DITA VON TEESE, NOVEMBER 2005 SPANK ME, 2002 VINNIE
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DITA VON TEESE, NOVEMBER 2005 SPANK ME, 2002 VINNIE
SPANK ME, 2002 VINNIE JONES, 1999 Another peach of a commission (below). “It’s not a job. it’s an addiction,” wrote Carlos Clarke. “I could have entertained a fashionable class-A drug habit. But I chose instead to indulge an unfashionable dependence on A-class females” Carlos Clarke became friends with Jones (above) after he photographed the former footballer for a commercial His career took off in 1980 when he shot the photographs for an illustrated edition of Anaïs Nin’s book of erotic stories Delta of Venus, followed by Obsession (1981) and a stream of glossy coffee-table books, including The Dark Summer (1985) and Shooting Sex (2002). At times his work attracted heavy criticism. He responded: “It’s the feminists and the lesbians that should be supporting female nudes. The female fashion editors have colluded in the demise of their own sex by going along with the ludicrous charade of supermodels. Fashion poses a far greater threat to modern woman than pornography, with its wild demands that she conform to that freakish body shape.” Carlos Clarke was also renowned for numerous advertising campaigns, including ones for Levi’s, Smirnoff and Volkswagen, and is credited with revolutionising food publishing after documenting the then little-known chef Marco Pierre White in a series of photographs published in 1990 in a book called White Heat. Though he continued to sell his work to magazines throughout the 1990s – his candid images of drunken teenagers in passionate embraces were published in this magazine – he seemed to become DITA VON TEESE, NOVEMBER 2005 The American model and burlesque performer Von Teese (above) was the last big celebrity to be photographed by Carlos Clarke. This session followed in the style of his Love-Dolls Never Die series, featuring “strong, independent women who run the world” disillusioned: “After 30 years as a photographer I can say this business has got harder, more callous, less open and much more competitive. In the 1960s, photographers ranked just behind rock stars in terms of image. Now they’re way down the list, behind brawling footballers and provincial DJs.” Around the time of his death, he was busy preparing to open his Love-Dolls Never Die exhibition in Barcelona, and hanging photographs in one of Marco Pierre White’s new restaurants, Luciano. He was buried at Brompton cemetery in a non-religious ceremony in early April. A eulogy was read by Rupert Morris, a minister from the British Humanist Association: “In retrospect, the signs were there that he might choose one day to end his life in some sudden and violent way. His own work is full of allusions to such things, and many of you here may well have your own insights. For his wife, Lindsey, certainly, the manner of his death, although deeply shocking and wounding, was not entirely a surprise.” s A selection of Bob Carlos Clarke’s work is at Photo-London 2006, at the Royal Academy, 6 Burlington Gardens, London W1, from Thursday to next Sunday. Visit www.photo-london.com 14th May 2006 The Sunday Times Magazine 41 41