Showing posts with label Austrian Venuses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Austrian Venuses. Show all posts

Monday, 18 July 2011

Centrefold Venus of the Month 26: Florence Maurier, July 1972



From July 1972 we have Florence Maurier who was, according to Men Only, from which this pictorial comes, one of France's top fashion models.




Photographed by Jean-Pierre Bourgois she certainly looks like she could be a fashion model, with her stunning face and slender figure.




A successful model too, with her "luxury apartment in Montparnasse" complete with sauna and plunge pool as well as a house near Le Mans.




Of course, unlike Playboy or even Penthouse in the early days, the text accompanying the models' pictures was, in Paul Raymond's magazines, entirely fictitious so, in truth, we know nothing about Florence at all.




It is an interesting conceit of these magazines that they felt it necessary to persuade people that their models were different people than they, in fact, were.  Partly this could be explained by the model herself wanting anonymity and not wanting to use her real name.




At least in Florence's case they admit she is a model rather than a secretary, bank cashier, au-pair girl or whatever else they would claim the girls to be.  Perhaps the reason that these magazines claimed their models were from ordinary jobs was to suggest that they were attainable girls who the readers could, perhaps meet. 




Admitting Florence was a model goes against this but this is probably because it would be hard to claim that such a spectacular looking woman could be anything else. 




Later, of course, other magazines would discover the appeal of less attractive, but more "real"  women, with the readers's wives phenomenon (in the US very much started by Gallery's Girl next Door feature) which would eventually spawn their own dedicated magazines.




The article also claims that she is half Scottish but then, again, it was common for the magazines to claim that their featured girl was British or part British even if she was foreign.  Again, they were trying to relate the girl to the experience of their readers, obviously thinking that a German or French girl would be that much more exotic and that less attainable.  You won't bump into the centrefold on your way down to the pub if she lives in Paris.




So this leaves us in a situation where we have to appreciate Florence only for her visual representation; a process which is, we feel, a lot more honest than a publisher trying to persuade us that she has anything in common with us, as the "reader".




After all, why does such a lovely young woman need any explanatory text at all.  Why not just print the pictures with no text or captions whatsoever? 




We suppose that it all started with Playboy who, of course, really were presenting the idea of "the girl next door" even if she did happen to be a model anyway.  Their text telling us about the girl in their Playmate feature often being a significant challenge for their writers.  In fact the writers were rotated often to stop them "going up the wall".




Playboy never lied about any of its girls in their accompanying text.  If it said she was a nuclear physicist, she was a nuclear physicist.  That didn't mean that unappealing facts (like whether the Playmate was married) weren't left out.




All of this discussion becomes relevant as we examine two more appearances by "Florence" in other magazines.




Three months after her Men Only appearance Florence popped up in the first ever issue of Oui magazine in October 1972.  Hugh Hefner, surprised by the success of Penthouse since its launch in the US in September 1969, had decided that the reason for Bob Guccione's success was that his magazine, put together in London, was more "European".




He signed a deal with Daniel Filipacchi, publisher of French Playboy clone Lui, to produce a new magazine with half European and half American content.  Florence was the magazine's first centrefold.  The feature didn't purport to tell you anything about her, other than her name was Florence Fossorier, as it was headed "Sixteen facts about French women". 




There is little doubt that Florence Maurier and Florence Fossorier (photographed for Oui by Frank Gitty) are the same girl but then the same girl appearing under different names in different magazines was quite usual.




Gitty has her wearing rather more clothes than in her Men Only shoot; to greater peek-a-boo effect.





One thing that Oui did which the other magazines hadn't done at this point was to include a man in their centrefold shoot.




This was not, it has to be said, particularly popular with their readers but Oui persisted with this for another year.




At the end of the following year Penthouse did include a man in their centrefold shoot for December 1973 but they didn't actually include him in the centrefold as Oui did here with Florence.




Oui's centrefold of Florence was notorious for a reason other than the inclusion of a man, however.  Penthouse, well aware that Oui was designed to take readership from them (and Guccione smarting from the fact that he had been about to sign a deal with Filipacchi before Hefner trumped him) accused Oui of using a former Penthouse Pet of the Month for their first centrefold.




