Robert Carlos Clarke (24 June 1950 – 25 March 2006) was a British-Irish photographer who made erotic images of women as well as documentary, portrait, and commercial photography.[1][2]
Carlos Clarke produced six books during his career: The Illustrated Delta of Venus (1980), Obsession (1981), The Dark Summer (1985), White Heat (1990), Shooting Sex (2002), Love Dolls Never Die (2004), and one DVD, Too Many Nights (2006).
Carlos Clarke's first encounter with photographing models in rubber and latex was an experience with a gentleman called 'The Commander', a publisher of a magazine for devotees of rubber wear who had contacted Carlos Clarke to shoot for his publication.[4] The British pop artist Allen Jones[6] was a good friend of Carlos Clarke.[2] Jones' work drew heavily on fetishism and he advised the younger photographer to lay off the fetish scene.[2] He is known as "the British Helmut Newton".[7]
Personal life
While at Worthing, he met Sue Frame, later his first wife.[2][3] Knowing that she was a part-time model, he instantly became a photographer and persuaded her to pose for him on a chromed 650 cc Triumph Bonneville. In 1975, a couple of years later, they married at Kensington Registry Office. Carlos Clarke was later remarried with his wife Lindsey. The couple had a daughter.
Death
Carlos Clarke died by suicide on 25 March 2006 after jumping in front of an incoming train. He was 55 years old.[3][1][8]
Publications
Publications by Carlos Clarke
The Illustrated Delta of Venus. W H Allen, 1980.
Obsession. Quartet, 1981.
The Dark Summer. Quartet, 1985.
Shooting Sex: The Definitive Guide to Undressing Beautiful Strangers. Self-published, 2002. ISBN978-0954346201.
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