Photography by Ian L. Sitren

Posts tagged “Helmut Newton influence

Mia Ciccero – Nude World Order / Sin City, 1997


Sometimes the tiniest pieces of film tell the biggest stories.

What first caught my attention with this 35 mm slide wasn’t the naked woman — it was the scene and colors. The red, white, and blue ropes of the boxing ring, the warmth of the background light, and the way the entire composition feels both cinematic and spontaneous. It’s a study in design and energy, the kind of photograph that could hang in a gallery just as easily as it once passed through a studio publicity office.

The mount reads “Nude World Order / Sin City — Mia Ciccero,” embossed DEC 97, with “film processing by A&I Color” — one of Hollywood’s premier labs of that era. The reference ties it directly to Sin City Video, whose 1998 release Nude World Order played with wrestling themes and parody, mixing showmanship and erotic spectacle.

Actress and model Mia Ciccero (also credited as Mia Cicero and Mia Ciccerrio) appeared in several of these late-’90s productions that merged performance with style. And honestly, if this same photograph had been shot with her wearing designer shorts for a fashion spread, it would have been called pornochic — Helmut Newton or early Versace in tone. It’s that close to the cultural line between eroticism and high art.

Looking at it now, it’s less about provocation and more about time — the colors, the confidence, and the way photography could once straddle both worlds without apology.

Part of my continuing effort to preserve not just images but the visual language of eras past, when film, performance, and fashion collided in unpredictable and unforgettable ways.

You can explore this and more originals from my archive in From My Collections (Cultural & Erotic) at https://www.secondfocus.com/gallery/From-My-Collections-Cultural-Erotic/G0000h1LWkCCepcc/


Brigitte Nielson by Herb Ritts – A Postcard

This is an original postcard featuring Brigitte Nielson, photographed by Herb Ritts in Malibu in 1987. Published by Fotofolio with the Fahey/Klein Gallery, it’s one of those cards that was more often collected than mailed—an art print in postcard form.

I first remember Brigitte Nielson in the unforgettable images Helmut Newton made of her. Those photographs—erotic, striking, and unapologetically powerful—stayed with me. Newton had a way of presenting tall, commanding women as both glamorous and intimidating, something that influenced my own photography for years.

Seeing this Ritts image of Nielson feels like another piece of that era, when photographers like Newton and Ritts defined what sensual celebrity portraiture could be. I’ve long been drawn to photographing tall, powerful women myself—images that nod to the confidence and strength Newton captured so well.

This postcard is now part of my collection, a small but meaningful reminder of the photographers and subjects who helped shape my vision.

Explore more pieces like this in my gallery From My Collections (Cultural & Erotic) at:
https://www.secondfocus.com/gallery/From-My-Collections-Cultural-Erotic/G0000h1LWkCCepcc/