terry richardson

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Postby clit » Sat Jan 01, 2005 7:09 pm

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<!--sizeo:20--><span style="font-size:12pt;line-height:100%"><!--/sizeo-->It’s Terry’s World and You’re Just Afraid of It<!--sizec--></span><!--/sizec-->
<!--sizeo:15--><span style="font-size:12pt;line-height:100%"><!--/sizeo-->The pride of Hollywood High makes good being bad<!--sizec--></span><!--/sizec-->
by Arty Nelson
<!--coloro:red--><span style="color:red"><!--/coloro-->It’s Thursday afternoon in Terry Richardson’s studio on the Bowery in Lower Manhattan: Pantera’s cranking, fashion models parade in and out, and judging by the staff’s nonchalance, one suspects that this is just another day in Richardson’s life, albeit with little of his recent and highly documented adventures in penetration and pearl necklaces. These days, it’s good to be New York’s favorite rail-thin, well-inked photo sniper. Terryworld (Taschen) and the limited-edition Kibosh (Damiani) were both recently released in conjunction with a savagely attended opening at the Zeitgeist-central Deitch Projects in Soho, during which thousands of rabid downtown kids gleefully braved a human stampede and near-inhuman temperatures for a glimpse of Mr. Richardson’s latest photographic foray into a land where the photographer’s own penis acts as a kind of sword/torch guiding him through the sometimes troubling and oftentimes hilarious wilderness of his unrepentant sexual psyche.

Today, however, it’s all about casting for the next Sisley campaign, Richardson’s 14th to date, although, in fact, he’s playing hooky. Rocking his notorious standard-issue nerd glasses and muttonchops, he clowns with his buddy and fellow photographer Kenneth Capello, whom Richardson is shooting for I.D. magazine’s special New York City issue. Watching one of the most sought-after image-makers in fashion and pop culture work is a study in frantic energy. He bops to the pounding metal, bonds with his subject, playfully does whatever he can to coax that one flash that will capture the deeper currents stirring behind the human mask.

Terry Richardson first busted onto the fine-art scene in 1998 with a show at the seminal Alleged Gallery in New York titled “These Colors Don’t Run,” which coincided with the publication of his first book, Hysteric Glamour. “There was a huge, 4-foot-by-6-foot portrait of Terry with cum all over his face, and then in the back there was a shot of a toothbrush jammed in a butt that was blown up to 12 feet by 30 feet,” says Alleged’s erstwhile maestro, Aaron Rose. “The thing about Terry that you have to remember is that he’s got a total Beavis and Butt-head sense of humor. The first time I saw the work, Terry spread like hundreds of 8-inch-by-10-inches out on his kitchen table. Ten years of shooting people being wild on the Lower East Side. I couldn’t believe how vast it all was. Terry creates the ‘kids being bad’ feeling as well as anyone who’s ever mined that particular terrain.”

Like Ed van der Elsken, Larry Clark and Nan Goldin, Richardson is obsessed with creating a body of work that captures the rarefied world inhabited by his peers and cohorts — an ongoing series of intimate but not precious portraits of urban life gone completely amok, the amalgam of which constitutes an impromptu autobiography. Whether it’s sloppy lovers in party costumes French-kissing and slurping at each other’s nipples, heavy metal kids rolling around in the grass, or fun and games at nudist colonies, what separates Richardson from the photographers who have preceded him in this genre is his terminally randy irreverence. Where the others call it quits at “aftermath,” Richardson literally serves up the after-poop, or the jism as it streams across the cheek and breasts. Richardson is forever in search of the outlandish, never wavers when confronted with bad taste, and often quite remarkably manages to convey a sense of joy, exhilaration and sometimes even sheer poetry.

“It’s hard to compare Terry to other current artists because almost everyone working in the same genre is copying him,” says Dian Hanson, Richardson’s editor at Taschen. “Terry is the innovator, the father of fashion-porn/porn-fashion, in perfect step with America’s current ‘reality’ obsession, or rather America’s current manipulated-reality obsession. Relevance? He’s a guy using his charm and current cultural cool to rewrite a less-than-ideal adolescence. And more power to him. The guy excels in his fashion career and through sheer balls builds an equally admired side career casting himself in every man’s porn fantasies. Most people would edit out these urges; Terry just bulls ahead.”

