Barbara Nitke
Barbara Nitke (b. 1950) is a New York photographer best known for her intimate and compassionate work in areas that have historically been considered alternative sex. She has long been a champion of the LGBTQ+, kink, and sex worker communities. Her photography practice spans hardcore porn sets in the 1980s, fetish porn in the 1990s, and the private lives of BDSM lovers for the following decade. After 2005, her work expanded into exploring constructed narratives and portraiture featuring fashion models and people picked up on the street. Her most recent work, The Luxe Motel, is a series inspired by the movie The Grifters, which explores issues of sexual identity, transience, and anxiety. In 2003, Nitke’s first monograph, Kiss of Fire: A Romantic View of Sadomasochism (introduction by A. D. Coleman), was published. It was followed in 2012 by American Ecstasy (introduction by Arthur C. Danto). Nitke was born in 1950 and grew up in Virginia and Alaska. She originally wanted to be a writer but found that she was most comfortable with a camera in her hand. She is self-taught in photography and has studied literature and philosophy at Baruch College, City University of New York. She has been on the School of Visual Arts faculty since 1992.
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