• Tom Nelson: The Early Days

    Tom At the Voting Booth 1976

    Posted by Tom Nelson on 8-10-10
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    My name is Tom Nelson, and I was Tony Ward’s first model during his college days in the mid 70′s. We met initially in 1974, when Tony lived in an apartment complex in Millersville, PA, while he was an undergraduate student at Millersville State College. We became close friends. After Tony graduated from Millersville State, he moved on to graduate school at The Rochester Institute of Techonolgy where he was trained to become a professional photographer at the beginning of the 80′s. At that time we reunited and I became his butler for he and his second wife, who Tony met while he was employed as a corporate photographer for Smithkline Corporation. In the early 1990s, while TW started to raise a family, I doubled as a babysitter and part time cook for the three children, during his many frequent trips abroad.

    Tom As The Intellectual

    In the spring of 1976, I first posed for TW, at random locations on Millersville property. At that time I was barred from Millersville campus due to violating a ban on prospective dissidents because of my political views at the time. However the fact that voting machine’s for my precinct were installed on campus, I was allowed access to the campus to vote where Tony took his first photo of me exiting the voting booth at the student union center. This was during the Pennsylvania Presidential primary election that pushed then Governor Jimmy Carter over the top for the presidential nomination. Later for his senior show in the Spring of 1977, Tony wrapped me up in a sheet and smuggled me back onto campus to attend his first student art exhibition.

    Tom And The New York Times, December 1976

    In December of 1976, Tony and I undertook his first major attempt at a costume photographic session, which was a precursor of his later highly acclaimed book entitled Tableaux Vivants. I dressed in black leotards, and with my favorite read the New York Times, Tony shot me at various locations at the Landis Valley Farm Museum in Lancaster, Pa., where I was working as a janitor. The New York Times was not effective as a prop, but the results otherwise were magnificent! The resulting photographs in the Landis Valley Museum’s schoolhouse, carefully preserved by Tony Ward, provides testimony to his great photographic abilities that would emerge in his later works.


  • Carmelita Couture: Pop Art Fashion

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  • Chanel Ward: Picture Of The Day

    Racquel And Josh By The Pool


  • Contest: How Was This Picture Taken?

    Diane: Rochester, New York 1978

    ……….This picture of Diane was taken in our apartment, while I was studying photography in the Master of Fine Arts program at the Rochester Institute of Technology in 1978. This was a very playful time for me, as I was experimenting with various way’s to create interesting pictures. As you can see, I was already interested in the nude as subject matter and Diane, my girlfriend at the time, was always a willing participant in these visual explorations. I will send a signed copy of my latest book entitled Wasteland, to anyone that can figure out how this picture was created. Send your comments to my email address at tony@tonyward.com. Good Luck!


  • Michael Furman: Car Of The Day

    1954 Ferrari 375 MM Cockpit

    To learn more about Michael Furman’s car photography, log on to www. CoachBuiltPress.com.


  • Drive By: The Aftermath Of Katrina

    Waveland, Mississippi: First Exposure To Katrina Destruction

    Posted By Marque Love

    ……….I was in Pansacola,Florida over the Christmas season of 2005, four months after Hurricane Katrina landed ashore. The hardest hit parts of the gulf coast were just beginning disaster recovery. First responders and volunteers of all sorts converged on to the disaster area.

    Message Board

    So my friend Troy, followed his girlfriend back home to Pensacola from “Cali”, as he called it, had just left his girlfriend and decided to return to Cali. The next thing you know, Troy and I were headed west from Pensacola, me in my RV and he in his van with his dog Blue.

    Ravages

    When we arrived on Bourbon Street in the French Quarter, it pretty much seemed normal. We befriended some street entertainers who showed us a place to park our vehicles at an abandoned Burger King. The parking lot was filled with tents, people living in cars and around campfires. However, these were not homeless vagabonds. They were people from the neighborhoods of the 9th ward, whose homes were destroyed in the “washout of the community”.

    Along The Way To New Orleans

    The next morning, Troy and I were invited to go to breakfast where we were taken to a well organized camp called the Emergency Communities, a disaster relief volunteer camp, referred to as the “Hippie Camp”. They fed people, supplied clothes and home cleaning supplies, water, entertainment, computers for contacting relatives and friends, served breakfast, lunch and dinner. It was a very well run, very much needed emergency community.

    Battlefield

    I could not believe what I was seeing as we drove by street after street in our vehicles. The devastation, the turmoil, the emotional and physical pain etched in their beings.

    Moved To Oregon

    Thanks Katrina


  • Cover Shoot: Month Of August

    Carmelita Martell

    ……….Our cover model of the month is fashion designer Carmelita Martell, owner and founder of Carmelita Couture. Ms. Martell was recently selected by TW to be featured in an upcoming special October, 2010 edition of German Cosmopolitan magazine, entitled Sex & Art.

    Carmelita Couture is a line heavily influenced by Art & American Pop Culture, a mix of ultra-feminine silhouettes for today’s Glamour Girls. Carmelita Couture embraces the sensuality, strength and vivacious side of being a woman. Born out of her need to be creative and finding the female form a perfect canvas, Carmelita Martell founded the company in Miami, Florida in 2007 and is currently offering her line in over 20 national boutiques as well as overseas in Dubai, Australia, Bermuda and Japan. Patricia Field, stylist for Sex & The City, was one of the first to offer the unique line in her downtown NYC boutique, followed by multiple stores in Los Angeles and Las Vegas. Not going unnoticed by Hollywood, Carmelita Couture has been worn by some of today’s top celebrities, musicians, models and divas like Paula Abdul, Niki Minaj, VV Brown, Olivia Munn, Tatiana Ali, Tila Tequila and much of the young fashion minded Hollywood crowd. Ms. Martell has recently opened her first flagship boutique in Philadelphia and hopes to share her sensual line with local clients and international visitors.

    To learn more about Ms. Martell’s fashion design, log on to www.carmelitacouture.com.