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Marlene Starlet Pin Up Girl is an homage to the Pinup girls of the 50s and 60s whose mass-produced pictures see wide appeal as pop culture. She is invented from the imagination of French filmmaker and artist, Stephan Saint Emmett, whose passion for women inspired him to create a collection of Pin-Ups, whom vary in age but have one thing common -- they are all seated in design chairs.
Who is a Pinup Girl? A pin-up girl or pin-up model is a model
whose mass-produced pictures see wide appeal as pop culture. Intended
for informal display, pin-ups are a light genre of pornography. Pin-up
girls are often glamour models, fashion models, and actresses. "Pin-up"
may also refer to drawings, paintings and other illustrations done in
emulation of these photos. The term was first attested to in English in
1941; however the practice is documented back at least to the 1890s.
The "pin up" images could be cut out of magazines or newspapers, or be
from postcard or chromo-lithographs, and so on. Such photos often
appear on calendars, which are meant to be pinned up anyway. Later,
posters of "pin-up girls" were mass-produced. -- This definition uses
material from the Wikipedia article "Pin-up girl" and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
ABOUT THE ARTIST -- Stephan Saint Emett was born in the
Spanish town Santander in 1962. At the age of four he and his parents
moved to France, where he studied literature, architecture and art in
Paris at the renowned Penninghen/Esag Studios. After he had made a
short film, for which he received several awards, he took up the idea
to create three-dimensional figurines based on his film characters. At
first he made his sculptures from polystyrene but soon afterwards he
started working with wood paste and poly resin, which enabled him to
work in a more practical way, with more precision and at a quicker
pace. And thus, his original Pin-Ups were born! |
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