FIRST PERSON: My Conversation with Spencer Tunick

EDITOR’S NOTE:

Work / Family Caution! 

THIS ARTICLE MAY NOT BE APPROPRIATE TO OPEN AT A BUSINESS OFFICE OR AROUND CHILDREN.

The subject of Spencer Tunick’s artistic photos is the nude figure, gathered in groups, sometimes in massive groups. These images may be inappropriate for some work situations or for family viewing. The nude figure in art is as old as art itself and is considered in artistic circles as nature’s most beautiful creation. These photos are not sexual in nature but are about unusually good photography, beauty, and design plus human interaction.

PLEASE do not scroll down to view if nudity offends (you, your coworkers, your boss or any family members).

Thank you.

 

Photographer Spencer Tunick turns thousands of au naturel bodies into environmental sculptures. (Article by Jack Atkinson)

I met Spencer Tunic outside of a gallery opening, one night in the Chelsea Arts District of New York City. I had just seen an exhibition of his unusual approach to photography. He told me, if people see his work as sexual, they don’t understand what he is trying to accomplish? These happenings are about photography, beauty, composition and flowing movement, using humans as the music, always nude. He posts signs telling about his project, in the city where he is shooting to attract the people. Participants tell Tunic the experience is a very cathartic… literally, no “body” is perfect and the experience reinforces their being comfortable in your own skin.

When viewing Tunic’s photos, the sea of natural bodies catches our attention, but seeing people sculpted into human cityscapes or landscapes makes the photos intriguing. Tunic’s provocative images are controversial, but they also speak to all of us in some way, the part of us seeking reinforcement for our self-image and for better human connections. His photographs/photoshoots are always respectful to the individual volunteer and to the group.
Spencer Tunick in front of the Gaasbeek’s Castle on July 9, 2011.
Tunick’s request for volunteers never fails to attract thousands who want to participate in his mass of humans completely in the buff. Why do people want to be involved? They want to accept or celebrate their bodies and to experience this once-in-a-lifetime experience. All participants say it’s “freeing”, with nothing to hide and with all physical imperfections exposed to the world. In these mass nude photographs, the anxiety of being nude disappears as the crowd disrobes.
(Source: Photographs were first published in the Huffington Post and some text was inspired by Priscilla Frank’s writing, in the same publication. Please go to their link (below) for their complete story, with more details and more photographs.
Spencer Tunick at Mexico City’s Zocalo square on May 6, 2007.

 

Spencer Tunick at Mexico City’s Zocalo square on May 6, 2007.

 

Spencer Tunick at Mexico City’s Zocalo square on May 6, 2007. A record 18,000 people took off their clothes.

 

Spencer Tunick  in the northern Portuguese village of Santa Maria da Feira on September 13, 2003.

 

Spencer Tunick in downtown Munich on June 23, 2012.

 

Spencer Tunick in front of the Sydney Opera House on March 1, 2010.
Spencer Tunick at San Sebastian’s Kursaal auditorium on April 22, 2006.
Spencer Tunick in downtown Munich on June 23, 2012.
Spencer Tunick at the Ernst Happel soccer stadium in Vienna on May 11, 2008.
Spencer Tunick in front of the Sydney Opera House on March 1, 2010.
Spencer Tunick in the northern Belgian city of Bruges on May 7, 2005.

 

Spencer Tunick in the Europarking building in Amsterdam on June 3, 2007.
Spencer Tunick on the Aletsch glacier on August 18, 2007 a Greenpeace campaign highlighting climate change.
Spencer Tunick pillow fight in front of the Gaasbeek’s Castle on July 9, 2011.

 

 

 

Spencer Tunick Saatchi Gallery in London on April 15, 2003.
Spencer Tunick taken at Hot Springs New Mexico

(Source: SpencerTunic.com / Some photographs and the source for some of the text was the Huffington Post. Please go to their site, {link below} for the complete story, more details and more photographs. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/100-women-just-got-naked-together-at-the-republican-national-convention_us_578cc902e4b0867123e1bf86 )

The Day I Got Naked for Spencer Tunick (City of Hull, UK) by Hannah Tomes

Standing naked in the center of Hull in the small hours of the morning is not something I ever expected to be doing. But that’s where I found myself on Saturday, wearing nothing but my own skin, painted blue, alongside 3,200 other like-minded people, shivering slightly in the dawn breeze.

