NEWSLETTER



DOS & DON'TS

If you ever want to hear the sound of time marching slowly to the grave, just unplug the jukebox at any bar on Third Avenue. Comments/Enlarge | See all


Women on bachelorettes are so crass and shameless it’s kind of like hanging out with a dozen Sarah Silvermans.
Comments/Enlarge | See all








Published July, 2009

HARRI PECCINOTTI


INTERVIEW BY MATHIEU BERENHOLC

Every photographer who’s made a career out of pressing shutter buttons in front of beautiful women owes a great debt to Harri Peccinotti. He was the first person to consistently capture the sexuality of everyday activities on camera: subversively pleasing sights like girls carefully sucking on popsicles, close-ups of butts on bike seats, and California beach bunnies unknowingly shot with telephoto lenses.

Harri was born in London in 1935. At 14, he dropped out of school to design album covers for the jazz label Esquire Records. In the 50s, he began working as an advertising photographer and eventually served as art director for glossy behemoths like Rolling Stone, Vogue, and Vanity Fair UK. But he will forever be remembered as the main brain behind Nova, a British magazine first published in 1965 that set new standards for both graphic and journalistic content by integrating ideas borrowed from the psychedelic subculture and underground press of the day.

In ’68, after completing an assignment in Vietnam, he photographed the now legendary Pirelli pinup calendar that paired love poems with photographic interpretations of the verses—alluring, tastefully shot women lounging around the Tunisian island of Djerba. Pirelli—and everyone in the world who wasn’t blind—liked it so much they invited him back the following year. This time Harri proceeded to up the raunch factor by featuring the aforementioned California girls in various states of undress.

Harri’s recent endeavors have focused on ethnographic reportage, filmmaking, and publishing books of his work. He also continues to shoot fashion and advertisements and is a photography consultant for the weekly French newsmagazine Le Nouvel Observateur. We met up with him in Paris in an attempt to wrest a few nuggets of wisdom out of one of the most talented men to ever hold a camera.


Vice: Bonjour, Harri. How did you become one of the greatest erotic photographers of all time?
Harri Peccinotti:
Honestly, I have no idea. I think it just happened by accident—by taking pictures of models with no clothes on. That’s how I did the ’68 Pirelli calendar. I don’t think there were any nipples shown in those calendars until the one I did, and even then there was only one nipple in it. Now there are crotches and God knows what everywhere. I’ve always been doing lots of close-ups, because I think it’s graphic, it’s getting closer. I suppose it becomes graphic when I’m doing it, and it’s the graphic side of the pictures that makes it erotic, not the other way around.

Lots of people cite Nova as one of the most influential magazines in history. Was there a particular impetus that inspired it?
It started as a sort of test for a particular market, which is why I had such great freedom. It was to see if there was a place for a magazine that treated women as intellectuals. I think it began with an awful subtitle, something like Nova: For the New Kind of Woman. Women’s liberation was going quite strong at the time.

It seems perverse to run naked photos of women in a women’s magazine, especially at that time.
Well, all of the women working at the magazine—lots of great writers, such as Germaine Greer—were feminists, but they were not antisexual. It’s not like they did not use their sex, obviously. They were pretty open. For instance, there was an American hippie sort of guy who photographed his wife giving birth. He made this explicit series from the beginning to the end, so I bought them, and the editor agreed to publish them. The magazine sold out in about ten minutes because people weren’t used to that sort of thing—especially men.

You were also one of the first to photograph and publish pictures of black models.
Yeah, I suppose. It happened quite naturally. I think all women are attractive. I couldn’t understand why there were no black models at the time.

Your subjects never seemed to be “perfect” like the supermodels of today.
No, I prefer it when they’re not. I think they are perfect, but not to some imaginary standard of size or shape. Like I said, all women are pretty attractive to me. The picture of the Japanese girl you chose was made for a makeup shoot in Japan. It was very hard to find real Japanese models in Japan; at the time, models in Japan were half-Korean or half-white, so she was not a model. She was an assistant of [Japanese fashion designer] Issey Miyake.

There was once an article in Nova that said something like “Let your hair grow!” Do you wish more women would abstain from shaving their armpits and nether regions?
Yeah, sure, I was fond of underarm hair and bushes. I quite like the idea of being hairy. I used to like these sort of earthy Italian and Spanish ladies who didn’t shave. It’s hard for me to photograph girls now because they all have pubic hair shaved into a heart shape and belly-button rings and tattoos.

