Leonard Nimoy—famous for portraying the Spock character in the Star Trek universe—did not set out to photograph naked fat women. He got lucky. A talented and passionate photographer who built his own darkroom out of found parts as a teen, Nimoy has been creating black-and-white art photography since the early 1970s. As Houston Museum of Fine Arts photography curator Anne Wilkes Tucker explains, Nimoy's work explores deep themes such as "his Jewish heritage, a concern for human dignity and the concept of Shekhina, a Talmudic term for the manifestation of God on earth." Shekhina is the title of Nimoy's first book of photographs.
His most recent book of fine art photographs is called The Full Body Project, an exploration of proud fat women. Although I am not one of Nimoy's models, I too am a proud fat women; this project resonates with in a very personal way.
I have always been fat. I wasn't always proud. Then, in the mid-1990s, I started a ‘zine and then wrote a book, both called FAT!SO?, to express what might be called fat pride. In the process of being the proudest possible fat woman, I got lucky. I met another proud fat woman named Heather MacAllister, who founded Big Burlesque & the Fat Bottom Revue, "the world's first exclusively plush-size, gender-inclusive burlesque ensemble." Before her recent death, Heather fought fiercely to expand the world's definition of beauty and sexuality and humanity to include all of us. In one of her proudest pieces of work, Heather and her dancers posed for Leonard Nimoy.
The Full Body Project is a near-perfect book of images, with an elegant introduction by Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Natalie Angier. It's also an ongoing project for each one of us, the project of living fully in our bodies. It was with a great pleasure that this proud fat woman (six-word memoir: "This body, this fat, this life!") spoke with Leonard Nimoy about the story behind these luscious, liberating, loving photographs.
Marilyn Wann: I'm curious about the story
of how this book, The Full Body Project, came to happen. I'd love
to hear how you met your first fat model.
Leonard Nimoy: The story of this
book begins with a lady on a black background, lying on a black cloth in the
back of the book. My wife and I have a house in Lake Tahoe. A camera shop
owner in the area, in Carson City, heard I was in the area and contacted me
to do an exhibit, which I did. I was showing some of the earlier work from a
book that I published called Shekhina, about the feminine aspect of
God. There were a number of people who showed up and one woman approached me
and she said, "I'm a model. I'm a different body type than what you're
working with. I wonder whether you're interested in working with me." And we
did. She came to our home in Lake Tahoe.
MW: I'm trying to picture the conversation
you and your wife had, driving home from the gallery show.
LN: I said, "What do you think?" And she said, "You ought to try it, break
some boundaries and do something different." I was concerned about it
because I wanted to make sure I did her justice. I wanted to find an
appropriate way to photograph her. I'd never photographed that body shape or
size. I wasn't sure how to do it. But I found a way, in black and white
photography, to make a kind of sculptural look. I told her that I wouldn't
publish the pictures unless she approved and she said she would show them to
her husband. I had paid her, like any model. So she showed them to her
husband, and she said that he said, "That's my girl." So I said, "Okay then,
we're on."
MW: This sounds like a different level of
caution than you use with average-body models.
LN: Yes. I think, too, that she had not done a lot of figure modeling.
Although she called herself a model, her work had come in advertising
modeling and so it was not fine art work.
MW: What happened next in the story of this
book?
LN: We subsequently showed some of those images in other exhibitions of my
work. These got a lot of attention. I realized that there's a difference
between making artwork and making documentation in photography. A lot of my
previous work would be described as fine art or art photography. It was all
based on a concept that I had developed, or some other subject, and I was
using models to help express that idea. In this case the work was a
crossover between artwork and documentation. It was about a concept but it
was also about her story.
MW: So you were telling her story in
addition to telling your own story about the subject.
LN: I was telling a story about this particular person. As a result, it was
a different kind of photography. When people saw the picture, they wanted to
know about her. They had the same questions you're asking. So I became
curious about this question of body image in our culture. I contacted a
model here in Los Angeles who is not a fat body activist or a fat model, but
she's a model activist and works with a lot of different kinds of models. I
asked her if she knew of anybody who might fall in that category and she put
me in touch with Heather MacAllister.
MW: Whose troupe, Big Burlesque, were
revolutionary in bringing fat people to burlesque and bringing fat
visibility to the public.