Oui's Florence Fossorier was, according to Penthouse, none other than their own March 1971 centrefold, Lottie Gunthart and she wasn't French but Austrian.




Oui denied this and insisted she was French and a completely different girl.  As the New York magazine observed in November 1972: "If she wasn't Lottie then she was her twin."




So, is it the same girl?  After careful examinination we believe that it is the same girl in all three pictorials.  Other than her face, Florence Maurier and Lottie Gunthart share a distinctive mole in exactly the same place under the right breast. 



You can't see the mole in Oui's Florence Fosorier pictures as she keeps her top on in most of the pictures except her centrefold.  We believe that the mole isn't visible in the Oui centrefold picture because it has been printed as a reverse image.




Gunthart/Maurier has one round nipple and one oval one.  Oui has flipped the image so that the round one is visible meaning that the mole on her right side is now on her left side and invisble in the Oui centrefold.





The matter is further confused by the fact that her mole doesn't appear in the picture above but does in her centrefold, which is from the same sequence.





So is she French or Austrian?  The truth of the matter is, of course, that it doesn't matter but given that Penthouse had no reason to lie about her nationality and Oui (or Lottie herself) may not have wanted her to be too identifiable as a previous Penthouse Pet, then we are inclined to go for Austrian.




Probably only the lovely Florence/Lottie herself can confirm the issue.




Lottie was only the ninth Pet to flash her pubic hair to this point and she does so more than any of her predeccesors.






This picture in front of the window was the most full frontal picture Penthouse had shown so far.  At this time they had still not had a full-frontal centrefold, however, so Lottie keeps her knickers on in hers.




Lottie had actually appeared in Penthouse before her centrefold, as one of the two women in Penthouse's first girl/girl set from December 1971 photographed, like her later Penthouse Pet feature, by Dutch-born photographer James Baes.  You can see that pictorial in full here.  Here she is, again, identified as Lottie Gunthart, an Austrian model.

It has been suggested that she is also Lotti Günthardt, an actress who appeared in the 1976 Swiss film Der Gehülfe, a German language film.

Monday, 22 February 2010

Curling Venus: Claudia Toth


Claudia Toth


Agent Triple P enjoys watching the Winter Olympics much more than the summer games, although for many reasons Vancouver 2010 has not been as satisactory as others he has watched in the past. He should be very involved in the whole thing but isn't somehow. This is odd as he has visted Vancouver and Whistler many times and the only other Winter Olpmpics city he has has been to was Innsbruck. He is very familiar with the locations of the events therefore. He was even involved with VANOC the organising committee for a while on a couple of issues.

Claudia uses a whole body sensing technique to decide where her next stones should be carved from


One big issue is that Vancouver just doesn't look wintry enough. Its nice to see Hazel Irvine giving her updates from the end of Canada Place with the lovely piles of sulphur in the background but it should be snowy mountains and fir trees not ships and float planes!

Claudia and the Austrian curling team: the other babe is her sister




The other problem, of course, is the eight hour time diference. Triple P has missed most of the ski-ing events which are shown early evening UK time. Switching on live, at present, for the late night show it is always curling. Triple P has been to several curling rinks in Canada. It is a very popular sport there. He even had a meeting in the cafe of the curling rink in Maple Ridge, BC once! What he wants to watch is bobsleigh, ski-ing and maybe a few stick-like women (where is the new Katarina Witt?) in short skirts in the figure skating. What he gets is curling. The problem with curling is that it is completely addictive to watch. Triple P has been staying up until 1.30am watching men and women sliding bits of Scottish granite over the ice. I suppose it's one of the few sports where great Britain has any chance of winning a medal: our bob-skeleton lady Amy Williams, being something of a surprise winner. Incidentally, we are sure that at Salt Lake City it was called skeleton-bob but now they have reversed this, presumably so it doesn't sound like a character from Pirates of the Caribbean.

Very much Triple P's sort of woman!