Upon encountering the man and his subtly well-composed wild sides, here are a few things to bear in mind: Terry Richardson is the progeny of Bob Richardson, the ’60s Blowup-era fashion photographer, and Annie Lomax, Bob’s former wife and stylist. That makes for a colorful back story, but it also means that while many of us were watching The Partridge Family and then going to bed, Terry was more or less running wild in the streets. “Basically, I went from Paris and New York, and my dad being really successful to my dad totally losing his career and my mom being in a car accident which left her permanently brain-damaged,” says Richardson. “Next thing you know, I’m losing my color TV and we’re on food stamps and welfare. Literally, from the penthouse to the park bench.” Richardson made his name and found fame in downtown New York but, in fact, spent much of his formative “punk rock youth” years in Hollywood — a Hollywood High Sheik who landed in New York with 800 bucks, a portfolio, a Pentax snapshot camera and three Black Flag cassettes. “To me, my best pictures happen when I capture the spirit of Black Flag’s Nervous Breakdown EP. The years I spent at places like Cathay De Grande and the Starwood [seminal L.A. punk joints] were where I believe my aesthetic was formed,” Terry smiles. “My tweaked Yale MFA, so to speak.” Richardson keeps coffee in his cupboard by shooting fashion campaigns for the likes of Miu Miu, Gucci, YSL, APC and Tommy Hilfiger and, in his spare time, makes art photos that have recently begun featuring himself, fully engorged, engaging in a dazzling array of tantric maneuvers with a variety of willing partners.

“I used to always want to shoot nudes, but when I’d say to models, ‘Hey, do you want to do this?’ they’d be like, ‘No way, why don’t you get naked?’ and I’d be like, ‘Forget that.’ Then I tried to get men involved in the process, but that was always weird, too. So then I got this idea that since I’d always got worked up and would, like, pop a boner when I was shooting women that maybe they’d get more into it if I let them start shooting me,” says Richardson. “So now I’ve got all of these rolls of myself where I’m being ordered around by women while they take nudes of me, all of which turned out to really be the catalyst for this whole most recent body of work.”

After sending a class he teaches to see the Deitch show, the art critic Jerry Saltz had this to report: “‘Way politically incorrect’ is right, but also maybe not. When we got to the Richardson show, which could be called ‘400 Blows’ because, as you probably know, it’s all-blowjobs-all-the-time, the boys dutifully all said it was ‘sexist’ and ‘bad’ while, at first, the girls sat back. Then they all started carrying on about how it looked fun: ‘Big dicks, blowjobs, cum on your tits.’ They were all delighted.”

The show clearly presents Richardson as a crafter of moods. “It’s really almost like what I’m doing is ‘happenings’ more so than photo shoots.” And more and more, especially with the Kibosh sessions, the actual snapper has, at times, become an almost secondary concern.

“The goal is to get the best image possible, and if that means that somebody standing off to the side gets a more candid shot than me, then I’m all for it,” Richardson laughs. “Which doesn’t always make my clients happy if I’m working on a job, but the way I see it, it really doesn’t matter who is actually pressing the shutter, because they’re my images. It’s a picture that I’ve created. I don’t work off lights and angles; I work off emotions. A mood that I create.”

Ever since he’s inserted himself as a predominant aspect of the subject matter, Richardson’s work has taken on a more conceptual bent, a kind of post-studio photo analogy to the likes of Jeff Koons, Takashi Murakami or Maurizio Cattelan. Richardson’s recent hardbound offerings, Terryworld and Kibosh, combine to form an extensive survey of his work to date. Taschen’s Terryworld is the R-rated miniretrospective incorporating work from throughout Richardson’s myriad chapters, including some of the tamer takes from the new erotic work. Taschen elected to pass on Kibosh as a book by itself. Explains Hanson: “What Benedikt Taschen wanted was an artful and complimentary mixture of Terry’s fashion and candid work. What Terry wanted was to see himself boffing pretty girls in an art book. I was the referee. I had to keep pushing for more fashion and pulling the poop pictures out of the ‘yes’ pile each time Terry’d sneak them back in. In the end, I think we’re all pretty happy and that the book really does represent most of Terry’s complex and conflicting artistic nooks and crannies.” As for the more X-rated Kibosh, the Italian publisher Damiani stepped up and put out a limited edition of 2,000 after Taschen passed on the project.

“The Kibosh work is really a result of me getting clean [off drugs] and really getting into the high that I was experiencing from the sex,” says Richardson. “I mean, even one of the meanings of the title actually refers to me exorcising my inner demons and, hopefully, putting them to rest forever. To give it the ‘kibosh’ so to speak.”

Is it porn? Or is it art? Who even really knows anymore? Where the lines aren’t heavily blurred, they’re dotted. When I tell Richardson that my wife, after approaching his work with more than a little apprehension, laughed out loud at several of his images, he breaks into a grin.

