Lady Gaga and Taylor Kinney make love on canvas for charity shoot
Lady Gaga and Taylor Kinney have put their love on full display by posing naked on the cover of V magazine after having sex on a paint canvas.
The American Horror Story: Hotel star and Kinney are completely nude and covered in paint as she embraces her fiance from behind, in post-coital selfie taken by the actor.
The new issue of the publication will feature 16 different covers
and proceeds from the $50 magazine will benefit Gaga's Born This
Way Foundation.
Gaga, who served as guest editor, explains she came up with the
concept for the feature after asking her beau to work with her on a
project to raise awareness for mental illness.
"Since we first met, Taylor's been drawing and painting all over
me," she writes in her guest editor's letter for the magazine.
"Years ago, when we were secretly living in San Diego and crashing
on the floor of a beach shack, we never wore shoes. He told me he
wanted to make love to me on a canvas."
"I asked (Taylor) to collaborate with me on a project to raise
money and awareness about mental illness, (and) he immediately
brought my attention back to this idea," she continues.
"We made love on the canvas on a Sunday in Chicago," she adds. "We
made love amidst chaos. We talked about shootings. We made love
amidst terrorism. And we talked about how people's hearts are also
suffering all over the world as they watch and witness a swell of
violence. We made love amidst violence."
The result of their tryst is a colorful abstract painting.
"During tumultuous times, we hope everyone in the world will see
this and be reminded to love each other wildly, generously,
totally, colorfully, without fear and with compassionate hearts,"
Gaga writes. "We made a galaxy of endless colors with only brief,
black holes of emptiness that are then filled by each other."
In addition to the couple's magazine charity project, the
29-year-old has teamed up with bosses at Intel, Vox Media and
Re/code for a campaign to combat online harassment. The new
initiative, titled Hack Harassment, will aim to advance
anti-harassment technology.
"Young people are spending more time online than ever before,
making it more important than ever before to face this problem head
on," Gaga's mother, Cynthia Germanotta, says.
"Online harassment has become a pervasive and often vicious problem
with real-life repercussions," Intel CEO Brian Krzanich adds.
"Today's tech and media leaders have a collective responsibility
and capability to identify solutions that can help reduce different
forms of online harassment. We need to remember that behind every
device, game, sensor or network is a real person with real feelings
and real needs for safety."