As disturbing as some of his images can be, Richardson himself seems
to generate general goodwill from everyone he works with, from corporate
giants who entrust him with their commercial campaigns to notoriously
fickle editors-in-chief. "You can be afraid of Terry and his work
if you look at the stuff he does privately," says Alt. "As a woman,
I found those pictures really scary. But I think he can approach
chic very easily. And he is very sweet and charminghe's very
fun to work with."
But how, the industry wondered, would his informal snappy style
sit with the Gucci teamDouglas Lloyd, Tom Ford, stylist (and
recently appointed French Vogue editor) Carine Roitfeld,
hairdresser-to-the-stars Orlando Pita, and makeup artist Tom Pecheux?
The Gucci campaigns of the recent past had all been famously polished:
Mario Testino's sleek and perfectly accessorized beauties, Alexei
Hay's yoga-in-stilettos desert series, and the postmodern Marilyn-inspired
Kate Moss, all creamy and bleached, by Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh
Matadin.
"No shoot is without its process," says Lloyd. "Terry hadn't worked
with the Gucci team before, so it took a while for him to develop
a shorthand with them."
Richardson admits that it was a struggle at first. He wasn't getting
good work done in the studio, so instead he took a small team back
to his hotel room. He began simply messing about with his cameras,
using the models and a bit of available space between the door and
the bed. The result is arresting, simple, and direct: two girls
and a guy, photographed singly and together, in the corner of an
anonymous, cheaply carpeted, white-walled room. Something is either
about to happen or has already happenedand that something
is clearly sex.
"Terry was just like, 'Okay, this is the campaign.' I don't know
which images he shot where, with what cameras," says Lloyd, laughing,
"but Tom and I were thrilled with the results. It's rare that we
reconfirm a photographer this early, but we booked Terry to shoot
the next campaign before these ads even broke."
The Gucci shoot is a good case study of the Richardson technique.
Almost every shot poses the question How did he get that?
"You have to take a risk," Richardson says, simply. "That's how
you get something beautiful. It's the most amazing feeling when
you are shooting something that you know is good: It's like great
sex."
And when it's not good? "Well," he says, "sometimes you have to
do a little bit of cheerleading. But often things just happen. People
like to perform in front of the camera." He stops and listens to
himself. "Especially if I'm in my Speedo," he says, unable to resist.
Unexpectedly, I discover for myself how persuasive he can be.
One evening, scheduled to look over some of Richardson's early work
with him, I arrive at his loft late, my face freshly swollen and
blue from a bicycle accident. He makes me an ice pack and shows
me the large scar above his nose, the result of a fight whose outcome
was decided with a broken bottle. Of course, he says, he has to
take a quick photo of my ghoulish face. Of course, I respond, anticipating
that he'll take one or two snapshots of me and my bruises in front
of his white wall.
He begins by shooting a lot quickly, reloading film in one camera
while snapping with another. He darts about, often sticking himself
in the frame next to me. He doesn't issue instructions as much as
express enthusiasmand not the yeah, baby sort. "God,
I love taking pictures," he says as he begins to find a line of
energy between us. I am usually awkward in front of the camera,
and I am self-conscious about my body, even on a good day, but within
five minutes of the first frame, I've taken my top off. Why? Because
he suggests it ("I love women's bodies," he says to me later, as
in, Duh, well, of course) and because, amazingly for me,
I feel comfortable. It's like we're in cahoots, spoofing what has
gone on for years between photographers and their prey. And so,
for whatever reasonTerry being Terryhe's created yet
another series of images that might well make you wonder how he
got a bruised woman, clearly not a model, to take her clothes off
against a white wall.
In one sense, Terry Richardson was born to be a photographer.
His mother, Annie Lomax, worked for years as a stylist, and his
father's work in the late sixties and early seventies was as important
as Richard Avedon's and Helmut Newton's in terms of changing fashion
photography. The elder Richardson's photographs hinted at narratives
in which the models became characters, and the viewercast
as a voyeurwas used to complete the story. Although Terry's
work does not look like his father's more iconic images (Bob's photographs
are a lesson in composition, whereas Terry's work celebrates the
accidental), they share a preoccupation with documenting their own
experiences. "I don't know anything about fashion," Bob Richardson
tells me when I track him down in Los Angeles by telephone. "I just
liked taking photographs of people and situations," he continues,
being deliberately deflationary.
And yet he and Lomax led a pointedly fashionable life for a time,
traveling between Paris and New York and being part of that small
circle of people who didn't just dabble in sixties grooviness but
played an important role in creating it. The marriage fell apart
when Bob Richardson, then 41, began an intense four-year love affair
with a 17-year-old Anjelica Huston.
"Anjelica was cool. She was like an older sister," says Terry,
when I ask him about his early childhood. "It was a funny time.