“You see, I love when I can get a smile out of someone with an image I’ve made. I’m interested in bringing a little joy into people’s lives. Art doesn’t have to be so serious; I think it’s way more about moving people than needing to make them furrow their brows.”<!--colorc--></span><!--/colorc-->
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Postby Timeoil » Mon Jan 03, 2005 2:37 am

It would be cool to see his process...
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Postby clit » Tue Jan 04, 2005 10:13 pm

nameman,
is <a href="http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&category=378&item=4516913969&rd=1" target="_blank">this</a> any good?
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Postby clit » Tue Jan 04, 2005 10:21 pm

<!--QuoteBegin-Saltchrome+--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Saltchrome)</div><div class='quotemain'><!--QuoteEBegin-->It would be cool to see his process...<!--QuoteEnd--></div><!--QuoteEEnd-->
Fucking documentary!!
Harm will film it 8)
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Postby nameman » Thu Jan 06, 2005 5:25 pm

<!--QuoteBegin-clit+--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(clit)</div><div class='quotemain'><!--QuoteEBegin-->nameman,
is <a href="http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&category=378&item=4516913969&rd=1" target="_blank">this</a> any good?<!--QuoteEnd--></div><!--QuoteEEnd-->

Honestly, I don't know. I've never had the desire to spend that much money on one of his books. I'm sort of an anti-spender for items this rare. If he'd publish more of them and charge $49.95 or something, I might bite. Sorry I couldn't help.
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Postby clit » Sat Jan 22, 2005 9:15 pm

<!--QuoteBegin-dont+--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(dont)</div><div class='quotemain'><!--QuoteEBegin-->Does Terry have a lot of participation in the making of Vice magazine?<!--QuoteEnd--></div><!--QuoteEEnd-->

One Less Vice
<!--sizeo:9--><span style="font-size:12pt;line-height:100%"><!--/sizeo-->A few hours after receiving the e-mail announcement that the Vice store in Silver Lake would be closing, I arrive at Sunset and Sanborn on a recent Saturday to see if the boutique bearing one of the most popular brand names in hipster culture will depart quietly, groaning the soft moan of other declining mom-and-pop shops, or if it’ll go down with the self-important panache its clientele projects at every opportunity.

At about 2:30 p.m., I enter the one-room storefront, which for the past three years has anchored Sunset Junction’s mini–Melrose commercial strip. Indiscriminately parked racks of everything-must-go designer clothes, mountainous stacks of moving boxes, and what appears to be a last-minute installation of pink and yellow galoshes all fight for meager amounts of floor space with employees sporting knowing grins of raison d’être cool and a herd of customers who desperately desire to possess that look.

Not that these customers don’t have it already, mind you — no trucker hats or faux-hawks here. They’re almost as cool as the "50-70% Off" merchandise they’re sifting through — especially the Scylla-and-Charybdis Valley girls planted at the front of the store in homemade off-shoulder blouses and pointed-toe pumps who are rummaging through hangers while double-fisting Charlotte Lorday dresses and ignoring polite requests to "excuse me" because the ubiquitous iPod buds in their ears drown out not just the mediocre drum & bass blasting the entire store, but needless social interaction as well.

The closing announcement came as somewhat of a surprise. You’d have figured that if anyone could survive moribund economic activity in this hipster quadrant, it’d be Vice, which formed as an underground zine in Montreal in the mid-’90s and has since become a small, Brooklyn-based media empire involved in the career rise of numerous internationally known artisans, from photographers Terry Richardson and Ryan McGinley to Brit-rap storyteller The Streets. If this primary troth of cool, relied upon by young irony-saturated fake nihilists to maintain their vaguely depraved art-fashion cachet, was closing its Silver Lake outlet, could it spell the beginning of a hipster sunset on Sunset? If that’s the case, Vice couldn’t give a drowning rat’s ass, discounting the Silver Lake store as expansion baggage left over from the dot-com boom, baggage that had less and less to do with Vice’s blueprint for media takeover.

"Honestly, we didn’t start the magazine to sell $300 pants," says one of its reps, when reached by phone in the 718. Instead, like any company that helped earmark and popularize an aesthetic, Vice’s plans for world domination are content-based. They involve front-burning movie and music deals in which the magazine’s editors are writing films for Spike Jonze’s production company and pushing records that Beauty Bar DJs will soon tell you they heard way back when (the shit-hot U.K. grime-rap compilation called Run the Road being the most immediate example).

But of course the DJs and the ghetto-fabulous slummers will always have to look the part. So when I return to the store on Sunday afternoon, mere hours before its final curtain, Vice’s business is still booming despite the biblical rain trying to wash this particular corner clean. Some racks are noticeably thinner — the Morphine Generation tees and sweats seem to have been attacked by the designer trash–conscious — while others spotlight an expiring 15 minutes: "Free t-bag with every t-bag purchase" reads a sign beside an overstock of Day-Glo aerobics skirts.

In the very front of the store is the kind of mix-and-match pile you see on a sidewalk at the end of a moving sale — or an eviction. Boxes of old videotapes and catalogs, a knife set, a computer monitor and printer, a tub of plaster.

"Are these for sale?" I ask incredulously.

