Template:Featured article
From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia
(Difference between revisions)
Revision as of 09:00, 28 October 2007 Jahsonic (Talk | contribs) ← Previous diff |
Revision as of 09:10, 28 October 2007 Jahsonic (Talk | contribs) Next diff → |
||
Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
Also check the Allen Jones category at the blog [http://lemateurdart.wordpress.com/category/jones-allen/ lemateurdart] | Also check the Allen Jones category at the blog [http://lemateurdart.wordpress.com/category/jones-allen/ lemateurdart] | ||
+ | |||
+ | To conclude, a 2002 photograph [http://www.sudsandsoda.com/notes/allen_jones.jpg] of Allen Jones's table sculpture. | ||
<p align="right">[http://www.artandpopularculture.com/Template:Featured_article?title=Template:Featured_article&action=edit edit] | <p align="right">[http://www.artandpopularculture.com/Template:Featured_article?title=Template:Featured_article&action=edit edit] |
Revision as of 09:10, 28 October 2007
"Vintage style risqué photos by Bob Carlos Clarke from a version of the book Delta of Venus published in 1980 set to "You Do Something To Me" by Marlene Dietrich recorded in 1939 with the Victor Young Orchestra." --Youtube via sensotheque
Bob Carlos Clarke was good friends with the artist Allen Jones. They shared the same interest in rubber fetishism and sexual objectification [1] and Clarke also re-interpreted the table sculpture of Jones's 1969 Chair, Table and Hat Stand in 1987 with Many Nights and in 2004 with the piece Total Control.
- "It was Jones who tried to put Carlos Clarke off using rubber-clad women in his photographs, as they appeared often in his own paintings. Clarke had been introduced to this rubber fetish while at college by a man known simply as the Commander, who published a quarterly magazine for devotees of rubber wear. (The Commander had developed a taste for rubber while serving as a frogman in the Royal Navy, during which time he had become very attached to his diving suit.) [2]"
Also check the Allen Jones category at the blog lemateurdart
To conclude, a 2002 photograph [3] of Allen Jones's table sculpture.