How You Look At It: a short fashion film by Poppy de Villeneuve

Warmenhoven & Venderbos designers fashion blog: Poppy de Villeneuve

“How You Look At It” is a short fashion film directed and created by Poppy de Villeneuve. The movie is an intriguing cross over and melting between cinema and online viral fashion advertising.
De Villeneuve is a British photographer based in New York. Her father is Justin de Villeneuve, the Sixties fashion photographer who discovered Twiggy, and her mother is the model Jan de Villeneuve. Poppy herself began modelling at the age of 17 but found it “boring” so took up photography instead. She studied at the London College of Printing, and since graduating has worked for publications including Vogue and Dazed & Confused. She also exhibits her work regularly.

 

 

Warmenhoven & Venderbos designers fashion blog: Poppy de Villeneuve

 

Nowness on the film and its director:
“Summer in the city: a bustling, stifling and less-than-calming experience. But even in the midst of blaring car-horns, sweltering commuters and dizzying throngs of irritable pedestrians, there’s a pocket of peace to be found in every metropolis. Such moments of sweet escape provide the inspiration for the How You Look At It film.”

“Poppy de Villeneuve (who has shot for Vogue, Jalouse and Nylon, among others) and starring rising Chinese fashion model Liu Wen, who was recently signed as the first Asian face of Estee Lauder. To create her moment of blissful cool, De Villeneuve took to the serene spaces of New York’s Asser Levy Recreation Center—a turn-of-the-century bath house, replete with Art Deco pool—where, in a heat-induced reverie, a Norma Kamali clad Wen is joined by former Sopranos regular and actor in the Martin Scorcese-produced HBO series Boardwalk Empire Edoardo Ballerini, for a sensual, teasingly ambiguous swimming lesson.”

Warmenhoven & Venderbos designers fashion blog: Poppy de Villeneuve

Warmenhoven & Venderbos designers fashion blog: Poppy de Villeneuve

Warmenhoven & Venderbos designers fashion blog: Poppy de Villeneuve

 

Video: Poppy de Villeneuve  | backstage photos by fashion blogger Hanneli | source: Nowness/luxury group LVMH

Norman Parkinson: A Very British Glamour

An exhibition about the British fashion photographer Norman Parkinson is currently running in the Somerset House, London. Norman Parkinson, was active for over 50 years (1930s to the 1980s). He redefined glamour in fashion and was instrumental in taking portrait and fashion photography beyond the stiff formality of his predecessors and injecting an easy, modern,spontaneous and casual elegance into his images. His photographs of celebrities, artists, actors and the British Royal Family are known throughout the world and have become icons of twentieth century style. The exhibition in the Somerset House celebrates the publication of the book: Norman Parkinson: A Very British Glamour and displays a selection of portraits from the Norman Parkinson archive.It will run until 31 January 2010. 

Photos: Norman Parkinson | Norman Parkinson Archive | Somerset House

Exhibition: Showstudio, Fashion revolution

Showstudio has staged a major exhibition at the London Somerset House called: Showstudio: Fashion revolution. This exhibition is a retrospective of nine years of online innovation, invention and creation and it challenges conventional perceptions of fashion imagery.

Photos from the performance: Banquet | Heston Blumenthal | Ed Griffiths

The exhibition is divided into various segments called: process, performance, participation and fashion film. It opens the process of image-making up to the public – by putting a live, working photographic studio within the exhibition space, to be used by top photographers including Nick Knight of Showstudio himself. Knight will also shoot 100 portraits of London’s ‘beau monde’; models, actors, musicians and artists – and will show a programme of new Fashion Films, specially commissioned by Showstudio for Fashion Revolution.

The exhibition will run untill the 20th of December 2009

Photos: Showstudio | Somerset House