"Anything in particular you interested in?" answers the clerk with the faraway eyes and the five o’clock shadow. He’s been spying on my note-taking since I entered, but at this moment his retort doesn’t seem filled with the privileged knowingness of hip brand association. He’s just another hourly worker ready to go home.
—Piotr Orlov<!--sizec--></span><!--/sizec-->
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Postby Þ¬µåðèíñôøüß½ » Fri Jan 28, 2005 10:50 pm

<a href="http://www.blackmailmag.com/terry_richardson_gallery.htm" target="_blank">Image</a> Image



<a href="http://www.adc.ch/_big/2003/design/bronze/264.jpg" target="_blank">http://www.adc.ch/_big/2003/design/bronze/264.jpg</a>
<a href="http://www.fecalface.com/openings/details.php?image_id=1050" target="_blank">http://www.fecalface.com/openings/details....p?image_id=1050</a>
<a href="http://www2.onunterhaltung.t-online.de/c/20/20/24/2020244,pt=self,si=13.html" target="_blank">http://www2.onunterhaltung.t-online.de/c/2...self,si=13.html</a>
<a href="http://academic.reed.edu/anthro/faculty/mia/Images/Gallery/Pics/YSL-DeadWoman.jpg" target="_blank">http://academic.reed.edu/anthro/faculty/mi...L-DeadWoman.jpg</a>
<a href="http://academic.reed.edu/anthro/faculty/mia/Images/Gallery/Pics/YSL-OvenWoman.jpg" target="_blank">http://academic.reed.edu/anthro/faculty/mi...L-OvenWoman.jpg</a>
<a href="http://www.studiopesci.it/content_it/photogallery-scheda.aspx?id=141" target="_blank">http://www.studiopesci.it/content_it/photo...eda.aspx?id=141</a>


<a href="http://www.artnet.com/Magazine/reviews/walrobinson/robinson9-17-04.asp#9" target="_blank">http://www.artnet.com/Magazine/reviews/wal...on9-17-04.asp#9</a>
<a href="http://www.artnet.com/Magazine/features/cfinch/finch9-2-1.asp" target="_blank">http://www.artnet.com/Magazine/features/cf.../finch9-2-1.asp</a>
<a href="http://www.artnet.com/Magazine/reviews/henry/henry9-22-00.asp#1" target="_blank">http://www.artnet.com/Magazine/reviews/hen...ry9-22-00.asp#1</a>
<a href="http://www.artnet.com/Magazine/people/Mbarone/barone12-13-00.asp" target="_blank">http://www.artnet.com/Magazine/people/Mbar...one12-13-00.asp</a>



[size=24]<!--coloro:violet--><span style="color:violet"><!--/coloro--><a href="http://www.xlrecordings.com/broadcast/~purple/" target="_blank">http://www.xlrecordings.com/broadcast/~purple/</a><!--colorc--></span><!--/colorc-->
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Is http://www.terryrichardson.com working for anyone else, is the site down?
<span style='color:blue'><span style='font-size:30pt;line-height:100%'>丱來〥ㄐㄘㄞ</span></span>
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Postby clit » Wed Feb 02, 2005 12:30 am

<!--QuoteBegin-Þ¬µåðèíñôøüß½+--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Þ¬µåðèíñôøüß½)</div><div class='quotemain'><!--QuoteEBegin--> <a href="http://www.studiopesci.it/content_it/photogallery-scheda.aspx?id=141" target="_blank">http://www.studiopesci.it/content_it/photo...eda.aspx?id=141</a> <!--QuoteEnd--></div><!--QuoteEEnd-->


:lol: thanks, didn't see that
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Postby Þ¬µåðèíñôøüß½ » Sun Feb 13, 2005 6:44 pm

<!--QuoteBegin-loony toad quack+--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(loony toad quack)</div><div class='quotemain'><!--QuoteEBegin-->does anybody know what's wrong with it?
it says im forbidden to look at it :cry:<!--QuoteEnd--></div><!--QuoteEEnd-->
No fucking clue?
I haven't been able to get on for two months now.. FIX IT T-BONE :!:
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Postby clit » Fri Feb 18, 2005 12:34 am

[b]While you guys wait for his site to cum back,
check out the NEW <!--coloro:deeppink--><span style="color:deeppink"><!--/coloro-->T-Bone Richardson<!--colorc--></span><!--/colorc-->
http://www.benetton.com/sisley/
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Postby clit » Sat May 07, 2005 11:25 pm

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Terry Richardson, the gangly, genial photographer from the Lower East Side known for his sexually provocative snapshots, has become a fashion power player. His secret weapon? An instamatic.
<!--sizeo:9--><span style="font-size:12pt;line-height:100%"><!--/sizeo-->BY DAISY GARNETT<!--sizec--></span><!--/sizec-->
<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue"><!--/coloro-->Terry Richardson is a 36-year-old with a handlebar mustache, long sideburns, and a collection of odd tattoos, including one on his belly that says "T-bone" and one on his heart that reads "SSA". He's tall and a bit bandy, and he's likely to be wearing faded jeans, Converse sneakers, and giant, slightly tinted aviator glasses. He's seventies-looking, not in a retro hipster way but in a Starsky & Hutch way, with a touch of Burt Reynolds thrown in for good measure. He's charismatic and famously attractive to women, despite his somewhat cartoonish demeanor. And much of the time, he carries a small snapshot camera with him, just like one you might take on holiday to record your adventures, which is more or less what he does for a living.

