{"meta":{"version":"2.1","_links":{"self":{"href":"https://api.vam.ac.uk/v2/object/O82687"},"collection_page":{"href":"https://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O82687/"}},"images":{"_primary_thumbnail":"https://framemark.vam.ac.uk/collections/2026PM0335/full/!100,100/0/default.jpg","_iiif_image":"https://framemark.vam.ac.uk/collections/2026PM0335/","_alt_iiif_image":[],"imageResolution":"low","_images_meta":[{"assetRef":"2026PM0335","copyright":"© Victoria and Albert Museum, London","sensitiveImage":false},{"assetRef":"2006AR9160","copyright":"© Victoria and Albert Museum, London","sensitiveImage":false},{"assetRef":"2021MY5385","copyright":"© Victoria and Albert Museum, London","sensitiveImage":false},{"assetRef":"2021MY7268","copyright":"© Victoria and Albert Museum, London","sensitiveImage":false}]},"see_also":null},"record":{"systemNumber":"O82687","accessionNumber":"E.1084-1996","objectType":"Photograph","titles":[{"title":"Nothing to Lose XII","type":"assigned by artist"},{"title":"Bodies of Experience","type":"series title"}],"summaryDescription":"Rotimi Fani-Kayode was a founder member in 1988 of Autograph, the Association of Black Photographers in London. He experimented with colour photography of the black male nude, using symbols derived from his Nigerian Yoruba culture. Homoerotic desire and sexuality was central to his work as can be seen in <i>Black Male / White Male</i> (1988) and <i>Bodies of Experience</i> (1989). His vigorous use of colour and original use of symbolism seem to reflect both Yoruban traditions and the new possibilities of expression and political debate in London in the 1980s.","physicalDescription":"A colour photograph depicting a black male nude, seated on the floor and leaning backwards, with grapes and a lemon covering his genitals.","artistMakerPerson":[{"name":{"text":"Fani-Kayode, Rotimi","id":"A10022"},"association":{"text":"photographer","id":"AAT25687"},"note":""}],"artistMakerOrganisations":[],"artistMakerPeople":[],"materials":[{"text":"dye","id":"AAT13029"},{"text":"photographic paper","id":"AAT14190"}],"techniques":[{"text":"dye-destruction","id":"AAT133465"}],"materialsAndTechniques":"Dye destruction print","categories":[{"text":"Photographs","id":"THES48910"},{"text":"Black History","id":"THES48989"},{"text":"Gender and Sexuality","id":"THES48940"},{"text":"LGBTQ","id":"THES266921"}],"styles":[],"collectionCode":{"text":"PDP","id":"THES48595"},"images":["2026PM0335","2006AR9160","2021MY5385","2021MY7268"],"imageResolution":"low","galleryLocations":[{"current":{"text":"SHLN","id":"THES49063"},"free":"","case":"","shelf":"","box":""}],"partTypes":[[{"text":"photograph","id":"AAT46300"}]],"contentWarnings":[{"apprise":"No","note":""}],"placesOfOrigin":[{"place":{"text":"Great Britain","id":"x32019"},"association":{"text":"photographed","id":"x30151"},"note":""}],"productionDates":[{"date":{"text":"1989","earliest":"1989-01-01","latest":"1989-12-31"},"association":{"text":"made","id":"x28654"},"note":""}],"associatedObjects":[],"creditLine":"Copyright Estate of Rotimi Fani-Kayode, courtesy Autograph ABP","dimensions":[{"dimension":"Length","value":"32.7","unit":"cm","qualifier":"","date":{"text":"","earliest":null,"latest":null},"part":"sheet","note":""},{"dimension":"Width","value":"26","unit":"cm","qualifier":"","date":{"text":"","earliest":null,"latest":null},"part":"sheet","note":""}],"dimensionsNote":"Frame dims (external): H655 x W655 x D32mm","marksAndInscriptions":[],"objectHistory":"","historicalContext":"","briefDescription":"Photograph by Rotimi Fani-Kayode, 'Nothing to Lose XII', Ilfochrome dye-destruction print, Great Britain, 1989","bibliographicReferences":[{"reference":{"text":"Haworth-Booth, Mark. <u>Photography: An Independent Art</u>. London, 1997.","id":"AUTH328379"},"details":"plate 82","free":""},{"reference":{"text":"","id":""},"details":"Stuart Hall, 2001","free":"Nothing is event driven in Rotimi's photography. The studio becomes a laboratory for exploring this border land between ritual eroticism and the sensuality of the male body. Rotimi looks at the body with an unashamedly gay gaze - different from Mapplethorpe; whose vision invades the subject, a form of voyeurism and a fetishising of the male black image. \r\nIn Rotimi's work the body is transfigured by a combination of visual pleasure and sexual pleasure. He draws on the repertoires of Yoruba ritual, his modern experience in New York, surrealist influences and Mapplethorpe. Each of his images plays across these different registers, none of them is preserved, nothing is a pure African image. The human subject is lifted with a certain displacement. He is not interested in 'Who is this?'.\r\nThe fruit and garland of flower images play across the masculine and the feminine, feminising the males without making them feminine. It is a wonderful play across sexual registers, cultural registers and different artistic languages. The politics of taking an approach to photography through the intersection of race and sex is tremendously powerful."},{"reference":{"text":"","id":""},"details":"Robert Taylor, 2001 (in conversation with Mark Haworth-Booth)","free":"\"At the time Rotimi first asked me to pose for him, I was still in ‘respectable mode’, in a salaried executive job in publishing, with professional appearances to keep up. This was not really the sort of thing one was supposed to be doing. But there was something about the way Rotimi worked. I can’t say I understood all of his motives, but I just felt comfortable with him. I wanted to go wherever he wanted to go and do whatever he wanted me to do. We did some outrageous things, none of which I regret. I just find it surprising that that's me in the images. I was thrilled by the possibility that you could make images that were relevant to the way people lived and felt, that properly reflected some of the complexities of our lives, even though the images were not specifically about the people in the pictures. It seems very elemental these days, to be free to explore ideas that went beyond the human represented in the image.\""}],"production":"","productionType":{"text":"","id":""},"contentDescription":"","contentPlaces":[],"associatedPlaces":[],"contentPerson":[],"associatedPerson":[],"contentOrganisations":[],"associatedOrganisations":[],"contentPeople":[],"associatedPeople":[],"contentEvents":[],"associatedEvents":[],"contentOthers":[{"text":"figure","id":"AAT189808"},{"text":"male nude","id":"x45958"}],"contentConcepts":[],"contentLiteraryRefs":[],"galleryLabels":[{"text":"<b>Gallery 100, 2016-17:</b>\n\nRotimi Fani-Kayode (1955–89)\r\n‘Nothing to Lose XII’\r\nFrom the series ‘Bodies of Experience’\r\n1989\n\r\nIn the 1980s, London artist Rotimi Fani-Kayode experimented with studies of the black male nude. In the images, he brought together motifs derived from his native Nigeria with those from European art. In this warm-hued image, Kayode combines a ritualistic pose with lemons and grapes, classical symbols of love, fertility and virility.\n\r\nIlfochrome dye-destruction print\nMuseum no. E.1084-1996\n","date":{"text":"","earliest":null,"latest":null}}],"partNumbers":["E.1084-1996"],"accessionNumberNum":"1084","accessionNumberPrefix":"E","accessionYear":1996,"otherNumbers":[{"type":{"text":"series number","id":"THES57536"},"number":"XII"}],"copyNumber":"","aspects":["WHOLE"],"assets":[],"recordModificationDate":"2026-04-21","recordCreationDate":"2003-07-24","availableToBook":false}}