Action 
      by Richard Kern. 
          Published by Taschen. ISBN-10: 3822856495 
		  
		
       
          
Photographer 
            and film maker Richard Kern was born in North Carolina in 1954. He acquired 
            an understanding of photography by accompanying his father, who was both 
            editor and photographer for a local newspaper, on news assignments. After 
            graduating from the University of North Carolina in 1977 he moved to New 
            York City where he fell in with the underground arts scene that also included 
            the likes of David Wojanarowicz, Lydia Lunch, Nick Zedd and Lung Leg. 
            In 1985, as part of 'The Cinema of Transgression' movement, he started 
            to make a name with his low budget films, such as 'Manhattan Loves Suicides', 
            that showed the seedy, drug fuelled counter culture of Reagan's America. 
            In 1986, working with Lydia Lunch and based upon her sexual fantasies, 
            he made the infamous 'Fingered'. Along the way - Kern has found time to 
            published several photographic monograms and produce music videos for 
            Sonic Youth and Marilyn Manson.
          It could 
            be argued that Kern's style of photography is a continuation of themes 
            inherent within the cinema of transgression. He tends not to favour the 
            conventional photographic studio - finding that sterile - his 'studio' 
            is his own New York Apartment. Here his models often pose in the kitchen, 
            bathroom, lounge, backyard and bedroom where they can be caught, via Kern's 
            camera, using action-men dolls as dildos, chewing on a packet of birth 
            control pills, urinating, smoking cigarettes held between toes or taking 
            off tights - tights, stockings and feet play a large part within the mise 
            en scène of Kern's images.
          His images 
            have found homes within the pages of magazines, such as Hustler, and art 
            galleries around the world, such as London's prestigious ICA. People react 
            to Kern's images in the same way that they react to Marmite - one either 
            loves them or hates them. They continue to divide and polarise opinion 
            - James Gardner of The New York Post has said that "There's a moral 
            element to Kern's work," whereas Sarah Kent, in Time Out London, 
            hated the work, exhibited in London's ICA, to the point where she asked 
            of her readers "Why is the ICA showing this nasty rubbish? Should 
            this man be walking free?"
          This coffee 
            table 280 page monograph  is published 
            in hardback and has been edited by Dian Hanson. It opens with a single 
            page introduction, entitled 'Detention', by Richard Prince. Other than 
            that there is no further text - have Taschen taken note of my preference 
            for letting the photographs speak for themselves without the burden of 
            pretentious essays trying to speak for them? Doubtful - but it is a welcome 
            change and Hanson and Taschen should both be applauded for resisting the 
            temptation.
          The photographs 
            are, with but a few exceptions, displayed one per page and printed to 
            the same high standard that one has come to expect from Taschen.
In 
            way of a bonus - 'Action' comes with an hour long DVD. Entitled 'Extra 
            Action' this comprises of film made by Kern that has a specially written 
            score by Sonic Youth's Thurston Moore. The film is a series of photoshoots, 
            set to experimental music, and split into 7 chapters - BBB, Insert, Legs, 
            Misc, Rub, Wet and YG. Also included on the DVD is an extract from a black 
            and white experimental short film entitled 'Hardcore'. As stated above 
            - as with Marmite one either loves or loathes Kern's work. I happen to 
            love Marmite. Try it for yourself and make up your own mind.
          
          
          Review by 
            Christopher John Ball
          **** Rating
        
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          *****  | 
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            Recommended  | 
        
    
 
          If 
            you have a photography related book you would like reviewing, including 
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