6B Cr- The Michigan Daily - WA"e., eU. - Thursday, November 9, 1995 Local photographer Harvey: Naked in the spotlight By Karl Jones Daily Weekend Editor It's an August night at Stucchi's. Mil- lions'of Ann Arbornatives with no friends are orammed into the ice-cream shop commiserating with their single scoop of mint chocolate chip. It's hot, it's late ... nothing exciting will ever happen. Then, like a dream sequence from some wacky seventies sit-com, a man at the next table whispers, "Now!" His two female companions jump up, rip off their dresses and sling an arm around eachother's shoulders. The man snaps a photo, and before Stucchi's patrons even have time to scream, "Cool ... they were NUDI!" the three have disappeared. Thmysterious photographer in ques- tion is:Harvey, aformer Ann Arbornative who began shooting public nudes about a year and a half ago. One might wonder whatkind of man would decide to devote his lifeto this, er, unique line ofwork. The answvr is ... a surprisingly normal one. Harvey lives in a small flat with his wife ,jebecca and their pet rabbit. The couple are warm, friendly, genuinely ex- citedbout Harvey's line of work. In fact, if it weren't for a few pictures of nude people hanging on the wall, the photogra- pher and his wife could be the couple next,door. This may have something to do w4h the fact that, before delving into the ralm of nude photography, Harvey didn't even own a camera. "I -worked at Zingerman's for three years" said Harvey. "I was living in a 3,500square foot apartment, and halfofit was ,he Anecdote Club (one of Ann Arbor's only underground clubs at the time)." "One day, a model and a photographer approached me about using (the space in) the apartment as a location for a work- shop to teach photographers to work with the nude form. All I had to do was make coffee and tea and lunch," he laughed. A friend of Harvey's loaned him a camera for the shoot, but according to the budding photographer, the novelty wore off quickly. "It was fun, don't get me wrong. There were three nude women, and it was very artistic... It just seemed like everyone was doing the same shots. I was thinking' 'Ifwe all sat down and looked at the shots like a week from now, they're all going to be almost identical, so what in the hell is the use?"' At the height of frustration, inspiration struck. "I looked out the window, and there were like 30 people waiting to cross the street, facing straight," Harvey contin- ued. "I thought it would be so funny if these three nude people were the last three people of this group. THAT would be funny! THAT would be a photograph to get! And the whole kind of philosophy happened right there. The idea of no one knowing, the candid-ness of it..." Harvey eventually decidedto move his "philosophy" into the streets of Ann Ar- bor. A nude shot at Hash Bash, another in front of Cava Java ... and the amazing thing is that pedestrians seemed almost oblivious. A series of Harvey's photos reveal a nude man posing and pivoting in front of a store window. Three com- pletely clothedpeople who had no idea he was going to "drop" are walkingpast him, and not ONE of them even turns to look. "When there's a lot of people around, it's much safer to do a shot because if you're walking down a crowded side- walk, you can't see much further that the second or third person in front of you," said Harvey. "A whole bunch of things couldbehappening, andthere'sthat whole wave ofpeople there ... but you don't see that brief drop. You miss the wholething." The candid-ness of Harvey's nudes eventually drew national attention. Tab- loid television show "A Current Affair" decided to run a piece on the photogra- pher in September of '94. When he asked around for models, then-acquaintance Rebecca turned up. The two eventually married, and as the success of Harvey's newlyfounded"nude greeting card" busi- ness and world wide web page began to take off, the couple decided to take the logical next step. They went on tour. "Nationwide search for nude people" trumpeted the fliers the couple handed out in cities from Los Angeles to New York. And from tatooed exhibitionists to small town residents looking for a thrill, models crawled out of the woodwork for a chance to appear in one of Harvey's photos. "(On tour) we carry the camera around with us and then we go to the coolest places in the city. Where we want to shoot, we put up fliers and try to draw the people from those areas," Harvey ex- plained. The models would practice stripping, posing, and getting dressed again in the couple's hotel room before they moved out into the street. As Harvey pointed out, the need for speed and accuracy turned the whole process into a type of science. "It's all planned ahead, and there's no communication once we leave the train- ing room. Once in a while when we're running through an alley or something, we'll scream 'yay' but mostly we just don't talk," he said. In order to avoid potential trouble with anyone who might be opposed to seeing (or unknowingly appearing in) a nude photo, the couple devised a James Bond- like getaway plan. "We zig-zag," Harvey said. "We do a shot, and then we have a getaway plan where it's all on foot for several blocks... We park a distance away, so you don't jump in the car and have your licence plate right there for everyone to see. Then we zig-zag to another shot and make triangles and stars and whatever and just keep zig-zagging all over town." "A lot of times people will ask us what we're doing, and we just don't say any- thing," he continued. "We'll give them a little blurb, but we don't just stand there, we gooffandgiggle andsay, 'Oh my god, we did it again!"' The gods of law enforcement have been smiling on Harvey thus far in his career as a nude photographer. He has yet to be ticketed, arrested or even severely chastised for public indecency. A few of his photos even feature police officers or vehicles along with the standard nudes. "It's fun to include cops in shots be- cause they have a sense of humor. I've met a lot of cops, actually." Harvey ad- mitted. "Most of them are pretty regular people. I thought growing up and getting speeding tickets that they were pretty well jerky, but I'm finding out that, hey, you run into a bully, but it's not as fre- quent as you think." In the future, Harvey plans to continue selling greeting cards, posters and t-shirts that display his work in local stores like Schoolkids' Records, In Flight, David's Comics, and others. If he can get around certain activist groups, that is. "One ofthethings I encounter... is that the word nude automatically categorizes greeting cards in a certain way. Activist groups or church groups, there's all kinds of names for them, come in and all their job is to do is to complain about some- thing that they disagree with," Harvey sighed."In other words, they inhibit these stores to exercise their choice and their right of expression." "There's not a single one of these pic- tures that are racy," he continued. "It's not what it's about - it's about natural- ness. We're trying to put nude people into an everyday setting ... I mean, we do shots in the middle of Monday after- noon." The photographer will also be pub- lishing a book of his photos called "The Spirit of Lady Godiva" sometime soon and is considering expanding his national road trip to a world tour. "I would like to do the Pyramids ... a kangaroo in Australia. I don't care where we are as long as there's a kangaroo in the background, you know," he laughed. And although Harvey admitted that one day he might return to a career in the food indus- try, he also stressed that his passion for photography is here to stay. "Professionally I don't think I would move beyond the nudes ... but I would like to experiment on a personal basis," he said. "We were driving down the road the otherday, and theclouds werejust this amazing color, and I was imagining a camera that could just capture all those colors and all those hues." Then with a twinge of "naked" enthusiasm he added, "I was intrigued." Check out Harvey's web page at http://www.anecdote.com Harvey's wife Rebecca poses for the first shot of their 1995 cross-country tour f "Hi. I'd like a single scoop of vanilla, a. sweater and some pants, please." m