Peter Gowland (1916 ? 2010) started taking glamor and pin-up photographs of young woman in and around Los Angeles in 1946. In 1954, The New York Times called him "America’s No. 1 Pin-up Photographer" early into his career and later situated his pictures "someplace between titillation and art."
Peter Gowland found his models on Hollywood film sets and at agencies or beauty contests. He posed and photographed them in his studio or on the beaches from Los Angeles to Malibu, thus contributing significantly to the myth of California as a perpetually sunny postwar paradise.
Peter Gowland’s Girls* presents some 180 works selected from the photographer’s estate, which comprises tens of thousands of superb prints and slides, including the most sensational, most elegant, and most daring pictures from his unparalleled career as a pin-up photographer. The book displays his portraits of stars like Joan Collins and Jayne Mansfield, his work for Playboy and Rolling Stone, and his pictures for innumerable calendars and magazines from the 1940s to the 1970s. The pictures in Peter Gowland’s Girls* are a snapshot of days past but have remained stunningly ageless all the same.