

To see the full article hop over to Dazed.

Slow Motion Clouds

8th September 2015 | Alice Taylor

I’m so in love with the work of Carlos JGM who creates beautiful, nostalgic photographs with his old film camera.

He’s just returned from his travels and uploaded some photographs which make me want to go back on holiday! I especially love the skinny dipping ones!

You may be seeing more of Carlos’ work soon… hint hint.

Via: Slow Motion Clouds

Growing Pains

26th August 2015 | Alice Taylor

An interesting essay taken from the April 2013 issue of Dazed, as part of the Last Shot archive series:

Israeli-born, NYC-based artist Rona Yefman loves to flirt with the line between reality and fantasy. In the mid-90s her youngest brother Gil became her muse as she embarked on an intimate documentation of his unique adolescence, during a period of struggle and recovery for both of them. Isolating themselves from the conflict zone in which they were raised, the siblings created a private dream-world, fuelled by dress-up and psychological games. As they rejected societal and familial norms, their lives became a real-life version of Jean Cocteau’s infamous tale of sibling love and poison, Les Enfants Terribles. Yefman’s project spans 14 years, and includes an intimate look at Gil’s sexual transformation into life as a female, and his eventual re-transformation back to life as a biological male. A chronological photobook of the images, Let it Bleed, published by Little Big Man soon.

“This picture was taken around 2001 in our garden, while our parents were on vacation. As far as I remember, out of boredom we spontaneously took our clothes off and took naked photos under the grapefruit tree – a favourite spot. The  picture was taken with a cable release – it’s hiding under my feet! 

The project, “Gil and I”, is largely about relationships, inventing oneself in the world, and not accepting reality that you don’t feel you fit in. It’s about the connection and the difficulty of growing up. There’s a lot of confusion when you’re young because you’re not sure exactly what you’re doing or how it will turn out. But I’ve learned from Gil that no matter what you can still dance and play and  be together. We created a fantasy world that actually became the reality of our existence. The camera is really a good tool for learning self awareness, and through taking pictures we were discovering ourselves, creating characters, and telling a story. It was about creating a tension between the image and the viewer. For as much as this project is a personal representation of our lives, it’s also about the viewer’s mind and imagination.

The first images were shot in a tent made of bedsheets, where Gil and I spent much of our time. It was like a womb, the start of our journey. Some of the project was shot when during a time when it was not safe to do what Gil was doing – to live as a woman in public – especially in Israel. But our parents just accepted the way she was and supported her.

I’ve never been sure what it means to be a female – I’ve always resisted the traditional gender roles and aesthetic – so I related to Gil and supported her to fulfill her fantasy. But the transformation process doesn’t happen in one day; you have to live through it. The way Gil put it during an interview that we did then was: , “…It’s a bit like breaking apart everything you’ve been raised on, and everything you’ve understood, to really achieve a state of basic chaos, of not knowing anything, even who you are”…

After a while, Gil decided to make the journey back to living life as a male. Ultimately he told me that the prison of the female body is no different than the prison of the male body. 

As a protagonist Gil is a natural. I feel immense appreciation for his braveness, the greatness of his talent and inspiration, his generous collaboration and his endless support. Thanks to our close relationship and continuing dialogue all those years, we managed to do this work. Today, through his life and work as an artist, Gil continues to search for ways to live life outside of this prison.”

Via: Dazed

Hair, There & Everywhere

25th August 2015 | Alice Taylor

I’ve spotted this image floating around on Tumblr a few times and can’t find who the photographer is. I think it’s from a vintage erotic magazine like Playman.

Anyway, I love it! Especially the untamed bushiness.

Via: Partial Boner