In the first session of the human
anatomy lab, where we were to begin our group dissection,
the instructor had us gather around the draped cadaver.
He explained that the body before us had been home to the
person who lived there. Although the person was no longer
there, we must respect that person by respecting the body,
and by being thankful for the gift of knowledge that person
was bestowing on us.
I have always been thankful to that anonymous
donor, and the instructor's words have stayed with me for
more than 40 years. Today, as I photograph the human body,
very much alive, I wonder at and am enthralled with the
life within it. I aim to convey through my photographs
of nudes my own sense of wonder and joy at seeing "the
person within" the body, in motion, strong, healthy, at
once both a creature of nature and also something very
special - an intelligent, complex and individual human
being.
My first attempt at photographing
the nude began in 1969, as a result of a workshop with
Lisette Model at the New School in New York. When Ms. Model
saw a photograph I had made of a friend's feet, she
said “Flesh. You should be doing flesh.” I
did some "flesh," but
when I compared my first nude photographs with the
photographs of Edward Weston and Ruth Bernhard I didn't
feel I was contributing anything new, so moved on
in different directions with my photography.
More than 30 years after that first
attempt, I was swimming in an abandoned quarry where everyone
swam and sunbathed nude. Set deep in the woods, the quarry
is now flooded with water darkened by leaf tannins.
The bodies of swimmers and sunbathers are highlighted by
the sunlight, accented by the darkness of the water, and
stand in contrast to the various textures of granite. The
setting and the people presented beautiful images that
brought back to me the words of Lisette Model, and I once
again began photographing "flesh."
Since I began photographing the figure
in nature, I have been fortunate to work with a number
of women who are comfortable in their own skins, who project
that feeling of comfort, and who have made me feel privileged
to photograph them in beautiful natural settings. Our photography
is very much a collaboration, with each model bringing
her own ideas, her own experiences, and her joy in being
alive and at home within her own body.