Peter Berlin Talks!
October 18, 2014
7:00 PM – 9:00 PM
Press Release from Magnet: http://www.magnetsf.org/community/events/peter-berlin-talks.html
PETER BERLIN, is a photographer, artist, filmmaker, clothing designer/sewer, model and gay sex symbol. In the early to mid-1970s, Berlin created some of the most recognizable gay male erotic imagery of his time. Serving as his own photographer, model, and fashion designer, Berlin redefined self-portraiture and became an international sensation. His two films, Nights in Black Leather (1973) and That Boy (1974) (credited in the latter as Peter Burian), played to packed houses for years and, along with other pioneering erotic filmmakers such as Wakefield Poole and Jack Deveau, helped bring gay male erotic films artistic legitimacy.
Born…Armin Hagen Freiherr von Hoyningen-Huene aka in 1942 WW2 Germany. He was the second of the three children He was born in Łódź, Poland, and grew up in Berlin, Germany. The extended family included the American fashion photographer George Hoyningen-Huene. (lover of famed Hollywood photographer Horst) He received post-secondary education in Germany as a photo-technician. In his early 20s, he worked as a photographer for an interview program on German TV, photographing some of Europe’s biggest celebrities and film stars. Berlin designed and sewed all of his clothing without a pattern. He also was a painter and illustrator. He began photographing himself in erotic poses and making skin-tight clothes to wear as he cruised the parks and train stations of Berlin, the streets of Rome, Paris, NY and SF.
In the early 1970s, Berlin moved to San Francisco and became a fixture on the streets with his highly suggestive clothing and constant cruising. He collaborated with friend Richard Abel on a 16 mm hard-core porn film entitled Nights in Black Leather (1973) in which he played the lead role. Berlin’s poster for the film helped make Nights in Black Leather an underground hit. As a follow-up, Berlin directed, produced, wrote, and starred in That Boy (1974), another successful film. He also made four short films in the mid- to late-1970s, which were primarily sold as 8 mm “loops” by mail order. His self-portraits were published and sold.
He was also the subject of several Robert Mapplethorpe photographs, five drawings by Tom of Finland, and at least one photograph by Andy Warhol. Two Robert Mapplethorpe Polaroid images of Berlin can be seen in the 2008 book, Mapplethorpe: Polaroids, and the Whitney Museum of American Art exhibition of the same name. Berlin’s photographs and artwork have been exhibited around the world, including the exhibition “Split/Vision” (NYC, 1986), curated by Mapplethorpe, and in the exhibition “Berlin on Berlin” (2006) at the Leslie Lohman Gallery in NYC.
Although he retreated from the limelight in the 1980s, he continues to make videos of himself and lives quietly in San Francisco, where he is still frequently recognized on the streets. In 2005, filmmaker and writer Jim Tushinski directed and co-produced (with Lawrence Helman), the featurelength documentary That Man: Peter Berlin, which began a resurgence of interest in Berlin’s works. The documentary premiered at the 2005 Berlin Film Festival and garnered several awards at film festivals worldwide, reconnecting Berlin with his older fans and introducing him to a new generation. In 2006, Berlin launched a web site devoted to his work. In 2007 Peter Berlin was inducted into the GAYVN Hall of Fame. The GAYVN Awards were presented annually to honor work done in the gay porn industry.