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In Memory: Herman Leonard

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Duke Ellington photographed by Herman Leonard


I would like the art community to stop for a minute today to reflect on the passing of one of our great photographers, Heman Leonard.  He died Saturday, Aug. 14, at the age of 87.  For those of you who do not know who he was and what he did, you can read his obituary here.  He photographed iconic images of jazz greats such as Billie Holiday, Duke Ellington, and Frank Sinatra.  Google his name, look at his art, and you will see why he was one of our greats.

Six months ago we began an interview with him that was never completed.  As an artist and a publisher, I felt that he should share his life with us at NUDE but that was not to be.

Today we remember him.

Carrie Leigh

Found in Our Distributor's Warehouse

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Our distributor recently found boxes of all the past issues of Carrie Leigh's NUDE in a warehouse, and copies of all 11 issues are now being sold at Amazon.com.  The first issue sold out and used copies now sell on e-bay for as much as $197. Such overpricing of her art quarterly was not what Carrie intended. 

You will also find previous issues of Carrie Leigh's NUDE magazine in the website store.  The new Spring 2010 issue is now available at Amazon.com.

THREE YEARS OF NUDE

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Which is your favorite cover?  Vote on the right....view them all at Amazon.com

Carrie Leigh’s NUDE is an international art quarterly founded in Los Angeles, Calif., in 2007 by Carrie Leigh Publishing Group. The publication has no advertising and is funded by subscriptions and bookstore sales. The magazine has grown into an internationally recognized brand with fine art photographer Carrie Leigh now one of the world’s top female publishers. Leigh was the First Lady of the Playboy mansion in the 1980s.

NUDE is printed on a sheet-fed, plate printing press on heavy matte satin paper.

In August 2008 NUDE was one of the fastest growing publications in a suffering magazine industry. In November 2008, NUDE launched its first annual contest. Winners are announced in the Summer issue.

The magazine has published numerous fashion and fine art photographers, painters, and other artists, including Kim Weston, Leonard Nimoy, Mel Ramos, Franchesco, Stan Malinowski, Ralph Gibson, Henry Asencio, Craig Srebnik, Joel Adams, and others. NUDE has published interviews with popular culture icons such as Theodore Mann, Robert Wuhl, Ruby Dee, Sharon Waxman, and Jim Ladd.

Help Us Find The Next Muse

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Each issue of NUDE features a well known established model who has worked with a variety of photographers. With so many amazing models to choose from, we are turning to our audience for suggestions as to who you want to see on the pages of NUDE. Please send your suggestion as to who should join should join such greats as Charlotta Champagne, Veronika Kotlajic, Sarah Ellis, Datura Noir, and in our next issue, Candace Nirvana.

See more at NUDE

More From Past Issues of NUDE: The Art of Women

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All images by Carrie Leigh


Note:  You are welcome to download my art as long as you give credit where credit is due.  After all, in print publishing, at least in Carrie Leigh's NUDE, credit is always given to the photographer and artist.
 

 




 


Carrie Leigh's NUDE Fall 2009 Cover Model

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Chanon Finley by Carrie Leigh






Note: You are welcome to download my art as long as you give credit where credit is due. After all, in print publishing, at least in Carrie Leigh's NUDE, credit is always given to the photographer and artist.


A Look at Our Fourth Issue and Carrie Leigh

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Channon Finley by Carrie Leigh




Carrie Leigh, Carrie Leigh's NUDE, Nude Magazine, Joel Adams, fine art, photography, Sydney Brown, Chanon Finley

From Summer 2008....the cover of the 4th issue of Carrie Leigh's NUDE magazine...

It is really amazing to watch as "Empires" are crumbling on the magazine rack, one magazine that wanted to be different, wanted to be classy, and wanted to be in and of itself, a piece of art, grow like Carrie Leigh's NUDE has.

And we're still growing in Fall 2010 with an exciting new issue to be announced soon!

Cover Model Merrique


YOU ARE THE FIRST TO KNOW!

