Eva Ionesco Playboy 1976 Italian.47 Apr 2026
The Controversial Lens: Eva Ionesco’s 1976 “Playboy” Italy Shoot (Set 47)
By 1976, Eva Ionesco was already famous—and infamous—as the child model and actress promoted by her mother, photographer Irina Ionesco. Irina had been shooting Eva in eroticized poses since she was five. The 1976 Italian Playboy spread (often tied to issue 47 or frame 47 of the original contact sheet) continued this aesthetic: soft lighting, lace, and poses mimicking adult seduction. The Italian edition of Playboy, then operating under different editorial standards than its US counterpart, defended the images as "artistic." Eva Ionesco Playboy 1976 Italian.47
The publication led to criminal charges in Italy and France for procuring a minor and distributing indecent images of a child. Eva later testified against her mother in the 2010s, stating the photoshoots had caused lifelong trauma. While collectors today trade the "1976.47" prints for high sums, many museums and archives have removed the series from public display, citing updated ethical codes. The Italian edition of Playboy, then operating under
In 1976, Italian Playboy published a pictorial featuring 11-year-old Eva Ionesco—a decision that would spark decades of legal battles and ethical debate. The images, often cataloged by collectors as "Italian 1976.47" (referencing a specific frame or contact sheet number), remain some of the most contested in publishing history. They sit at the crossroads of art, exploitation, and the shifting legal boundaries of child protection. In 1976, Italian Playboy published a pictorial featuring