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BABY OIL & ICE: Striptease in East London edited by Lara Clifton photographs by Sarah Ainslie and Julie Cook OUT OF PRINT 1 899 344 85 3 – Crown quarto (246mm x 189mm) hardcover
Hands had to be playfully pushed away; baby oil and ice were commonplace props For me, watching strippers is observing erotic perfection together with the £1 for any London bus journey, it is the best value £1 can buy. Dr Tuppy Owens I came from a small town, had studied in a very small city where I had, by my standards, been a bit wild. But stripping? If Id ever thought of it I suppose it was in the Toulouse Lautrec style skirts to swish, feathers to coyly hide behind. Getting your kit off in the local pub was a whole different ball game. Louise I always feel 10 past 1 is a bit early to be sticking your ass in somebodys face Roxanne, watching Jackie Dean do the tie routine at Sollys one afternoon I am dancing and I am looking at him and I am thinking that he has nice eyes and his eyes do not follow me undressing but seem to be entranced, and perform their own sparkly number with mine. Liz Howard
PRAISE for Baby
Oil & Ice ABOUT THE EDITOR & PHOTOGRAPHERS This book seeks to provide a snapshot of strip pubs in the East End. The combination of a traditional pub with naked ladies is fast becoming a thing of the past. Sarah Ainslie is a photographer working in Londons East End. She has worked on dramas and documentaries in TV, film and theatre. She has spent many months photographing strip pubs, specialising in the usually private world of the womens changing rooms. This was an invitation into another world. The women were amazing; without their co-operation none of these pictures would have been possible. Its their strength and feeling of empowerment that remains with me. In the very intimate area of the toilets and changing rooms there were stories about their lives, laughter, banter, boredom, drinking and camaraderie. I was there when outfits were carefully chosen for each strip... and still there when the girls returned naked holding their discarded clothes. I loved it. Julie Cook is a London-based
photographer who has exhibited in London, Liverpool, Bath and Hereford.
She has taught at Bauhaus Weimar, Berlin TU and Londons South Bank
University, and been published in magazines such as Bizarre, Contemporary,
ES Magazine and Blueprint. Click here to see extracts |
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