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 Cover model photographed by Carrie Leigh



We want you to be the first to know!

The cover is here for the next issue of Carrie Leigh's NUDE magazine due out in early December. All the information is here http://www.carrieleigh.com

NUDE's Cover Model Nude

Censored on Facebook

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By Joel Adams

I have or should i say had a Facebook page that I used mostly for business reasons, and keeping in touch with fans and letting them know what I was working on. This past Tuesday, I posted to my page the new cover to the upcoming issue of NUDE because I have a new piece of art in it. I added a link to pre-order the issue and I made the cover my profile picture for the day.

I woke up Wednesday morning to find my profile picture was gone. I immediately went to my email and found a message from Facebook stating:

"You uploaded a photo that violates our Terms of Use, and this photo has been removed. Facebook does not allow photos that attack an individual or group, or that contain nudity, drug use, violence, or other violations of the Terms of Use. These policies are designed to ensure Facebook remains a safe, secure and trusted environment for all users, including the many children who use the site.If you have any questions or concerns, you can visit our FAQ page at http://www.facebook.com/help/?topic=wphotos."

So I followed the link to see if there was anymore information to help and got this:

Photos are removed if they contain nudity, drug use or other obscene content. If the photo attacks another individual or group, it will be removed as well.

The image was the cover of the new issue of NUDE. I'll give it that it is one of the sexier covers that Carrie has shot, but was there anything to censor? Even though I had viewed the image many times now, having worked with it to put it on the Carrieleigh.com website, I had to pull up the image again to really look at it. This cover is going to sit on shelves at Barnes and Noble and Borders. It will be up on Amazon.com. Maybe Carrie missed some "naughty bit" that could not only get the image pulled from Facebook, but hidden from display at the book stores.

I looked at it carefully. I blew it up huge on my monitor like a pervert hunting for some bit of naughty, but I found nothing. All I can figure was that maybe the person who viewed the image looked at it quickly as a small image and, at a glance, thought the model was naked. So, Wednesday night, I posted the image again as my profile pic, but this time I added in the description asking that before anyone thinks to remove the image to examine it because it did conform to Facebook's "terms of use".

Thursday morning I woke up and immediatly turned on my laptop to make sure that it was still there and, "whew", there is was. I got up and out of the house, arrived at work and turned my computer on, went to Facebook and... gone... no explanations, just the same form letter. What I didn't mention before is with the form letter and amongst the terms of use, it basically tells you that they will not tell you what images they remove or why.

This frustrated the hell out of me. I am not a sit down and just take it. I make calls, I write letters, I try to get and answer... but you can't with Facebook. No way to really contact anyone. No emails for sure. I was to then forced to just sit and take it while someone played judge and jury with the images on my page. Facebook's own Gestapo of censorship.

I wasn't done, I got a little hot-headed this time and I added, right on the image, below the image, and in big enough type to read at a small size, I wrote asking to please look at the image before taking it down again. Maybe not as friendly as that, but that is the gist of it. Then I went on about my day.

Well, it didn't take a day for me to find out if they would ignore my message and take it down again. Around 7pm, I went to my Facebook page and... it was gone... but this time it was not just the image that was gone, the Facebook censors deleted my whole account. I was in shock. I had been on Facebook for at least 2 years and the page had become a huge business tool for me. I had over 2000 friends and customers on the page that are now gone. I have dozens of sites that now link to a blank page on Facebook where people would be looking for me, and all because some "Censor Nazi" would either not look carefully at the image, or has standards that are even more puritanical that of the Facebook terms of use.

Let me just add in here that the page I had with Facebook was completely set to private so the only way you could see anything on my page would be to be on my "friends" list. I do this intentionally for these reasons because as an artist who does nudes and work that may be risque for some, I want to make sure that only the audience I chose can see and no children can have access.

This is not my first run-in with censorship on Facebook, I guess. I have had artwork of nudes removed. Tastefully done artistic nudes, but it didn't seem to matter. If I drew a nipple, it was gone. I guess if it is not Titian or Michelangelo, it is then naked and not art. This doesn't explain the magazine cover though, and there seems to be no-one to ask "why?".

Maybe I shouldn't have called them Censor Nazis... Maybe Facebook sucks.

Serenity

A Very NUDE Birthday!

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A very NUDE birthday for Joel Adams from all of us at NUDE!!!

A Very Special Birthday

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 Austin Dawn, cover model for the Spring 2010 issue of Carrie Leigh's NUDE magazine
 Photgrapher:  Carrie Leigh



 Happy Birthday from the Carrie Leigh's NUDE staff!


NUDE cover model Austin Dawn will celebrate her January 13th birthday all this week, and why not?  When you're young,  you are entitled!


Happy 80th Birthday, Leonard Nimoy!

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Actor and photographer Leonard Nimoy turned 80 on Saturday. We at Carrie Leigh's NUDE magazine wish him a Happy Birthday and many returns of the day.





Carrie Leigh, Carrie Leigh's NUDE, Nude Magazine, Joel Adams, fine art, photography, nude art, artistic nude, leonard nimoy, Anthony Guerra, Olga Safonoff





Carrie Leigh's interview with Mr. Nimoy, "The Artistic Journey," is published in the Winter 2008 issue of Carrie Leigh's NUDE magazine and available online here.







Art by Leonard Nimoy

Happy Birthday, Gary!

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Today is my husband Gary's birthday, and I would like to recognize the wonderful things he has done in this time for civil rights, the fine art world, and his family. As someone who enjoys working behind the scenes, he seldom steps forward to allow us to recognize his achievements. On this special day, I want to acknowledge Gary as a great humanitarian who has tirelessly served others.

Happy Birthday, Gary, I love you and appreciate everything you have done and everything you do so very much.

Carrie

An Announcement from Carrie Leigh

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Our cover model for the Summer/Fall 2010 issue of Carrie Leigh's NUDE
Photographed by Carrie Leigh


Times are changing for those who love print and collect.

As everyone knows, the publishing and book store world is suffering extremely hard times and only the strong will survive.  Our solution was to terminate our existing distribution contract and to sign with a larger, more financially secure company.

In the process of our change we discovered, in our distributor's warehouse, small numbers of past issues of Carrie Leigh's NUDE.  As these are only available on e-bay and Amazon for extremely high prices by those looking to make a large profit on the collectable factor, we have decided to sell these issues in our store.  We have priced them according to quantity available.  All are in mint condition and still shrink wrapped.

And best news of all!  We have added a National and International Shopping Cart to help you save on the shipping!

Check it out

A Mother's Day Message from Carrie Leigh

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Carrie Leigh as a model


Everyone knows that everything changes in life.

Once I was a model who had the opportunity to work with some great photographers. Now I am a photographer who has the opportunity to work with great models.  When I was a model I loved to be published in print;  now I am a print publisher.  Once I was single; now I am married with children.

My history reflects change, but one thing that has never changed is that I have one and only one mother.
The common denominator among everyone in the world is that we all have a mother.  Times change, and people change, but today is the day to spend time with your mother or, if you can't be with her, reflect on what she means to you.

Pippa NUDE? She's not the first...

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"Buckingham Palace Nude" by Jan Murphy


The Duchess of Cambridge's family should not have upset the Queen with their embarrassing photographs of James and Pippa.  These images of the Royal relatives just this week appeared on the Internet in the United States in various states of undress.

Carrie Leigh’s NUDE magazine exposed the Royal Family long before the Royals exposed themselves.  The Queen was home and didn't say a word.  The nude was photographed in front of Buckingham Palace with the police in the background watching.

Why is everyone up in arms now?

The Spring 2010 issue of Carrie Leigh's NUDE magazine features an exhibit of female nudes shot on Royal Ground by London photographer Jan Murphy as a statement of artistic freedom. Ms. Murphy shows her nude model wearing white gloves for presentation to the Queen, who was inside the Palace at the time as the flag is flying.

