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Naked New York

Naked New York

List Price: $35.00
Your Price: $35.00
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: "I decided to go to extremes..." -- Piercer's Apprentice
Review: "Those who make their dress a principal part of themselves, will, in general, become of no more value than their dress." ---William Hazlitt. I agree that this is a fascinating and well done book, but I do not agree with the standard comparison of this book to a "road accident" or other "I shouldn't be looking at this..." sort of experiences. I, too, like the photographer, am fascinated by people and what makes them tick and how they live and, yes, what they look like... Including what they look like naked. Folks looking for some sort of erotic thrill will not likely find it herein. Folks looking for hot "model-perfect" bodies in the buff will also be disapointed. But those who are wondering, or have wondered who people are-- people they see or meet walking down the proverbrial street-- will find that this book provokes more questions than anything else. I want to know more about these folks, more than just the one or two word sentences on the jacket. What were they thinking before posing? Why did they pose in the first place? What statement to they make about themselves and their place in the world by posing clothed and nude? I quote the author from the intro: "I photographed each person clothed and naked in order to show the two sides of the same person, the public as well as the private. The clothed version, as they are seen every day in society, is only part of the truth." Similar to this idea is the book, "Self Images: 100 Women."

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Very interesting
Review: A lot of people would think this is quite a boring book, but I found it fascinating to see how much clothing changes someone's appearance. It just reinforces the idea that we're all naked under our clothes.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: NAKED IS NATURAL
Review: Friedler shows to fine effect in this book the contrasts between our public and private selves. I really appreciated what the 30ish woman (a brunette social worker) had to say about her reasons for posing. Kudos to her! Granted this book speaks to the voyeur in each of us. But it also shows how liberating it is to be naked and proud.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Not Just Your Usual Norton Anthology
Review: Greg Friedler succeeded in getting over 70 ordinary New Yorkers to pose for him, both clothed and naked, in this strange but intriguing book. The subjects are all photographed in the same fashion. They apparently showed up for the shoots wearing street clothes, were photographed in them and then photographed "naked." Friedler explains the difference between the words "nude" and "naked", and I think he is correct here. "As I see it, photographing someone naked is about trying to get at some kind of truth, whereas photographing someone nude is linked more to sexual gratification, eroticism, or our conventions of beauty." The subjects to a person all stand looking straight-on and unsmiling into the camera. They are all shot against an ugly brick wall and lit with unflattering, shadowless flat light. Ranging in age from 19 to 75, they are for the most part white with some black models and and a couple of what job applications might label "other." There is a pregnant woman, a grossly overwight woman, skinny folks, a breast implant or two, tall, short, et al. As the photographer says in his definition of "naked", there's not much pretty here. And being "naked" certainly is a great equalizer. A walk through a steam room or communal shower proves Mr. Friedler's theory of equality. All we know about the models is their occupations and ages. While there are a couple of upper income types here-- a pediatrician and an attorney, for instance, most of them are at the other end of the pay scale-- school bus driver and cashier-- to name two. Perhaps they had less to lose by baring their all. There are some occupations on the edge here, transexual karate instructor, porno star, prostitute, dream interpreter, closet queen-- whatever that means--junkie-- I thought that was a condition rather than an occupation--piercer's apprentice, erotic masseur. Then there is a limo dispatcher aka New York's most tattooed man.

While these photographs show the influence of both Richard Avedon and Diane Arbus, the differences are obvious. Avedon for the most part shot unsmiling celebrities looking straight into his camera against a white background. Friedler obviously goes one step further or several feet downward for the full monty here. Arbus apparently did some of her work without the cooperation or knowledge of her subjects, something she should have been ashamed of. Friedler, on the other hand, had the full cooperation of everybody concerned.

This book generates a lot of questions. How did Friedler select his subjects or weed out the bad apples, to mix a metaphor? (How could there be any bad apples in this 20th Century Eden shoot?) Age, sex, occupation and race must have entered into his decision but he doesn't tell us that. Could this project have been so successful in a much smaller, city or town, say Columbus, Georgia or Dayton, Ohio? Did the subjects tell their friends and family about their afternoon of exposure or wait to be discovered at the bookstore? Why did the models do this? Two or three models say why on the back cover of the book, and the photographer has some ideas on the subject as well. I suspect there may be as many different answers as there are people here.

What impressed me most about this book is that the Norton Company, that staid keeper of truth when it comes to college literature, is the publisher. That says volumes-- speaking of which, Mr. Friedler has done a similar work for LA and London. Lady Thatcher naked? Wouldn't it be great if Friedler could do a series like this for U. S. Senators or big city mayors or CEO's of big corporations? Imagine the books he would sell.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Oh, go on, take off your clothes for my camera....
Review: How we have all walked down the street and wondered what people look like without there clothes on. Well here is a book that does just that! Can't wait for Naked Miami, I will be first in line...

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Dull and Repetitious.
Review: I was looking for Spencer Tunick's work, and somehow this book came up in the search instead. I wasn't careful enough looking at the description, comments, etc. So, I ended up buying it.

Aside from the disappointment of not getting what I was hoping for, I find this book rather boring and monotonous. Of course, this could have been author's intention to put all the subjects into a similar setting and underline the idea that these are ordinary people from the streets, however this doesn't make these images any more compelling or interesting for myself. I still find the book dull and repetitious. And it was twice the disappointment for myself.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Sometimes there really are new ideas in photography
Review: Picking up Naked New York for the first time, I expected some nice B&W photos, perhaps even some edgy, fringe of the village stuff, but I did not expect to see something I have never thought off before. His idea is simple, that all of us wonder what other people look like naked. His book is a series of excellent photographs of average people, seeming as if they had just walked in off the street, first clothed and then naked. Greg Friedler knows one of man's dark secrets, that we all feel we are hiding something. Seeing the same people you met on the street, you eat next to in restraunts, you work beside...naked, is truely a revelation


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