Anyway, back to curling and the rather splendid Claudia Toth captain (or "skip" as we afficionados know it!) of the Austrian team of a few years ago. Sadly, Austria didn't make the curling for this Olympics so we will have to make do with these pictures from a couple of years back. Claudia was the former girlfriend of America's wayward skier, Bode Miller, until he dumped her. Is he insane? Er, well he was the man who went out on a heavy drinking session before the 2006 Olympic downhill race and, not surprisingly, failed to deliver his predicted gold medal.


Claudia gets her rock off

The black and white photos of Claudia are from a women of curling (honestly!) calendar from 2005. Claudia turned down German Playboy, sadly, but she is still a fine looking young lady for some icy sliding fun. She is obviously good with a broom as well, which would be very useful given the state of Agent Triple P's study floor at present.

Sunday, 29 November 2009

Venus asleep: Slumbering Woman by Johann Baptist Reiter

Schlummernde Frau (Die erste Gemahlin des Künstlers) 1849


Here is a gorgeously sensual nude from Austrian painter Johann Baptist Reiter (1813-1890). The translation of the title is Slumbering Woman (The first wife of the artist). In fact, when the picture was painted in 1849 Reiter was still married to Maria Anna Hofstötter who he had wed ten years before at the age of 26. His wife, like Reiter, was from Linz but she left him in 1850 and it wasn't until 16 years later that he married again; to Anna Josefa Theresia Brayer. Unfortunately for Reiter, his second wife was one of those creatures who was so extravagant that he have to work flat out for the rest of his life just to keep up. Not just painting his own pictures but also having to do copies of old masters just to keep her in the style to which she had become accustomed to.


Johann Baptist Reiter: Self Portrait (1842)


Reiter was the son of a carpenter and started his artistic career painting furniture, ships' figureheads and even cemetery crosses. Encouraged by the art dealer Josef Hafner he went to Vienna and studied at the Academy under Kupelwieser, Ender and Petter. In 1830 he studied engraving and earned a living from painting porcelain. He started to exhibit his paintings and in 1836 won the Lampi prize (named after the Austrian painter whose first names were also, co-incidentally, Johann Baptist). His career took off and enabled him to buy a large house in Vienna.

This nude is unusual in his output which indicates that it was a private work painted for his own benefit. It is certainly a wonderfully intimate study with nothing whatsoever of the sort of classicism expected of a nude in this period. It has an erotic quality that is almost post-coital. Most of his pictures (after an unsuccessful attempt to produce religious pictures) were portraits (especially children and miniatures) or genre paintings of workers. As he got older he refused to be influenced by movements such as Impressionism but carried on painting in the same technically fine style that he had adopted from studying the Dutch Masters.


Betrachtung im Neglige (1847)


There is certainly a lot of the Dutch School in this study which is probably also his first wife. So Reiter's Slumbering Woman is a one off and, for that reason, we respond to it even more as a portrait of a young woman the artist obviously desired.

Agent Triple P saw this picture in the splendid Belvedere Palace Gallery in Vienna. The Upper Belvedere (there are two buildings) houses a wonderful collection of Austrian art including the largest collection of pictures by Gustav Klimt anywhere. Well worth a visit next time you are in Vienna.

Thanks to B for her help in translating the only piece I could find on Reiter.

Tuesday, 14 April 2009

Sporting Venus: Alexandra Worisch


This splendid photograph by Tony Duffy has been much imitated since he took it during the European Swimming Championships in Split, Yugoslavia, in 1981.


5'5" Alexandra was competing in the synchronised solo event and finished in silver medal position behind Britain's Carolyn Wilson. At this point Great Britain did well at synchronised swimming but, typically, once it became an Olympic event (like Ice Dancing) we immediately became useless at it.



Alexandra was only fifteen at the time of the photo and went on to compete for Austria in the first Olympic synchronised swimming event at the Los Angeles games where she came tenth in both the solo and duet events.



A very animated Venus rising from the waves! She now works as a physiotherapist for the Austrian Institute for medical and sports scientific advice.





Alexandra today