While most fashion photographers travel with a phalanx of good-looking young assistants wielding lights and oversized lenses, tripods, film bags, and reflectors, Richardson arrives on location with a couple of instant cameras, one in each hand, and nothing else. He doesn't design the lighting, doesn't plan his shoots, forgoes Polaroids, and never choreographs poses. He likes to work with little fuss and no entourage. And yet, in the last few years he has shot campaigns for Evian, Eres, H&M, Tommy Hilfiger, Anna Molinari, A|X, Sisley, and now —one of the biggest scores in the fashion world—the fall campaign for Gucci.

"You know how cameras are supposed to symbolize sexual power?" asks the creative director Nikko Amandonico, who has worked with Richardson since 1998 on the Sisley campaigns. "Well, Terry is a big man with a tiny camera. He looks funny. He makes jokes with his camera, and that's how he gets the shots."

Richardson has wielded his point-and-shoot on Faye Dunaway, Catherine Deneuve, Sharon Stone, the Spice Girls, and a great many famous models. His work has been exhibited in galleries in London, Paris, and New York, and he has been published in magazines as varied as French Vogue, Harper's Bazaar, i-D, Vibe, The Face, and the Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue.

"At the beginning," Richardson says, "people laughed at me because I was using snappies. Sometimes, a celebrity would look at my camera and go, 'Oh, I've got one of those.' I'd feel like handing it to them and saying, 'Well, you take the pictures then.' But I like using snapshot cameras because they're idiot-proof. I have bad eyesight, and I'm no good at focusing big cameras.

"Anyway," he continues, becoming more animated, "you can't give your photograph soul with technique. I want my photos to be fresh and urgent. A good photograph should be a call to arms. It should say, 'Fucking now. The time is ripe. Come on.' "

These days Richardson is enjoying what many in the fashion world call a moment. Designers and stylists are entranced by the way he gives a glossy fashion spread a palpable—and somewhat coarse—sexual punch. "He's a modern Helmut Newton," raves Emmanuelle Alt, the fashion director of French Vogue.

"We'd run the gamut of slick, finished photography," says Douglas Lloyd, the art director behind the Gucci campaigns, about the decision to use Richardson. "We wanted a rawer energy and more sex appeal, and that's what you find in Terry's work."

"Terry is very much about sex," says Gucci designer Tom Ford, "but what I love about his work is that his pictures jump off the page at you." In fact, Richardson has already been confirmed as the photographer of choice to shoot the next go-round for Gucci, which will feature Ford's spring 2002 collection.

This is what happened the day in June when Richardson received the news:

He spent the morning in his studio on the Bowery—a long space with a white shag pile carpet at one end, a workstation at the other, and a full-length mirror in between—catching up on phone calls and editing prints with his associate, Seth Goldfarb. Benedikt Taschen, the iconoclastic art-book publisher, was in touch about the possibility of doing a book. Harper's Bazaar called about booking him to shoot a fashion story for Glenda Bailey's first official issue. Then Tom Ford called.

In the afternoon, a band named the Centuries came over to the loft. They were wearing gold and silver lamé outfits, and Richardson photographed them as part of a series he is doing for the French magazine Self Service. The early part of the evening he spent with Lenny Kravitz, discussing the next day's shoot, when Richardson would photograph Kravitz for his new record cover. Then he went to Sophie Dahl's rooftop party. At the party, a young stylist asked him if he was the son of Bob Richardson, the renowned sixties-era fashion photographer. "Yep," Richardson said, biting into a piece of mozzarella, "son of Bob."

"How is Bob?" asked the stylist. "He's well," said Terry, enjoying his supper. "Still working. Still wakes up with a hard-on every day. Pretty good for 74 years old." He demonstrated what he meant with a breadstick, took a snapshot of someone with his Contax, then told a story about a curious wet dream he had had only the night before.

Two days later, I watched as he packed his cameras and his suitcase for a trip to Paris, where he would visit his girlfriend, Camille Bidault-Waddington (a stylist who was named one of the world's most fashionable women by Harper's Bazaar), and shoot his next project, a couture story for French Vogue, with the model Angela Lindvall. Not too shabby, I remarked. "I know," he said, grinning. "I'll be like, 'Hello. Hello! Only me. Bonjour!' "

"I don't think Terry can believe his luck," says the British stylist Cathy Kasterine. "A lot of photographers become frustrated once they've shot a few big campaigns and done their fair share of fashion stories. They don't know what to say about fashion anymore. But not Terry. Every photograph for him is an adventure." She starts to laugh.

