..February 2010 East River, New York..
Striptease Burlesque
“Most of these women have day jobs.”
I first stumbled upon the New York burlesque scene in 2004. Burlesque shows would take place in the backrooms of small downtown bars. For $5, you and 75 others crammed into speakeasy type rooms to watch Dirty Martini, Julie Atlas Muz, Little Brooklyn, and Amber Ray perform stripteases on broken down wooden stages. The stripteases ranged from elaborate sensual fan dances in lush costumes to in your face bump ‘n’ grind.
The broken down wooden stages still remain but the number of people who attend these burlesque shows have grown exponentially in a short time. The performances have spilled over from the backrooms to the entire city. Performers from all over the world now travel to New York to be seen on big stages ringed with velvet curtains and mock stages in the backroom of bars.
My interest in photographing burlesque performers wasn’t to highlight striptease. The nudity wasn’t what attracted me. What grabbed my attention was the characters and satire each performer brought on stage.
The majority of these women have day jobs. Hours after riding the crowded subways home from work they would be tassel twirling in front of a raucous New York crowd.
The purpose of my portraits was to show the persona of each performer. I wanted an intimate glimpse away from the stage and crowd. As if their character were walking the streets of New York at noon or midnight.
..June 2005 New York..
My friend, who I’ve known for 2 years, came to my home for the first time yesterday. She glanced at my place, remarked “I can’t believe you live in a place like this. It’s neat and civilized.”
That set me back a bit. I’m 31. I live in a neat home because in college I lived with 4 random people. I didn’t know their names. I slept on a dirty concrete floor in the sunroom portion of the apartment. I had no furniture, ate cans of string beans most nights, and owed $60,000 in student loans. In the winter I slept with a ski hat on because the wind came through cracks between the windows.
After graduation, I toured with rock bands for 2 years. Even though they were the biggest rock bands in the world, we criss-crossed the country on a tour bus. Staying in cheap hotels when not sleeping on the bus. Living on a bus with 4 rock stars is far from a glamorous life.
Three days into this journey I realized rock stars are as boring as I am. They put their pants on and off, go to the bathroom, and stress about responsibility like I do.
I wore most of the same clothing those 2 years. It didn’t matter what I looked like. There was no one to impress. We spent the majority of our time staring at an endless landscape of concrete strip malls that infest the Midwest. Countless daydreams about being in New York rather than at a pit stop in Iowa looking at truck drivers with missing teeth. We lived in close quarters on a bus for months, but we all felt alone in your hearts.
Now I’m 31. I live alone in a house built in the 1920’s. It was bought from a gangster. My home is clean, with enough furniture to make one person comfortable. The rooms are dominated with the colors red, black, and white. With not much furniture and tall ceilings, there is plenty of room.
My living room consists of a black couch, circular red chair, skinny black metal lamp, large tv with sound system, wooden coffee table with a chess set, red candles, and a zebra print area rug covering a portion of an untreated wooden floor.
In the corners there are props taken from a fashion campaign I shot, an old cracked wooden chair, and a guillotine. The long narrow windows are framed with red curtains.
The walls are lined with my photos mostly of rock stars and fashion models, framed as murals. Obviously the photos are dark. Most are provocative. Some nude. The main wall has a large mural of Jane’s Addiction lead singer Perry Farrell. It’s a sentimental photo, taken on the first night I toured with a real band. To the left is a photo of Marilyn Manson. Taken seven years later, it’s identical to the Perry Farrell photo. On the end is a blue toned photo of Radiohead guitar player Jonny Greenwood.
Randomly throughout the rooms I’ve hung hand painted Venetian masks. Most have been used to photograph nudes in different parts of the world.
My home is neat considering there isn’t much in it. I don’t know how to cook. The only food in my house is chocolate chip cookies and cans of soda. I’ve never sat at the kitchen table for a meal.
The bathroom is the most problematic room. The walls are lined with pastel pink ceramic tiles. Apparently the gangster had a soft side to his personality. The tiles are completely hideous. I’ve kept the bathroom the way it is so I can lock myself in there if I get lazy or take bad photos. It’s incentive to work hard. The only silver lining is the spacious shower stall. It’s large enough to shower and walk around. If I bite my lip and close my eyes, I can imagine not being surrounded by pastel pink ceramic tiles.
Yes, I’m 31. I photograph rock stars and fashion models for a living. And I live in a clean home. Why? Because the years prior I lived like a resident of a monkey cage at the local zoo. And yes, famous rock stars and beautiful fashion models live similar lives as you. They take their clothes off like you do and their shit smells just as bad as yours.
..October 2009 New York..
..Sleeping hot dog vendor outside the Museum of Art in New York. Didn’t buy a hot dog from him. Took notice of the army photo in back of the sleeping vendor. Men with large machine guns.
On sunny October days, I walk to escape the dreary reality of war. I think about all the people I spoke with in Japan who lost the majority of their family’s during WW II in the Tokyo fire bombings and atomic bombings. I don’t like the glorification of war because it doesn’t explain the reality of war.
..September 2007 New York..
..September 2009 New York..
I finished a big assignment for a British magazine. The shots were approved this morning and now a feeling of relief. I washed and waxed my car to relax after.
Feels nice to make money. Felt like 1998 for a couple of minutes. The days when pay checks came in the mail 3 times a week from several different companies. The phone rang constantly for work I wasn’t looking for and we didn’t even have cell phones back than.
The sun seemed to shine brighter 11 years ago. Maybe because I was still in my 20’s….
Now finding the next assignment.
..September 2001 New York..
Shot from the 65th Street fishing pier in Brooklyn. About 5 or 10 minutes after the second plane hit. A warm sunny azure blue morning. Was at home getting ready to cover New York fashion week.
Headed to the fishing pier because of it’s view off the coast from the south. The pier became packed with people. People running out of their homes and fishermen who had already been fishing. Fishermen continue to fish after the buildings fell. Was like a suspended reality. Life continued that day and night in a strange space.
My pregnant downstairs neighbor worked at the World Trade Center and escaped in time. A Chinese man down the block never came home. A candle burnt outside the apartment building he lived in. Next to the candle a small photo of him. A candle was lite for many months after. He never returned home.
I live 5 miles away from the World Trade Center. I could smell the fire smoldering in my neighborhood until the middle of December. Was a bizarre time in New York. For months the streets seemed solemn. Everyone in a suspended disbelief. Bombarded with 24 news coverage for 3 months also didn’t help. Regular tv didn’t resume for 2 weeks. Even than it was kind of hypnotic.
I left for a weekend trip to Rhode Island 5 weeks after. It was the first trip I took after September 11th. Was good to get out for a day. Just 15 minutes outside the city I could smell a crisper air. The sunshine seemed brighter and landscape endless.
Seems like 10 minutes ago but also a very long time ago. 8 years.