I contacted Heather and I sent her a couple of images that I wanted to
replicate. It was the image that is on the cover of the book, which was
originally done by Herb Ritts of high fashion models Linda Evangelista,
Cindy Crawford, Naomi Campbell. I said to Heather, "I'd like to replicate
this with you." I also wanted to do a diptych, two pictures of four women
walking toward the camera, one of them clothed and the other one nude, and
that was based on a diptych by a very famous fashion photographer named
Helmut Newton. So I sent her Helmut's pictures and that's how we began.
We went to San Francisco and we photographed Heather and her group there. Then a year later, they were coming to Los Angeles to perform and we agreed to photograph them again at the Hammer Museum in Westwood. That's the whole story.
I wasn't sure that I had enough pictures for a book. I think that's when I contacted you. I was looking for more models. But Garrett White, an editor from Fiveties Publishing, which later published the book, contacted me. He had seen some of the pictures—and said, "Do you have more?" I gave Fiveties my contact sheets and they went through and found the book.
MW: I think it's a strong book because of
the group of models, and then the single model at the end who's so powerful.
What was it like for you, who perhaps had not come across fat pride
activists before?
LN: Very educational.
MW: What did you learn?
LN: I learned a lot about body image in our culture. Heather said to me,
"Beauty is culture driven." I realized that we are swamped with advertising
that tells women in our culture—95 percent or maybe 99 percent of them—-that
they don't look right. That they should be buying these pills or buying this
diet program or buying these exercises or buying this surgery to try to get
closer to what the culture says they should look like. It's a gigantic
amount of pressure on an enormous number of people who are not going to look
like what this culture says is required.
MW: I actually have a feeling of concern
for the models who are perceived as beautiful and then their stories aren't
a point of curiosity. When we look at, say, a Herb Ritts photograph of a
typically beautiful woman, by our cultural definition of beauty, why don't
we wonder what her story is? Is it because her beauty somehow erases her
story?
LN: I think you're right. I think they're objectified. It's not the story or
the person we're looking at, it's the image. We're not even looking at the
person; we're looking at the image of her.
MW:
And that
image is somehow a different thing from the person.
LN: Quite different. I think the photographs in this book tell us that we're
looking at some quite specific people. These are very real people. Their
exuberance and their sense of life comes off the page.
MW: Do you have a feeling of points of
contact from your own life experience and the fat models that you worked
with and their life experience?
Anybody who has ever felt alienated knows what this is all about. To me,
it's a question of being marginalized and alienated. When I first came to
Los Angeles looking for work as an actor, there was a particular kind of
look that Hollywood was buying in those days—and it wasn't me. They wanted
the typical, blond-haired, blue-eyed guy. Tab Hunter was hot stuff. So my
agent took me and we made the rounds of the studios and nobody was
interested because I was just wrong. I wasn't what you would call a pretty
guy.
MW: Has that feeling of being an outsider
affected your work?
LN: I had to rely on a belief that if I was good enough, I could overcome
the visual. If I learned my craft and worked hard and became valuable as a
performer rather than as a look, then I would find my way to a career. I
concentrated on being able to do the work better than the next person.
MW: Well, it all worked out. And aren't you
making a new movie soon?
LN: Yes, I'm going to be acting in a new Star Trek movie.
MW: Do you mind if I ask you about the
reaction to your comment in
The New York Times
feature on you about the sexual attractiveness of your models and whether
you found them beautiful or sexually attractive. I find it a funny kind of a
question, but evidently that was something The New York Times asked
you and it stirred up a bit of a controversy.
LN: I'll tell you, the writer of the Times article,
Abby Ellin,
has said that the editor insisted that the question had to be asked because
people would be curious about it, my sexual reaction to these women. I
understand that and I have no problem with it. I think Abby did a terrific
job and a very honest job in reporting what my photographs were about. My
answer is that I don't have any sexual intent or interest in any of these
models that I work with.
MW: In all of your work?
LN: Yes. There may be sexual suggestions and there may be people who find
the models sexy in one way or another or who are interested sexually in the
models, whatever type they may be. When I'm doing the work, I'm not thinking
sex, I'm thinking image. I'm thinking about a look, I'm thinking about an
idea, I'm thinking about a concept. I'm totally preoccupied with that. I
don't get aroused doing these photographs with any of the models I work
with. So it's not an issue for me.
MW: I find it curious that The New York
Times, the great, Gray Lady, found it so necessary to ask that question
when you photograph fat women.
LNI think it's a question a lot of people think. "Why is Nimoy photographing
these fat women? What is his interest in these women?" A lot of people
wonder. My answer is that I'm interested in these women as human beings.