Before we finish, I want to see if you’re willing to divulge your greatest secret: How did you make your models so comfortable? It seems like they would’ve done anything for you as long as you were holding a camera.
I don’t know. I’m not pushy. I’m just quiet. At that time I was roughly the same age as the models—at least sort of sexually connected to that age, so there were some things going on. Now I’m more like their grandfather’s age, but it still feels great.


Harri Peccinotti’s new book, H.P., collects over 40 years of his best work and is out now from Damiani.




1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | NEXT PAGE »



See all articles by this contributor

< PREV

Comments

Anonymous, on Aug 7, 2009 wrote:
is this some solo domino game i’ve never heard of?
Anonymous, on Aug 7, 2009 wrote:
How did he get such saturation of color on film?
Anonymous, on Aug 6, 2009 wrote:
im surprised that so many vice readers are into trannies
Anonymous, on Aug 6, 2009 wrote:
the first couple times i had sex i was so drunk the girls looked like that. haha. good times.
hi fructose, on Aug 6, 2009 wrote:
that makes it better. he probably didn’t see what he shot until two days later when the models were halfway around the world. it took more know-how to make sure you got things right the first time.
hi fructose, on Aug 6, 2009 wrote:
"his picture are amazing especially considering the fact that they didnt have didgital cameras and photshop at that time..."

oh yes, the days of in-camera photography. no instant gratification back in the day.
Anonymous, on Aug 6, 2009 wrote:
i wish there was a better word than- WOW.
Anonymous, on Aug 6, 2009 wrote:
did he just realize when he was a kid that was the man and just chilled real hard for the rest of his life?
dangerboy, on Aug 6, 2009 wrote:
this dude mustve led a sweet life
Vanzilla, on Aug 6, 2009 wrote:
his picture are amazing especially considering the fact that they didnt have didgital cameras and photshop at that time...
Anonymous, on Aug 6, 2009 wrote:
never seen green fingernail polish before and i think i could go a few more years before seeing it again.
Anonymous, on Aug 6, 2009 wrote:
No. 7 looks reanimated.
Anonymous, on Aug 6, 2009 wrote:
i like the idea of using boobs as an ashtray but where is she going to put it out?
place kicker, on Aug 6, 2009 wrote:
i just remembered that in the 80s women didn’t really care as much if their bottom teeth were in line. as long as the tops were it was no big deal. remember that? when peopled would only get braces on their top teeth?
Anonymous, on Aug 6, 2009 wrote:
These make me think of photography books from the 70s and 80s that my father had. I remember looking through them one afternoon when I was relatively young and thinking, "Wow, there are boobs in here!" Being that my parents rarely let me watch anything above PG-13, it was a revelation. Several years later I loved the books for reasons only dealing with photography.
Anonymous, on Aug 5, 2009 wrote:
"i like how that picture progresses from bra to no bra"

and it only took one frame!
Anonymous, on Aug 5, 2009 wrote:
number five is awesome. that girl has really interesting, sharp features
Anonymous, on Aug 5, 2009 wrote:
i like how that picture progresses from bra to no bra
Anonymous, on Aug 3, 2009 wrote:
i find number 6 strangely pretty
Anonymous, on Jul 31, 2009 wrote:
the seventh one is really good
Anonymous, on Jul 31, 2009 wrote:
i think im in love with no 9’s nipples. it must have been chilly.
Anonymous, on Jul 31, 2009 wrote:
Domino motherfucker!
Fuck Russia, on Jul 31, 2009 wrote:
I think everything Peccinotti displays here is going to be back sooner than anyone imagined. The red lips, overdone makeup, everything of 80s excess. As soon as we get out of this recession, it’s on.
Anonymous, on Jul 30, 2009 wrote:
there is a flash of bush! i bet that is just the start before it suddenly turns into deep undergrowth. like the rainforest.
Anonymous, on Jul 30, 2009 wrote:
cucumbers have never looked better.
Anonymous, on Jul 30, 2009 wrote:
the woman in the 6th shot could be horrendous if you woke up next to her after a smashy night out on the yeh yeh but you would realise that she isnt that bad and prob tap it again.
Anonymous, on Jul 30, 2009 wrote:
these pictures are all so unqiue in their own way
Anonymous, on Jul 28, 2009 wrote:
the girl in the third picture is amazing
dangerboy, on Jul 28, 2009 wrote:
this guys my idol
hi fructose, on Jul 28, 2009 wrote:
almost looks like a triple tit in the first one. total recall style.
Next 30 comments >

POST A COMMENT [SIGN IN]
Hi, in case you haven't heard, you can now sign up to become a "member" of Viceland.com, which entitles you to all sorts of amazing benefits like pictures and a nickname. Click here to make your own profile. You can still comment if you don't, but you gotta do it all 'nonymously.

Name:
Comment: