Last week I was very lucky to be invited to observe Selina Mayer on a shoot with model and photographer Jacs Fishburne, and be able to take some snaps of them both at work.
Marlene Dumas: The Image as Burden
Figurative painter Marlene Dumas is soon to have an exhibition at the Tate Modern between the 5th of February until the 10th of May. In anticipation and to give you a taster of her work to date, here are some of her paintings of nudes.
About the exhibition:
‘She is one of the most prominent painters working today. Her intense, psychologically charged works explore themes of sexuality, love, death and shame, often referencing art history, popular culture and current affairs.
‘Secondhand images’, she has said, ‘can generate first-hand emotions.’ Dumas never paints directly from life, yet life in all its complexity is right there on the canvas. Her subjects are drawn from both public and personal references and include her daughter and herself, as well as recognisable faces such as Amy Winehouse, Naomi Campbell, Princess Diana, even Osama bin Laden. The results are often intimate and at times controversial, where politics become erotic and portraits become political. She plays with the imagination of her viewers, their preconceptions and fears.
Born in 1953 in Cape Town, South Africa, Dumas moved to the Netherlands in 1976, where she came to prominence in the mid-1980s. This large-scale survey is the most significant exhibition of her work ever to be held in Europe, charting her career from early works, through seminal paintings to new works on paper.
The title of the exhibition is taken from The Image as Burden 1993, a small painting depicting one figure carrying another. As with many of Dumas’s works, her choice of title deeply affects our interpretation of the work. It hints at the sense of responsibility faced by the artist in choosing to create an image that can translate ideas about painting and the position of the artist. For Dumas it is important ‘to give more attention to what the painting does to the image, not only to what the image does to the painting.’’
Via: Tate Modern & The English Group
Jordan Sullivan

Having lived in London, Houston, New York City, and Mt. Vernon, and worked as a manual labourer, a touring musician, a dishwasher, an artist’s assistant, and a housekeeper for a psychoanalyst, photographer and writer Jordan Sullivan now seems to have settled in Los Angeles, California.
David Lynch: Couch Series

A beautiful full figure in ‘Couch series #11′ by David Lynch, 2008.
Via: Foxes in Breeches
David Lynch: Distorted Nude Series

A surreal series of photographs by David Lynch.
Via: ClickBlog
Erwin Blumenfeld

Profile of Bust (1947)
Via: The Quiet Front
Diana

Rather beautiful nude study by Francesco Maria Colombo.
Via: The Quiet Front
Wingate Paine
Photography by Wingate Paine from the 1967 Mirror of Venus photo book.
Herb Ritts
Another delicious figurative study by Heb Ritts.
Via: My Tingle Factor
Needle in a Haystack
This blog is full of beautiful photography of naked woman.
But this entirely naturalistic portrait of a man is truly wonderful. I have no idea who the photographer is.
Via: My Photographic Life
Rudolf Koppitz
Another lovely Art Deco-ish figurative study; this time by Rudolf Koppitz (titled Despair, from 1928).
Via: The Quiet Front
Deco Beauty
Such an elegant Art Deco study by Alexei Galushkov.
Via: 11C RVN 1969
Pierre Corratgé
Stunning study of female athleticism by photographer Pierre Corratgé.
Sheer & Wet
Quite Delightful is immersed in sensual and erotic photography, here’s a tantalising image we came across while researching opportunities.
If we’re researching on Tumblr, the images far too often aren’t credited I’m afraid.
This one is via: Les Beehive
Katherine Jane Wood’s Lace
Just an initial image from a self-portrait shoot that I started to play with yesterday.
I’m not yet quite happy with the results, but this one unretouched colour image is quite pleasing and can serve for now to suggest a hint of things to come.
Via: The English Group
Auguste Rodin
‘Lying Nude’ an appealing sketch by Auguste Rodin (1840, Paris – 1917, Meudon).
Via: My Tingle Factor