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    BUNNY’S HONEYS

    Sexy Bettie Page photos made her famous, but photographer Bunny Yeager was just making a living

    Kendall Morgan
    Feb 21, 2013 | 12:30 pm

    Named “The World’s Prettiest Photographer” by US Camera magazine in 1953, Bunny Yeager is one of the few famous shutterbugs who could work both sides of the camera with equal ease. Some of her most iconic images — including vintage contact sheets — are showcased in a one-woman exhibition opening February 23 at Photographs Do Not Bend Gallery (PDNB).

    Born in 1929, the Miami-based Yeager was a pin-up model in the ’40s before stepping behind the lens. Her first attempts at photography were less about refining her craft as cutting down on an up-and-coming model’s work expenses.

    “Being a model, I needed a lot of photographs, and I thought it might be less expensive if I went to photo school and just learned how to print my own,” Yeager says. “I didn’t really care if I learned [the craft] or not; I just wanted to make a lot of photographs I could use in my career. I wasn’t very interested in shooting other models, to tell you the truth.”

    “Bettie Page didn’t care that much about modeling,” Yeager says. “Bettie’s delight was to work on her suntan.”

    Yet Yeager soon found herself taking pictures of model friends and selling her work to men’s magazines. Instead of using local studios as a location, she put her subjects (and herself) in the great outdoors, giving her images an energy and liveliness lacking in other cheesecake shots of the period. She also designed bathing suits and lingerie for her models to wear, giving her pictures a unique style other photographers couldn’t replicate.

    In 1954, Yeager met the notorious Bettie Page, and the duo’s collaborations made pin-up history. When Playboy bought a shot of a topless, winking Page in a Santa hat for its 1955 holiday issue, two legends were born.

    Despite their magical work together, Yeager says she considered Page just another model. “She was just somebody who came along who happened to follow my directions very well. She didn’t care that much about modeling. Bettie’s delight was to work on her suntan. She had flawless skin to begin with, and she would lay in the beautiful Miami sun every morning and knew just how long to cook it to get her skin that beautiful shade.”

    As the anything-goes ’60s dawned, Yeager’s photography fell out of favor. “After the 1960s, most men’s magazines went out of business except Penthouse and Playboy,” Yeager says. “Things got so very revealing, and I didn’t want to shoot that kind of work. I just stopped accumulating new photos and put the others aside.”

    The photographer kept busy publishing a series of how-to books, such as How I Photograph Nudes (1963) and How I Photograph Myself (1964), and even took on a small role as a Swedish masseuse opposite Frank Sinatra in the 1968 film Lady in Cement.

    The resurgence in interest in Page and pin-ups helped put Yeager back in the spotlight, and she was honored with her first museum survey at Pittsburgh’s Andy Warhol Museum in 2010. The publication of Bunny Yeager’s Darkroom: Pin-up Photography’s Golden Era in 2012 solidified her influential body of work, and she continues to stay busy with new books and projects, including a swimwear collection for the European line Bruno Banani.

    Throughout all her endeavors, Yeager continues to work the way she always has: in her own, indomitable way. “Whether it was shooting pictures of myself or any other girl, I wasn’t boxed into a corner. I did what I wanted to do,” she says. “If I get too old to pick up the camera or whatever it takes, I can always just direct. I’m an expert lighting master, and, for me, the whole excitement is painting with light.”

    ---

    The Bunny Yeager exhibit runs through May 11 at PDNB. The opening reception is Saturday, February 23, 5-8 pm.

    Bettie Page in Santa cap, Miami Beach, 1954.

    Photo courtesy of Rizzoli
    Bettie Page in Santa cap, Miami Beach, 1954.
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    Balloon News

    Global art exhibit Balloon Museum bounces immersively into Dallas

    Teresa Gubbins
    Oct 23, 2025 | 1:14 pm
    Balloon Museum
    Balloon Museum
    Balloon Museum

    A new museum tour featuring huge airy installations — also known as balloons — is coming to Dallas: Called Let’s Fly – Art Has No Limits, it's a multisensory exhibition from an entity called the Balloon Museum, and it will touch down at Dallas' South Side Studios at 2901 Botham Jean Blvd. on Saturday, November 22, where it will reside until April 16, 2026.

    Created by Italy-based Lux Entertainment, Let’s Fly will feature huge artworks spanning more than 65,000 square feet. Rooted in the concepts of flight, freedom, and lightness, the exhibition explores air as both a physical element and a symbol of movement and limitless travel.

    According to a release, Lux Entertainment specializes in traveling as well as site-specific exhibitions that combine monumental artworks, engaging environments, and live performances. In June 2024, an Italian investor SIMEST (CDP Group) pledged $5.8 million to expand Lux into the U.S., spawning the creation of the first permanent Balloon Museum overseas.

    Their mission is to transform entertainment into a personal journey, where the audience is not a spectator but a protagonist via innovative formats such as Balloon Museum, This is Wonderland, Christmas World, and Color Hotel.

    Balloon Museum was founded in Rome in 2021 as a pioneering art space dedicated to showcasing inflatable and air-based contemporary installations that merge creativity, technology, and sensory exploration. They have four main exhibitions: Pop Air, EmotionAir, Let’s Fly, and Euphoяia, which have toured across three continents.

    Let's Fly previously stopped in Austin and, simultaneous to Dallas, it will also stop in Houston, as well.

    The dozens of artists featured in each exhibit vary from city to city; Dallas' Let’s Fly – Art Has No Limits stop will include:

    • “Squeezed In,” an installation inhabited by oversized characters, by Lucas Zanotto
    • “Her Joy,” a mirrored sphere that breathes and reflects light like a resonating body, by Alex Schweder
    • “Crazy Love for Polygons" explores geometric forms, by Cyril Lancelin
    • “Balloon Tree,” uniting nature and artifice, by Myeongbeom Kim
    • “Lava Lamp,” a 44-meter psychedelic and breath-like installation inspired by the iconic 1963 lamp, by Michael Shaw
    • “BB,” using hundreds of balloons to explore symmetry and reflection, by Tadao Cern

    One notable piece is Christopher Schardt's “Mariposa”, a 26-foot butterfly sculpture with 39,000 LEDs, which was first presented at Burning Man 2023.

    Dallas seems to have a child-like rapture for big bouncy round things — from the Yayoi Kusama pumpkins at the Dallas Museum of Art to Bubble Planet, the immersive experience with larger-than-life bubbles which makes its debut at Grapevine Mills on October 23.

    “With its world-class arts scene and bold, design-driven landscape, Dallas offers the perfect backdrop for Balloon Museum’s “Let’s Fly,” says Lux Entertainment founder Roberto Fantauzzi in a statement. “We’re proud to bring an exhibition that reflects the city’s scale and spirit — dynamic, creative, and constantly in motion, always reaching for what’s next.”

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