As soon as I heard about Spencer Tunick’s vision for his latest artwork, Sea of Hull, back in March, I registered to take part. I’m not even from Hull – I’m a recent graduate living in the countryside outside York – but I couldn’t pass up the experience of posing naked for a world famous photographer.

For the uninitiated, Tunick creates “living art” all over the world by directing crowds of naked people through urban and natural environments – then photographing them. Ahead of its year as UK city of culture, Tunick wanted to use the curves and flowing nature of the human form to imitate a flooding of Hull’s city streets. The resulting photos will go on show at Ferens Art Gallery in 2017.

The idea of seeing myself nude on the wall of a gallery appealed on a primal level. I’ve never felt ashamed of my body, and see nothing wrong with stripping off in the name of art. The body should be celebrated, not shamed.

So packing our bags with old clothes, towels and what felt like a lifetime’s supply of baby wipes as if we were off to Glastonbury, my (very reluctant) boyfriend and I set off for Hull just after midnight. Each car we passed on the almost-empty M62, every bleary person we bumped into at Goole services, held a question for us: were we going to be seeing them naked later?

Arriving at Queen’s Gardens under cover of darkness at 3 am, we signed in and went to pick up our tubs of oily blue body paint. Chatting to other participants, I fluctuated between extreme nervousness and an almost giddy enthusiasm – although I soon realized I wasn’t alone in that. What struck me was the variety of people queueing up. Although I felt young at 22, I never felt singled out. The reasons people gave for being there varied too: some thought it would be a laugh, others were art enthusiasts, and one man told me he was acting from a subconscious desire for exhibitionism. Not so subconscious then.

The longer we waited to undress, the further my brain ventured into panicked overdrive. I was silently bombarding myself with questions: “Did I remember to shave my armpits?”, “Will people notice the freckle on my bum?” and the big one: “What if I’m dyed Avatar blue forever?” As it happens, my fears were totally unfounded; it was the best and most surreal morning of my life.

“You may now start painting your bodies. Smear it on like suncream. Get into every crack and crevice.” Tunick’s booming voice, amplified by the huge speaker system he’d set up, sounded apocalyptic at first and unleashed a ripple of nervous titters the crowd. Perfect strangers were asking each other if they’d missed a spot on their backsides, and filling in parts they’d missed – the camaraderie was like nothing else.

Slowly, I took my clothes off and let them drop to the grass. I was now standing absolutely naked in a park, making conversation with two men I’d met minutes beforehand. I dipped my hands into the paint pot and started rubbing it over my breasts. It was unexpectedly slimy, gliding over my skin smoothly, like a second skin. I was surprised too by how quickly you embrace the nudity and shed any embarrassment. Whoever said the British were prudes?

An early morning cyclist almost fell off his bike as he caught sight of us and Tunick took to the speaker system once more to scold some voyeuristic types lurking around the park’s edges. But as we reached our first photo location, the Rose Garden, the seriousness of the event sunk in and the laughter died out. We were making something that could potentially live on in Hull’s memory for years. We were putting our stamp on the art world.

As we took his direction, Tunick transformed a disorganized crowd of civilians into beautiful art objects. We were asked to look forward and upwards, no smiling or laughing please, to make his photograph as serene as possible. We became a sea of silent, blue monoliths, facing an almost invisible lens. We became water flowing through a city previously flooded by it. And although we moved as one, each of us felt anything but anonymous – a powerful combination in the current climate.

Lying on the pavement at the final location, a street in the city center, was the closest I’ve ever been to an absolute stranger’s body, yet the experience wasn’t sexual in the slightest. Instead, I felt moved to be involved in this one-off homage to Hull’s maritime history. I’d urge anyone to strip off for Tunick if they ever get the chance. Even if my boyfriend and I are still picking blue paint out of each other’s ears two days, and multiple showers, later.

Hannah Tomes’ social media post.

 

One photo from Spencer Tunick’s Sea of Hull series.

(Source: The Guardian • See their coverate at:  https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2016/jul/11/i-got-naked-for-spencer-tunick-sea-of-hull-photographer)

For more creative and sensentional posts visit our art blog category!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *