Tee Corinne Lesbian Artist (1943-2006)

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Tee Corinne Erotic Artist:

Tee Corinne was an artist and a revolutionary. She was one of the first to make lesbian erotic art for lesbians from a lesbian perspective.

Cunt Coloring Book:

Tee Corinne published The Cunt Coloring Book in 1975. The Cunt Coloring Book is just what the title suggests it is, a coloring book of female genitalia. It was later reissued as Labiaflowers in 1981, but can be found today under its original title.


Tee Corinne Lesbian Erotic Photographer:

Tee Corinne was know for creating beautiful erotic images of real lesbian lovers. Corinne's Yantras of Womanlove (1982) is thought to be the first book of lesbian erotic photographs published in the U.S. Not surprisingly, Tee Corinne was at the forefront of the battle against censorship. Printers sometimes refused to print her works and art galleries would not show it. Fat women, women with disabilities, diverse body types and sizes are all included in Tee Corinne's work.

Tee Corinne Lesbian Erotic Author:

Tee is editor and author of many lesbian fiction collections including A Woman’s Touch, Dreams of the woman who Loved Sex, I am My Lover and Femalia.

Tee Corinne died at her home in southern Oregon on August 27, 2006.

Tee Corinne in the Country:

Tee Corinne was born in Florida (1943) and spent time in North Carolina and the Bahamas. After attending college in New Orleans and South Florida, she lived in New York, and various other places on the East Coast.

In the early 1980s she moved to rural Oregon where lesbians were setting up community in a "back to the land" movement. Tee Corinne said, "I moved to a rural area where lower maintenance costs and fewer distractions free my time to make art."

Remember Tee Corinne:

Twenty years before her death she published these words in Common Lives/Lesbian Lives. "When death comes into our lives it is important not to become victims in our own grief, for in the passivity pain may induce, we suffer not only personal losses but the loss of our own history, our culture. Somehow we must take the time, summon the energy to write obituaries, to insure the survival of work, to honor the dead in way that they will be visible and available to succeeding generations."
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