According to Carrie Leigh,  "I wish I had the opportunity to do what Jan Murphy did. It makes quite a statement to shoot nudes with a world landmark like Buckingham Palace as a backdrop."

In conjunction with Carrie Leigh's NUDE, Murphy and her nude models elected to shoot at
some of London's historic sites, including Buckingham Palace as the Royal Flag flew, the Tate Museum of Art, and the GLA building.

Long before all this, Queen Victoria had a passion for nude art that is now the subject of Victoria & Albert: Art & Love, an exhibit at The Queen’s Gallery in Buckingham Palace that opened March 19.

The Spring 2010 issue of Carrie Leigh's NUDE is available for sale here.  Order your Royal Nudes today!

A Little American Freedom

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Photograph by Carrie Leigh



Enough is enough.

From now on, when you click on a copyrighted picture on this blog, you will be taken on a visit to the NUDE website.  No more free downloads.  It came to our attention yesterday that copyrighted images from this blog has ended up on pay sites. 

"I don't mind sharing my art," Carrie said.  "I have not previously protected it from downloads as I don't mind someone showing it with proper credit.  But when my art is stolen and sold on Internet pay sites without my consent, it hurts everything I have worked for.  It hurts me and my models when this happens."

As the glut of pirated music and images drives legitimate sources out of business, it concerns us to learn where images go that are posted on not-for-profit blogs.  Our stat counters show every download, and sometimes a visitor comes and downloads hundreds of images.  For what purpose?  Some create electronic portfolios for their own use, but now we have proof some of the downloads are pirated images to be used for commercial purposes without even a credit to the artist or artists.

The website of the Recording Industry of America says, "Copyright law protects the value of creative work. When you make unauthorized copies of someone’s creative work, you are taking something of value from the owner without his or her permission."  Not only is this a clear breach of ethics;  it violates U.S. law.  Criminal penalties can run up to five years in prison and/or $250,000 in fines, even if you didn’t don't download music and images for monetary or financial or commercial gain.

According to the site:  

Online music theft is "commonly known as piracy, but that’s too benign of a term to adequately describe the toll that music theft takes on the enormous cast of industry players working behind the scenes to bring music to your ears. That cast includes songwriters, recording artists, audio engineers, computer technicians, talent scouts and marketing specialists, producers, publishers and countless others.

"While downloading one song may not feel that serious of a crime, the accumulative impact of millions of songs downloaded illegally – and without any compensation to all the people who helped to create that song and bring it to fans – is devastating. One credible study by the Institute for Policy Innovation pegs the ANNUAL harm at $12.5 billion dollars in losses to the U.S. economy as well as more than 70,000 lost jobs and $2 billion in lost wages to American workers."

The site shares legal precedent regarding the piracy of copyrighted images online.  In Playboy Enterprises v. Russ Hardenburgh, Inc., 982 F. Supp. 503 (N.D. Ohio 1997), it was decided that:

"Distributing unlawful copies of a copyrighted work violates the copyright owner’s distribution right and, as a result, constitutes copyright infringement. . . . . [Unlawful distribution occurs where] [f]iles of [copyrighted] information are stored in the central system, and subscribers may either ‘download’ information into their[computers] or ‘upload’ information from their home units into the central files . . . ."

So there is no need to question whether online theft of copyrighted images is indeed art theft.  It is, and in the United States it is a felony to steal art.  Within hours of notifying an Arizona-based pay site that they were in violation of U.S. copyright law, the site removed artwork pirated from Carrie Leigh that initially appeared in print in Carrie Leigh's NUDE magazine and was later published on the official blog.

I don't mind visitor downloads of work for personal use.  But it is another story with the pay site pirates who take our work for commercial purposes and make money on it without even crediting the photographer.  There are also those who pass off others' work as their own work.  Piracy is art theft, and it is unethical and illegal and hurtful to all of us, each and every artist, when it occurs.

I realize some will shrug and say, "Then don't post your work online."  That's like saying, "If you don't want to be hit by a drunk driver, stay at home and don't go out on the highway."  This is, after all, the Information Superhighway.
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