Clayton
James Cubitt, a.k.a. Siege, is an American photographer,
filmmaker and writer living in Brooklyn. He is known for applying an
"arrestingly controlled and sleek sense of style" to art,
portrait, erotic and fashion photography. He has been described as
"one of a new breed of photographers no longer content to draw a
distinction between the worlds of fashion, art, and porn."
Cubitt
grew up in New Orleans and other parts of the Gulf Coast. He was
inspired to explore photography after seeing the photograph "Susie
Smoking," shot by Nick Knight for a Yohji
Yamamoto ad campaign. Cubitt also cites Helmut Newton's
photograph "Green Room Murder" as an early inspiration. He
moved north after high school, eventually settling in
Brooklyn in early 2000.
From
2004 to 2008, Cubitt published a photography/confessional blog titled
"The Daily Siege" at sex/culture online magazine Nerve.
It was described by Eyemazing Journal as "one of the best
sources of intelligent, open sexuality on the web.” In
addition to erotic content, including images and podcasts, the blog
featured Cubitt’s writing on a variety of topics, including
politics and his creative process.
In
2005, Cubitt collaborated on a generative art fashion
series series with creative coder Tom Carden. To create the images,
Cubitt used software that experimented with particles and attractors.
The software was written by Carden using the alpha version of
the Processing Programming Language, and the images were
published in Metropop Magazine. Cubitt is also known for "Lagos
Calling," an alternate-reality fashion story that reimagined
the skinhead fashion movement as a product of
late-1960s Lagos, Nigeria, rather than London. The images were
presented as a set of resurfaced, damaged, faded anthropological
portraits. The series was used as stylistic inspiration for
the Gnarls Barkley music video for "Going
On." Websites have mistakenly published the images as
historical reference. Cubitt created a series called "Damaged
Doll" that featured pornographic actress Justine Joli in
a sexual, high-fashion context. Two of the images were included
in The Playground, a collectible boxed set of fashion
artwork. Two different printers refused to print the pieces due
to their explicit nature, so the book publishers printed them
manually. However,Barney's New York refused to stock the boxed
set due to the inclusion of the two pieces.
In
2005, Cubitt traveled to Pearlington, Mississippi, ground zero
for Hurricane Katrina, after hearing that his mother's home
there had been destroyed. Upon arriving, Cubitt began to document the
area's devastation. He set up a photography studio in order to
interview and photograph Katrina's survivors and volunteers in
Pearlington's former school gymnasium, which was serving as a
distribution point for aid in the town. Cubitt published their
stories and images on a blog he created, titled "Operation
Eden." For a time, the blog became a central hub for volunteers
and people seeking to send relief, and citizens who were curious
about what the mainstream media wasn't covering. The blog has been
described as "a powerful piece of citizen journalism." It
was featured on MSNBC, LIFE Magazine, and Rolling Stone. Cubitt
returned to the area subsequently to photograph survivors in
Mississippi and New Orleans. His Katrina portraits were used by ad
agency Grey Worldwide, in conjunction with SAMHSA and
the Ad Council, to create a series of PSAs urging Katrina
survivors to reach out for help.
Cubitt’s
celebrity portrait subjects include David Byrne , Peter
Murphy, Xeni Jardin, Levon Helm, Shaun Ross, Big
Freedia, Justine Joli, and Molly Crabapple. Cubitt is
credited for initially discovering underground South African rap-rave
group Die Antwoord, and subsequently shot their portrait and
album cover for the band's debut, $O$.
In
2008-2009, Cubitt created a video series of Long Portraits, in which
subjects were filmed sitting still for five minutes or more. The
Long Portrait format became popular on Vimeo, inspiring many
other photographers create their own versions. In 2012, Cubitt
created a video series titled Hysterical Literature. Shot clinically
in black and white, the films show women having orgasms while reading
a passage from a book of their choice. The first installment in
the video series featured adult performer Stoya reading Necrophilia
Variations by Supervert, and has received over eleven million
views on YouTube as of February 2014. Subsequent videos feature
"friends and industry comrades" reading passages from
books including Bret Easton Ellis'American Psycho and Walt
Whitman's Leaves of Grass.
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