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Startling images of beauty and affectionate friendships by one of the rising stars of the art world. Bianchi's photographs constitute a record of the natural grace, wit, friendship and imagination of the male nude that transcends his physical beauty, and speaks to a reality rarely reported in art. 88 duotone photographs.
This textbook provides a unique and thorough look at the application of chemical biomarkers to aquatic ecosystems. Defining a chemical biomarker as a compound that can be linked to particular sources of organic matter identified in the sediment record, the book indicates that the application of these biomarkers for an understanding of aquatic ecosystems consists of a biogeochemical approach that has been quite successful but underused. This book offers a wide-ranging guide to the broad diversity of these chemical biomarkers, is the first to be structured around the compounds themselves, and examines them in a connected and comprehensive way. This timely book is appropriate for advanced under...
This collector's edition of Tom Bianchi's Fire Island Pines is limited to 67 numbered copies, and comes in a special orange cloth slipcase with a tipped-in cover image. It also contains a fine art giclée print signed and numbered by Bianchi. In 1970, fresh out of law school, Bianchi began traveling to New York, and was invited to spend a weekend at Fire Island Pines, where he encountered a community of gay men. Using an SX-70 Polaroid camera, Bianchi documented his friends' lives in the Pines, amassing an image archive of people, parties and private moments. These images, published here for the first time, and accompanied by Bianchi's moving memoir of the era, record the birth and development of a new culture. Soaked in sun, sex, camaraderie and reverie, Fire Island Pines conjures a magical bygone era.
Tom Bianchi's erotic and celebratory Polaroids of magical summers on Fire Island Growing up in the 1950s, Tom Bianchi would head into downtown Chicago and pick up 25-cent "physique" magazines at newsstands. In one such magazine, he found a photograph of bodybuilder Glenn Bishop on Fire Island. "Fire Island sounded exotic, perhaps a name made up by the photographer," he recalls in the preface to his latest monograph. "I had no idea it was a real place. Certainly, I had no idea then that it was a place I would one day call home." In 1970, fresh out of law school, Bianchi began traveling to New York, and was invited to spend a weekend at Fire Island Pines, where he encountered a community of ga...
In 1975, Tom Bianchi moved to New York City and took a job as in-house counsel at Columbia Pictures. That first year Tom was given a Polaroid SX - 70 camera by Columbia Pictures at a corporate conference. He took that camera to the Pines on summer weekends, those pictures became the book Fire Island Pines, Polaroids 1975 - 1983 published in 2013. Now, some 44 years later, we finally get a first look at another extraordinary collection of Polaroids by Tom taken in his NYC apartment at 63 East 9th Street. Whereas Fire Island is an expansive communal experience happening on a sunny sand bar outside of the city under huge open skies, Tom's New York apartment was an intimate track-lit den, a safe stage where he and his friends invited each other to play out their erotic night games. Tom's New York City Polaroids take us behind the closed door of his apartment, "Back then we were in the early days of a revolution that seemed inevitably headed to a more loving, playful and tolerant way of being. We were innocents", Bianchi recalls. This is an essential companion book to Fire Island Pines and an important document of urban gay life.
Tom Bianchi is a lawyer, artist, writer, and business executive. His painting, sculpture, drawings and photographs have been exhinbited throughout the world. His pubilshed wirting includes art reviews and essays. he is currently working on his first film and video projects. Here is a collection of photos and poems, in Bianchi's imitable style.
Rosie is a straight-A student and isn't one for getting distracted in class. But she's never had a professor like Thaddeus Rourke. So what happens when she's caught distracted and is ordered to meet him in his office? **This is an erotica--pure smut. There is no plot. No P into the V either.**
A Portrait of a Marriage Tom Bianchi's latest book breaks new ground in the annals of photography. A portrait of a marriage between two men, it captures in photographs the love two people share and the joy they find in one another. The result is a stunning portrait - in stunning B & W and colour photography - of the relationship between Bob Paris, a former Mr Universe, and Rod Jackson, the man he wed. Surely the photography book of the season.
Tom Bianchi is for sure, not a photographer who cares about conventions. Aseptic shootings with professionally posing models aren't his cup of tea. He rather uses his camera to catch the moment. Like nobody else, Bianchi is capable of capturing the spontaneous, rough energy that intercourse between men sets free. Strength and tenderness, frenzy and intimacy-these are the poles between which his work expands. And his skills are well received: So far all of his coffee table books have become bestsellers. With this book he sets the spot on the aesthetic side of impulsive love once more. A fabulous book that will continue his series of successes.
Ever since Bruno Gmunder began producing gay interest photobooks, none of their photographers has sold more books than Tom Bianchi. Here, he focuses on everything that arouses, turning sexuality into the exciting and diverse experience it should always be. Bianchi's unmistakable style provides readers with an intimate, unique experience. His pictures are taken straight from the heart and get closer to the models than those of any comparable photographer. Not to be missed by lovers of gay interest photography with explicit content.