Deborah Anderson

Deborah Leigh Anderson (born 16 December 1970) is an English musician and photographer.

Family and early life

Deborah Anderson is the daughter of singer Jon Anderson and Jennifer Anderson (née Baker), and sister to singer Jade Anderson. On the 1983 Jon & Vangelis album, Private Collection, Jon wrote the lyrics and sang "Deborah", a song dedicated to his daughter. Deborah's earliest musical work was on projects with her father: including backing vocals on "Song of Seven" in 1980, when she was nine years old, and on Anderson Bruford Wakeman Howe (1989), the 1993 Latin American Jon Anderson solo tour, Deseo (1994), Angels Embrace (1995) and Toltec (1996). She was educated at Roedean School in Brighton.[1]

She also worked in vintage fashion, owning her own store.[2]

As a singer

1995 saw the release of "Feel the Sunshine" (Island Records) by Alex Reece featuring Deborah Anderson (included on Reece's 1996 album So Far). The drum & bass single made #2 in the European Charts and Top 20 in the UK Singles Chart.[3] It made the European dance charts in 1998.[4] This led to Anderson signing to Mo' Wax and her debut solo single, "Lonely Without You", was released in 1997.

She has worked as a vocalist on a number of projects, including work with DJ Krush ("Skin Against Skin" on 1997's Milight, released on Mo' Wax; later used on the TV series La Femme Nikita), Fallen Angels ("Blue Sky" on 1999's Part One), DJ Shadow, Zero 7, Le Tonne and Tipper (2000s "Dissolve (Out)" single, released on Fuel Records). She appeared and co-wrote three songs on Télépopmusik's album Angel Milk (EMI Music, 2005), including the single "Into Everything".

Her debut solo album, Silence, was released in 2009.[4] The album accompanies "Paperthin", a coffee table book of her photography (see below).

As a photographer

Anderson has been described as "a photographer whose distinctive sensuality is located somewhere between classic French erotica and Helmut Newton".[5] Her resume includes being art director for The Gansevoort Hotel group,[6] campaign images for Pink's albums: I'm Not Dead, Funhouse and The Truth About Love, and brand-changing campaign images for Bebe Stores. Anderson has had her images published worldwide in such magazines as Elle, GQ, Cosmopolitan, Architectural Digest, Hello, Harper's Bazaar, FHM, Playboy, Vogue and Vanity Fair.

Based on her first photographic exhibition, "Hollywood Erotique" (Los Angeles, 2004), Paperthin, published by Verlhac Editions (ISBN 978-2-916954-07-3) in 2008, is a book of her black-and-white photography based on 1930s erotica.[7] Models include Minnie Driver, Fergie, Pink, Natasha Henstridge, Sophie Dahl and Tilda Swinton.[7] The book accompanies her debut solo album Silence (see above). Anderson's second book of photography entitled Room 23 (ISBN 978-3866541252), out February 2009, features Sharon Stone, George Clooney, Sir Elton John, Minnie Driver, Dennis Hopper, Cindy Crawford, Heidi Klum, Norman Reedus, Gina Gershon, Sting, Lindsay Lohan, Larry King and others as models.[5][8] The book was organised in conjunction with Diana Jenkins to support the UCLA Sanela Diana Jenkins International Justice Clinic.

Her fine art book and feature documentary film Aroused[9] (ISBN 978-0-9893744-0-8) features 16 female pornographic performers, released in cinemas in the U.S. in the summer of 2013 and internationally in January 2014.[1][10] Sixteen actresses were involved: Jesse Jane, Belladonna, Katsuni, Allie Haze, Kayden Kross, April O'Neil, Francesca Lé, Lisa Ann, Brooklyn Lee, Alexis Texas, Asphyxia Noir, Teagan Presley, Ash Hollywood, Tanya Tate, Lexi Belle and Misty Stone.

In 2015, Anderson was one of the first clients for The Dog Ate My Homework,[11] a new photographers' agency launched by Rihanna.[12]

gollark: Which seems like more of an argument for fixing them than just switching to, what, emotional recognition?
gollark: Indeed. And it doesn't scale well either.
gollark: ...
gollark: It's somewhat important to incentivize people to make things which aren't conveniently sellable physical objects.
gollark: Plants should really have solar-powered microcontrollers with cellular/satellite links so they can receive emails.

References

  1. Alison Wolf on power, politics and porn. The Spectator, (22 June 2013).
  2. "About Questia | Questia, Your Online Research Library". Questia.com. Archived from the original on 23 October 2012. Retrieved 11 August 2020.
  3. NME Alex Reece biography. NME.
  4. Deborah Anderson’s Solo Album “Silence” Debuts February 10, 2009. Business Wire (10 December 2008).
  5. ''LA Times''. Los Angeles Times. (17 February 2009).
  6. Inside Look: Hotel Art Collections. Gotham-magazine.com.
  7. "The Insider: Sensual Celeb Photos in New Fine Art Book". Archived from the original on 14 January 2009. Retrieved 11 August 2020.
  8. Room 23: celebrity portraits in a hotel suite. The Daily Telegraph. (15 July 2009).
  9. The Aroused Project Archived 6 August 2017 at the Wayback Machine. The Aroused Project.
  10. Adult-Video Actresses Get Real in 'Aroused' Archived 8 January 2014 at the Wayback Machine. Front Row Features (26 April 2013).
  11. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 14 November 2015. Retrieved 15 November 2015.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  12. Niland, Olivia. "Rihanna launches company that will get you ready for the red carpet". Mashable. Retrieved 11 August 2020.
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