I mostly stayed with my mom. I remember as a little kid looking
out onto the terrace of our Jane Street apartment and seeing her
making out with Kris Kristofferson." But their life wasn't jet-set
for very long. After a stint in the West Village, Lomax moved to
Woodstock, married a musician, relocated to Los Angeles, and finally
settled in Ojai, California. The last move was triggered by a serious
car accident she had in L.A., on the way to pick up her young son
from one of his twice-weekly sessions with a therapist. "I was always
getting into fights and being thrown out of school," explains Richardson.
He pauses. "It was quite heavy," he says, referring to his mother's
accident. "She was in a coma for three weeks, plus shortly after
that my stepdad's record deal started to fall apart. Basically,
our life became food stamps and welfare all of a sudden."
Among the glossy magazines on Richardson's coffee table is a mock-up
of a book with the title Premature Ejaculation. It is full
of photographs Richardson took when he was a teenager in Ojai. "My
mom gave me a snapshot camera, and I took pictures for the fun of
it," he explains. "I lived on Signal Street, and my best friend
and I started a gang called the Signal Street Alcoholics"hence
the SSA tattoo. "My mom would come home and there would be twenty
kids smoking pot and drinking and screwing. I was selling weed and
playing in a rock band. I took the pictures goofing around. They're
punk-rock snapshots. They look like the stuff I do now," he says
proudly.
The photographs are much quieter than they perhaps sound, and although
they have been taken with a steady hand, there is no trace of a
show-off behind them. They are affecting images of kids hanging
out, making out, getting high, and lying around. Most of the people
in the photographs, Richardson tells me, are now dead from drugs
and self-destruction.
"No one encouraged me to continue taking pictures. No one ever
said to keep doing it," Richardson says without bitterness, "and
so I stopped." He moved to Hollywood, worked as a busboy in an English
pub, and played bass guitar.
Meanwhile, his fatherwhose own career had long since unraveled,
ending in a battle with drug addiction, a period of time living
on the streets, and struggles with schizophreniahad moved
to San Francisco and found work in telemarketing. Tired of L.A.,
Terry joined Bob and began to take photographs again. "I had done
some photographic assisting in L.A. to make some money," he remembers,
"and I thought, 'Fuck it. If these people can make a living doing
it, so can I.' So I began taking pictures and getting a portfolio
together. I would sit with my dad and edit film and drink red wine
with some music on. My dad taught me cool thingslike that
you should always have a flashlight, extra batteries, and a corkscrew
in your camera bag. One day he said to me, 'You should move to New
York and become a fashion photographer.' "
And so he did. Not only that, he met and married a successful fashion
model, Nikki Uberti. They became cult figures in the East Village,
appearing in underground movies and taking off and returning from
road trips to Middle America. The combination of their adventures,
much of which Richardson captured and exhibited, and Uberti's gloriously
unself-conscious approach to nudity, resulted in some of his most
famous images.
"They were just pictures of her and of our friends and of our life," Richardson says about their collaboration. The carefree times, however, didn't last. The couple divorced in 1999, and later that year Uberti was diagnosed with breast cancer and underwent chemotherapy and a mastectomy. She has since become active in helping create awareness about the disease. Richardson is still visibly emotional about their relationship and keeps his thoughts about it private.
"I always take pictures of everything in my life," he says. "But
I don't change the way I shoot if I'm working for a magazine. Of
course, someone has done the model's hair, and, yes, you're selling
a product if you are working commercially, but that doesn't mean
the pictures aren't personal. My mood affects every picture I take.
Every time I photograph someone, whoever it is for, I'm trying to
get them to expose something about themselves, but I'm also putting
myself in the picture, too. You have to make yourself vulnerable
in order to capture something about the subject. You don't get it
every time, but when you do"Richardson pauses and shakes his
head"it's beautiful. There's nothing else like it."
Richardson's workespecially his earlier, grittier shotshas
been labeled heroin chic, but the term is misleading. Richardson's
photographs are celebratory; they're fun. He strongly believes that
if you're lucky enough to have a babe like Frankie Rayder walking
into the sunset in kinky boots and a black Ursula Andress bikini
in front of you, surely you're going to encourage her to pull her
swimsuit down a little.
When I ask him if he thinks of himself as a photographer or an
artist, he laughs and says that he's a rocktographer. Asked when
his last creative moment was, he says, "An hour ago," and issues
a dirty laugh. "Who were you photographing?" I query. "I wasn't,"
he says, "I was by myself," and there is a glint in his eye. "When
was the last time you got away with bullshitting someone?" I continue.
"Right now," he says. "How often do you get away with it?" "Every
day!" he replies with total pleasure. "Your fantasy?" I ask. "To
direct a film," he says. He's already directed music videos for
Death in Vegas, Primal Scream, and the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion,
all of which have firm cult followings. I ask him if the film will
tell his story. "I guess," he says. "Yeah. I mean, I can't write
a fucking postcard, but my dad says the thing to do is just to do
it, so that's what I'll have to do. Just do it." "Who would play
you?" I ask. "Billy Crudup," he replies without hesitation. Why
him? He shrugs and takes a bite of his sandwich. "Because he's cute
and he's got a mustache," he says. "It's as simple as that."