| | | | Guy Bourdin: Charles Jourdan, Spring 1976 © Guy Bourdin Estate, 2017 / Courtesy Louise Alexander Gallery | | | | | | | | 1 December 2017 – 13 May 2018 | | Opening: Thursday, 30 November, 8 pm | | | | | | | | | | Helmut Newton Blumarine, Monaco, 1995 © Helmut Newton Estate | | | | Guy Bourdin revolutionized fashion photography in the late 20th century, similar to Helmut Newton. Both were the star photographers of Vogue Paris and produced some of the most iconic images of that era working for the top international fashion houses. While their medium was the magazine, they approached it with avant-garde point of view and sharp humour. Unique as they were, they both broke aesthetic conventions achieving a sense of timeless glamour in their editorials and advertising and independently of one another developing a sense of "radical chic." While Bourdin found a prime client in French designer Charles Jourdan starting in 1967, Newton photographed the collections of clients such as Chanel, Yves Saint Laurent, Thierry Mugler, Mario Valentino, and Blumarine, parallel to his magazine editorials. Newton called himself in self-irony “A Gun for Hire,” a term then used for the title of the exhibition of his commissioned work shown posthumously in 2005 in Monaco and Berlin and later in Budapest. A selection of this project will now be shown again at the Helmut Newton Foundation – for the first time juxtaposed with the works of his notable French colleague, Guy Bourdin. | | |
| | | | | | | | | Guy Bourdin: VOGUE Paris, May 1970 © Guy Bourdin Estate, 2017 / Courtesy Louise Alexander Gallery | | | | | 1 December 2017 – 13 May 2018 | | Opening: Thursday, 30 November, 8 pm | | | | | | Guy Bourdin Charles Jourdan, 1978 © Guy Bourdin Estate, 2017 / Courtesy Louise Alexander Gallery | | | | Guy Bourdin was a painter all his life and an auto-didact photographer; his career spanned over three decades since his debut editorial in 1955. He was also an instinctive Surrealist, a creator of enigmatic narratives and a sophisticated art director. He extended the possibilities of what a fashion photograph might be by creating images that were, cinematic and unforgettable with intense interplay of light and shadow, hyper real colors and tight composition. Entitled "Image Maker" the exhibition introduces works by Guy Bourdin from various publications, iconic and lesser-known images alongside his visionary advertising for Charles Jourdan shoes. Both formally and contextually Bourdin presented shoes and other fashion products in challenging ways, by mainly using it as double spreads that resound today modern beyond their commercial context. | | | | | | Guy Bourdin: Charles Jourdan, 1978 © Guy Bourdin Estate, 2017/Courtesy Louise Alexander Gallery | | | | On the occasion of the exhibition the book "Guy Bourdin. Image Maker", with an introduction by Shelly Verthime (curator of the Guy Bourdin Estate) and a text by Matthias Harder (curator of the Helmut Newton Foundation), will be published by Assouline, Paris / New York; 10 x 13 in – 25.4 x 33 cm, 260 pages, over 150 photographs, 4 illustrations, hardcover, ISBN: 9781614286356, $150 – €150 – £110 | | | |
| | | | | | | | | Helmut Newton Mario Valentino, Monaco, 1998 © Helmut Newton Estate | | | | 1 December 2017 – 13 May 2018 | | Opening: Thursday, 30 November, 8 pm | | | | | | Helmut Newton Blumarine, Monaco, 1994 © Helmut Newton Estate | | | | In Helmut Newton’s "A Gun for Hire" we can see commissions for fashion designers from the 1990s that were first published in their own fashion books, and later often shown by the photographer as part of his own oeuvre. It was never merely a fashion shoot which he produced, but also an unexpected, complex story, tinged with surrealism or the suspense of an Alfred Hitchcock film – without forsaking the autonomy of the image. It is often unclear where reality ends and the staging begins; everything seems real and artificial at the same time, and occasionally bathed in a cinematographic light. | | | | | | Helmut Newton Thierry Mugler, Milan, 1998 © Helmut Newton Estate | | | | We encounter similar visual approaches in the works of Bourdin. In his later fashion and product shots Newton often staged photographic sequences, such as the black-and-white visual narrative for Villeroy & Boch (1985), a series of single images for Absolut Vodka (1995), a series with the model Monica Bellucci in different dresses by Blumarine (1998), and his 12 motifs with bikini models for a sports magazine calendar (2002). | | | |
| | | | | | | | | Angelo Marino Another Story, Week 44, Cagnes, 2014 © Angelo Marino | | | | 1 December 2017 – 13 May 2018 | | Opening: Thursday, 30 November, 8 pm | | | | | | Angelo Marino Another Story, Week 7, Eze sur Mer, 2014 © Angelo Marino | | | | Small and intimate, "June’s Room" is reserved for friends and colleagues of the Newtons – and this time for Helmut Newton’s former assistant Angelo Marino, who has gone on to work with Newton’s widow June (a.k.a. Alice Springs). Complementing the works of Bourdin and Newton, Marino presents under the title "Another Story" an eclectic view of his immediate environment, which he photographed on the way from his home in Cannes to his workplace in Monte Carlo. | | | | | | Angelo Marino Another Story, Février 2014 © Angelo Marino | | | | The snapshot-like images, taken with his iPhone, capture fellow travelers, the sea, or views of architecture and the landscape rushing past the window of the train. The show comprises a collection of 52 panels, each consisting of five color photographs arranged in a tableau representing one week. | | | | unsubscribe here Newsletter was sent to [email protected] © 28 Nov 2017 photography-now.com Ziegelstr. 29 . D–10117 Berlin Editor: Claudia Stein & Michael Steinke [email protected] T +49.30.24 34 27 80 | |
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