Quantcast
Channel: World Duh
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 5098

Spooky shots of naked volunteers wearing nothing but white sheets at the Festival of Skeletons

$
0
0

For a man whose career is taking pictures of  naked volunteers, these photos will hardly be shocking.

But to the average viewer these shots by  Spencer Tunick – taken early morning at the Festival de Calacas (Festival of  Skeletons) in San Miguel de Allende, Guanajuato, Mexico – will be rather  spooky.

Mr Tunick, 45, used the eerie landscape of  Los Senderos village and 150 volunteers in white sheets for his ‘Spirits’  project, to mark the Day of the Dead – which pays tribute to people who have  died.

Eerie: These remarkable shots by Spencer Tunick were taken during in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico

Eerie: These remarkable shots by Spencer Tunick were  taken during in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico

Big picture: Around 150 people posed for an early morning nude photo installation at the 'Festival de Calacas' (Festival of Skeletons) to commemorate the Day of the Dead, according to organisers

Big picture: Around 150 people posed for an early  morning nude photo installation at the ‘Festival de Calacas’ (Festival of  Skeletons) to commemorate the Day of the Dead, according to organisers

Directions: Spencer Tunick (centre), 45, of New York, used the eerie landscape of Los Senderos in Mexico

Directions: Spencer Tunick (centre), 45, of New York,  used the eerie landscape of Los Senderos in Mexico

Mr Tunick, who was born in 1967 in  Middletown, New York, trained at the International Center of Photography in  Manhattan before studying at Emerson College in Boston,  Massachusetts.

He has been creating astonishing human art  installations for the past 20 years, gathering hundreds or thousands of naked  volunteers, aiming to create scenes where humans blend with  landscape.

One memorable previous effort saw him  photograph 1,800 naked people arranged in the coloured seats of the Ernst Happel  stadium in Vienna, Austria, which hosted the Euro 2008 football  final.

Mr Tunick boasts on his website that he has  been arrested five times while trying to work outdoors in New York City since  1992, with the last of these coming in 1999 in Times Square,  Manhattan.

In memory: The installation was to mark the Day of the Dead, which commemorates those who have died

In memory: The installation was to mark the Day of the  Dead, which commemorates those who have died

Experienced: Mr Tunick has been creating astonishing human art installations for the past 20 years, gathering hundreds or thousands of naked volunteers in various places

Experienced: Mr Tunick has been creating astonishing  human art installations for the past 20 years, gathering hundreds or thousands  of naked volunteers in various places

Spooky: But for a man whose career is taking pictures of naked volunteers, these photos will hardly be odd

Spooky: But for a man whose career is taking pictures of  naked volunteers, these photos will hardly be odd

However Mr Tunick was so desperate to  continue working on New York’s streets that he filed a lawsuit against the city  to protect himself and participants from future arrests – which he  won.

But his website adds that he has not worked  on the streets of New York in a decade, after he was rejected when applying for  his first New York City permit after winning his case against the  city.

Now it seems Mr Tunick has found a soft spot  for travelling south to work in San Miguel de Allende.

He told the New York Times in June of this  year: ‘I head down to San Miguel de Allende in Mexico quite often these days  where I have learned to appreciate a good tequila like Casa  Dragones.’



Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 5098

Trending Articles