"Sorry," she says, "I was just thinking of how he looked when we first worked together. It was during his American-professor phase; he was wearing huge corduroy trousers and an English tweed jacket. This was in the bowels of Florida, at a nudist camp, where we were shooting an accessories story for Nova magazine. But that's Terry. He makes you laugh; his photographs make you laugh."

Still, much of the work Richardson is famous for is provocative and confrontational: a close-up of Richardson performing cunnilingus; a nude portrait of a bruised young woman crying on his bed; a close-up crotch shot of a woman wearing pink polyester underpants. One of his early assignments, a startling advertising campaign for the British designer Katherine Hamnett, captured a young woman staring at the camera with a frank, unashamed look. Her legs are open, showing a profusion of pubic hair. The photographs, after causing a stir in Britain, where they were published, provided Richardson with his first big break and foreshadowed the controversial "kiddie porn" Calvin Klein campaign.

As disturbing as some of his images can be, Richardson himself seems to generate general goodwill from everyone he works with, from corporate giants who entrust him with their commercial campaigns to notoriously fickle editors-in-chief. "You can be afraid of Terry and his work if you look at the stuff he does privately," says Alt. "As a woman, I found those pictures really scary. But I think he can approach chic very easily. And he is very sweet and charming—he's very fun to work with."

But how, the industry wondered, would his informal snappy style sit with the Gucci team—Douglas Lloyd, Tom Ford, stylist (and recently appointed French Vogue editor) Carine Roitfeld, hairdresser-to-the-stars Orlando Pita, and makeup artist Tom Pecheux? The Gucci campaigns of the recent past had all been famously polished: Mario Testino's sleek and perfectly accessorized beauties, Alexei Hay's yoga-in-stilettos desert series, and the postmodern Marilyn-inspired Kate Moss, all creamy and bleached, by Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin.

"No shoot is without its process," says Lloyd. "Terry hadn't worked with the Gucci team before, so it took a while for him to develop a shorthand with them."

Richardson admits that it was a struggle at first. He wasn't getting good work done in the studio, so instead he took a small team back to his hotel room. He began simply messing about with his cameras, using the models and a bit of available space between the door and the bed. The result is arresting, simple, and direct: two girls and a guy, photographed singly and together, in the corner of an anonymous, cheaply carpeted, white-walled room. Something is either about to happen or has already happened—and that something is clearly sex.

"Terry was just like, 'Okay, this is the campaign.' I don't know which images he shot where, with what cameras," says Lloyd, laughing, "but Tom and I were thrilled with the results. It's rare that we reconfirm a photographer this early, but we booked Terry to shoot the next campaign before these ads even broke."

The Gucci shoot is a good case study of the Richardson technique. Almost every shot poses the question How did he get that? "You have to take a risk," Richardson says, simply. "That's how you get something beautiful. It's the most amazing feeling when you are shooting something that you know is good: It's like great sex."

And when it's not good? "Well," he says, "sometimes you have to do a little bit of cheerleading. But often things just happen. People like to perform in front of the camera." He stops and listens to himself. "Especially if I'm in my Speedo," he says, unable to resist.

Unexpectedly, I discover for myself how persuasive he can be. One evening, scheduled to look over some of Richardson's early work with him, I arrive at his loft late, my face freshly swollen and blue from a bicycle accident. He makes me an ice pack and shows me the large scar above his nose, the result of a fight whose outcome was decided with a broken bottle. Of course, he says, he has to take a quick photo of my ghoulish face. Of course, I respond, anticipating that he'll take one or two snapshots of me and my bruises in front of his white wall.

He begins by shooting a lot quickly, reloading film in one camera while snapping with another. He darts about, often sticking himself in the frame next to me. He doesn't issue instructions as much as express enthusiasm—and not the yeah, baby sort. "God, I love taking pictures," he says as he begins to find a line of energy between us. I am usually awkward in front of the camera, and I am self-conscious about my body, even on a good day, but within five minutes of the first frame, I've taken my top off. Why? Because he suggests it ("I love women's bodies," he says to me later, as in, Duh, well, of course) and because, amazingly for me, I feel comfortable. It's like we're in cahoots, spoofing what has gone on for years between photographers and their prey. And so, for whatever reason—Terry being Terry—he's created yet another series of images that might well make you wonder how he got a bruised woman, clearly not a model, to take her clothes off against a white wall.

In one sense, Terry Richardson was born to be a photographer. His mother, Annie Lomax, worked for years as a stylist, and his father's work in the late sixties and early seventies was as important as Richard Avedon's and Helmut Newton's in terms of changing fashion photography. The elder Richardson's photographs hinted at narratives in which the models became characters, and the viewer—cast as a voyeur—was used to complete the story. Although Terry's work does not look like his father's more iconic images (Bob's photographs are a lesson in composition, whereas Terry's work celebrates the accidental), they share a preoccupation with documenting their own experiences. "I don't know anything about fashion," Bob Richardson tells me when I track him down in Los Angeles by telephone. "I just liked taking photographs of people and situations," he continues, being deliberately deflationary.

And yet he and Lomax led a pointedly fashionable life for a time, traveling between Paris and New York and being part of that small circle of people who didn't just dabble in sixties grooviness but played an important role in creating it. The marriage fell apart when Bob Richardson, then 41, began an intense four-year love affair with a 17-year-old Anjelica Huston.

"Anjelica was cool. She was like an older sister," says Terry, when I ask him about his early childhood. "It was a funny time. I mostly stayed with my mom. I remember as a little kid looking out onto the terrace of our Jane Street apartment and seeing her making out with Kris Kristofferson." But their life wasn't jet-set for very long. After a stint in the West Village, Lomax moved to Woodstock, married a musician, relocated to Los Angeles, and finally settled in Ojai, California. The last move was triggered by a serious car accident she had in L.A., on the way to pick up her young son from one of his twice-weekly sessions with a therapist. "I was always getting into fights and being thrown out of school," explains Richardson. He pauses. "It was quite heavy," he says, referring to his mother's accident. "She was in a coma for three weeks, plus shortly after that my stepdad's record deal started to fall apart. Basically, our life became food stamps and welfare all of a sudden."

Among the glossy magazines on Richardson's coffee table is a mock-up of a book with the title Premature Ejaculation. It is full of photographs Richardson took when he was a teenager in Ojai. "My mom gave me a snapshot camera, and I took pictures for the fun of it," he explains. "I lived on Signal Street, and my best friend and I started a gang called the Signal Street Alcoholics"—hence the SSA tattoo. "My mom would come home and there would be twenty kids smoking pot and drinking and screwing. I was selling weed and playing in a rock band. I took the pictures goofing around. They're punk-rock snapshots. They look like the stuff I do now," he says proudly.

The photographs are much quieter than they perhaps sound, and although they have been taken with a steady hand, there is no trace of a show-off behind them. They are affecting images of kids hanging out, making out, getting high, and lying around. Most of the people in the photographs, Richardson tells me, are now dead from drugs and self-destruction.

"No one encouraged me to continue taking pictures. No one ever said to keep doing it," Richardson says without bitterness, "and so I stopped." He moved to Hollywood, worked as a busboy in an English pub, and played bass guitar.

Meanwhile, his father—whose own career had long since unraveled, ending in a battle with drug addiction, a period of time living on the streets, and struggles with schizophrenia—had moved to San Francisco and found work in telemarketing. Tired of L.A., Terry joined Bob and began to take photographs again. "I had done some photographic assisting in L.A. to make some money," he remembers, "and I thought, 'Fuck it. If these people can make a living doing it, so can I.' So I began taking pictures and getting a portfolio together. I would sit with my dad and edit film and drink red wine with some music on. My dad taught me cool things—like that you should always have a flashlight, extra batteries, and a corkscrew in your camera bag. One day he said to me, 'You should move to New York and become a fashion photographer.' "

And so he did. Not only that, he met and married a successful fashion model, Nikki Uberti. They became cult figures in the East Village, appearing in underground movies and taking off and returning from road trips to Middle America. The combination of their adventures, much of which Richardson captured and exhibited, and Uberti's gloriously unself-conscious approach to nudity, resulted in some of his most famous images.

"They were just pictures of her and of our friends and of our life," Richardson says about their collaboration. The carefree times, however, didn't last. The couple divorced in 1999, and later that year Uberti was diagnosed with breast cancer and underwent chemotherapy and a mastectomy. She has since become active in helping create awareness about the disease. Richardson is still visibly emotional about their relationship and keeps his thoughts about it private.

"I always take pictures of everything in my life," he says. "But I don't change the way I shoot if I'm working for a magazine. Of course, someone has done the model's hair, and, yes, you're selling a product if you are working commercially, but that doesn't mean the pictures aren't personal. My mood affects every picture I take. Every time I photograph someone, whoever it is for, I'm trying to get them to expose something about themselves, but I'm also putting myself in the picture, too. You have to make yourself vulnerable in order to capture something about the subject. You don't get it every time, but when you do"—Richardson pauses and shakes his head—"it's beautiful. There's nothing else like it."

Richardson's work—especially his earlier, grittier shots—has been labeled heroin chic, but the term is misleading. Richardson's photographs are celebratory; they're fun. He strongly believes that if you're lucky enough to have a babe like Frankie Rayder walking into the sunset in kinky boots and a black Ursula Andress bikini in front of you, surely you're going to encourage her to pull her swimsuit down a little.

When I ask him if he thinks of himself as a photographer or an artist, he laughs and says that he's a rocktographer. Asked when his last creative moment was, he says, "An hour ago," and issues a dirty laugh. "Who were you photographing?" I query. "I wasn't," he says, "I was by myself," and there is a glint in his eye. "When was the last time you got away with bullshitting someone?" I continue. "Right now," he says. "How often do you get away with it?" "Every day!" he replies with total pleasure. "Your fantasy?" I ask. "To direct a film," he says. He's already directed music videos for Death in Vegas, Primal Scream, and the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, all of which have firm cult followings. I ask him if the film will tell his story. "I guess," he says. "Yeah. I mean, I can't write a fucking postcard, but my dad says the thing to do is just to do it, so that's what I'll have to do. Just do it." "Who would play you?" I ask. "Billy Crudup," he replies without hesitation. Why him? He shrugs and takes a bite of his sandwich. "Because he's cute and he's got a mustache," he says. "It's as simple as that."<!--colorc--></span><!--/colorc-->
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Postby clit » Wed May 18, 2005 10:13 pm

<a href="http://ictv1.com/art/artbasel/taschen/terryrichardson/001.html" target="_blank">Image</a>[cl!ck]

<a href="http://www.puta.it/photos/gallery/index.php?Qwd=./Terry%20Richardson%20inaugura%20Kibosh&Qif=IMG_0045.JPG&Qiv=thumbs&Qis=M" target="_blank">Image</a>[cl!ck]

<a href="http://www.nocategory.com/photofull.php?photoid=5394" target="_blank">http://www.nocategory.com/photofull.php?photoid=5394</a>




BTW,
foot foot.. you posted a link from Terry's site for Whirlwind in that MUSIC thread by andret,
just wondering is his site working for you???
If not, do you have any idea why it's been down for more than half a year? :?
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Postby clit » Wed May 18, 2005 10:36 pm

Jesus, am I the only person that didn't know T-Bone Richardson did the art for the new HBMS album?


<!--quoteo--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE</div><div class='quotemain'><!--quotec-->DRE: Why did you call the album White People?

AUTOMATOR: A variety of reasons. The record cover was commissioned from a photographer named Terry Richardson. He is a well known fashion photographer who has done campaigns for everyone from Gucci to whatever but he also has a whole other side to him. If you see his vision combined with our music you might understand what I am talking about. The reason I don’t tell you what the cover means it because it means different things to different people. It’s kind of like The Simpsons because you can watch Homer Simpson bump his head or you can watch it on another level like political satire.
<a href="http://suicidegirls.com/words/Dan+The+Automator+-+Handsome+Boy+Modeling+School/" target="_blank">http://suicidegirls.com/words/Dan+The+Auto...odeling+School/</a><!--QuoteEnd--></div><!--QuoteEEnd-->
<a href="http://www.exclaim.ca/index.asp?layid=22&csid=6&csid1=3062" target="_blank">http://www.exclaim.ca/index.asp?layid=22&c...id=6&csid1=3062</a>
Image
Image
Image



BTW,
HBMS interviews are always a trip. :D
Also,
what do all of you think of the new shit?
I think it's definitely off da hook
(the line-up this time is just crazy=Mike Patton/Del Tha Funky Homosapien/Cat Power/Chino Moreno/El-P/Cage/RZA/Cedric & Omar of Mars Volta/Kid Koala/Jack Johnson/Alex Kapranos of Franz Ferdinand/though I hate those faggs from linkin park)
but their first cd, So...How's Your Girl?, is still my fave!
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Postby foot foot » Thu May 19, 2005 3:11 am

<!--QuoteBegin-clit+--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(clit)</div><div class='quotemain'><!--QuoteEBegin-->BTW,
foot foot.. you posted a link from Terry's site for Whirlwind in that MUSIC thread by andret,
just wondering is his site working for you???
If not, do you have any idea why it's been down for more than half a year? :?<!--QuoteEnd--></div><!--QuoteEEnd-->

yeah i haven't been able to get the site to work in a long time. don't know whats up.
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Postby PaulyDanza » Thu May 19, 2005 3:19 am

<!--QuoteBegin-clit+--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(clit)</div><div class='quotemain'><!--QuoteEBegin-->Jesus, am I the only person that didn't know T-Bone Richardson did the art for the new HBMS album? <!--QuoteEnd--></div><!--QuoteEEnd-->
I was unaware of this too.

<!--quoteo--><div class='quotetop'>QUOTE</div><div class='quotemain'><!--quotec-->
BTW,
HBMS interviews are always a trip. :D
Also,
what do all of you think of the new shit?
I think it's definitely off da hook
(the line-up this time is just crazy=Mike Patton/Del Tha Funky Homosapien/Cat Power/Chino Moreno/El-P/Cage/RZA/Cedric & Omar of Mars Volta/Kid Koala/Jack Johnson/Alex Kapranos of Franz Ferdinand/though I hate those faggs from linkin park)
but their first cd, So...How's Your Girl?, is still my fave!<!--QuoteEnd--></div><!--QuoteEEnd-->

great album besides 2 or 3 tracks. Fuck Franz ferdinand and Jack Johnson...The Del/Hiero tracks were my favorite.

--Nick
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