Archive for the ‘nu’ Category

Ali Alisir – Virtual Bodies

www.alialisir.com, virtualbodies.blogspot.com and on photo.net

“My exhibition called “Virtual Bodies” aimed to question the place of “the body” and the individuals in consumer society.
The body has been replaced the soul in today’s consumer society. And the body is surrounded by the myths of health, diet, theraphy and desire. We are constantly invited to re-discover the bodies by Mass media which converted them into an investment object. For example; the temperature of a model in a woman’s magazine is the same as a modern furniture. This is an “ambiance” temperature. New sexuality is hot and cold just like the hot and cold colors game in “functional” housing. The erotism is not in the desire but in its indicators.
Sexuality is no longer just in sexuality, but also in many other places; media, cinema, literature. Likewise the politics is not only in politics but has spread to all areas. To religion, art, philosophy and to science. Today, football is a little politics, art is a little magazine and the magazine is a little art.
(…)
The models exhibited are transformed into virtual bodies and artificial androjin identities which no longer has any side to be desired. Cloned bodies and the heads found a body in other individuals. This irony is an artistic criticism of how we are transformed into similar copies in a cultural and mental state of cloning.”

exhibited at EkavArt Gallery in Istanbul, more info on the project’s website; via sweet-station


Elinor Carucci – My Children

elinorcarucci.com

via FlakPhoto


Brian Shumway – Black Girl

www.brianshumway.com

Modeling is an addiction.” Johanie, 24, aspiring model

“Black Girl is an ongoing portrait series about young black women in the New York City area who aspire to be models of all types. It grew out of a perceived need to expand my work beyond just documentary and into portraiture and ‘fashion.’ So, I began to shoot models, contacting them through a modeling website. As I did, I noticed something. We all realize, at least in some way, that the mainstream fashion world is white-washed, especially at the high-fashion end, and successful black models are very rare by comparison. What I found was that even though there are so few black professional models, literally thousands and thousands of young black women (just within 50 miles of my zip code, according to a search on this one site alone) are striving to attain that dream, or at least their interpretation of it.

Despite an economy that has hit the fashion, advertising, magazine, and retail industries quite hard, the women here have high hopes and remain steadfast. They work hard, often juggling school, work, family and relationships to find a few hours a week to squeeze in a shoot, or perhaps two if they’re lucky. The women here are a cross-section of real people who want to do anything from traditional fashion, print or commercial work to eye-candy or even artistic nudes. Their interests are varied, as are their looks and beauty, but this one dream ties them all together. Peering out from behind that dream are some fundamental human issues that touch upon identity, body, beauty, sexuality, fantasy, race, and the drive to be recognized in a culture obsessed with fame and celebrity. I hope that these portraits can in some way contribute to their pursuit.”


Jessica, 22, The Bronx


Twila, 21, The Bronx


Heaven, 21, Columbus Circle, NYC


Giovonni, 24, Collingswood, NJ


Aliya, 23, The Bronx


Macee, 18, Brooklyn

via featureshoot


Aaron Nagel

www.aaronnagel.com and his blog.

via fecalface.com


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