 |  | New
York City photographer Richie Fahey paints on his pictures in a cold water flat,
surrounded by his inspiration: a towering collection of 1930s-1960s musty paperbacks
and detective pulp. With the help of a postwar hobbyist's manual, Photo Oil Coloring
for Fun and Profit, he learned to transform black and white photographs into glorious
color by dabbling with pigments on snapshots from the '40s. Fahey's
Technicolor-like style evokes lobby cards in old movie houses, covers of dimestore
novels and star portraits in fan magazines like Screen and Photoplay. In defining
his style, Fahey is inspired by the posed photographs from detective magazines,
cinematographers of the 1940's-50's like John Alton, portrait photographers such
as George Hurrell, and painters and illustrators like Leeteg and James Avanti. In
creating his images, Fahey plays with the noir stereotype of beautiful women gone
bad and the men who love them. He is painstaking about stylistic detail. Convincing
art direction, combined with vintage lighting techniques and hand coloring conspire
to create alluring, ambiguous works. The viewer's inability to pinpoint the exact
time frame in which a Fahey photograph was taken, lends a certain timelessness
to the artist's work. Fahey has created book cover art for
PENGUIN, SCRIBNER, WARNER BOOKS, VINTAGE, ST. MARTIN'S PRESS, KNOPF and SIMON
& SCHUSTER. Other commercial clients include SONY RECORDS, ADOBE THEATRE CO.
and SPOT DESIGN. His editorial clients have included SPORTS ILLUSTRATED, GOTHAM,
BUST, ATOMIC and FLATIRON magazines. Fahey produced and co-designed the cover
art for the reissued James Bond novels. Fahey has been featured
in JUXTAPOSE art magazine, CAMERA
ARTS, YELLOW RAT BASTARD and GARAGE. His work has
been shown at the Robin Rice Gallery in New York City's Greenwich Village and
posters of his work are available for purchase online at VintageArte.com.
His 2004 pinup calendar, Women in Crime, slyly depicts gorgeous women caught in
the act of committing various amusing felonies. Fahey studied
painting at the University of South
Carolina and photography at the Rochester Institute of
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