Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin | Exhibition

Warmenhoven & Venderbos designer fashion blog | Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin

Warmenhoven & Venderbos designer fashion blog | Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin

Warmenhoven & Venderbos designer fashion blog | Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin

Currently the Foam Fotografiemuseum ( Photography museum) is presenting an exhibition of the stunning work by the photographic duo of Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin. The exhibition is titled: Pretty Much Everything. It shows approximately 300 photographs spanning 25 years of the duo’s career. Art, fashion and portrait works all exist next to each other. By disregarding any chronological order the combinations of images are based on personal, formal, social, political and intuitive associations that show the way the artists have lived with the images for 25 years.

Inez van Lamsweerde en Vinoodh Matadin launched their international career with the publication of ten pages in the British magazine The Face in 1994. It was here that for the first time in a fashion series the models and the backgrounds were photographed separately and subsequently combined into a single image by use of a computer. The series typified van Lamsweerde and Matadin’s hyper-realistic style and was made to celebrate and subvert fashion within the context of a magazine.

Dubiousness is at the base of practically every image they make. Their work is ambiguous in every sense of the word and balances deliberately on the thin rope between fashion and art, perverting both worlds, mirroring the strangeness of everyday life through an extreme enlargement of a singular part.

Since each photograph demands its own dimensions, and some have been shown over the years and have their own existing size and frame style, the exhibition will have a dynamic flow and will read like a huge stream of images – forming one flowing, pulsating sentence rather than divisions that are grouped by size or subject. This showing will draw the viewer into Inez and Vinoodh’s world of constant dualism, duality and ambiguity, as well as their obsession with giving meaning to the surface, while oscillating between horror and beauty, the grotesque and the quiet, and the spiritual and the banal.

Warmenhoven & Venderbos designer fashion blog | Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin

Warmenhoven & Venderbos designer fashion blog | Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin

Warmenhoven & Venderbos designer fashion blog | Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin

Warmenhoven & Venderbos designer fashion blog | Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin

Warmenhoven & Venderbos designer fashion blog | Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin | Naomi Campbell

 

Pretty Much Everything is on view from the 25th of June untill September 2010 in Foam Fotografiemuseum, Amsterdam.

Photos Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin | M/M (Paris) | source: Foam Fotografiemuseum

Greg Kessler Fashion Model Morphosis

Warmenhoven & Venderbos Blog Greg Kessler Fashion Model Morphosis Edita Vilkeviciute

Photographer Greg Kessler captures models backstage as they arrive at fashion shows,he has created a photo series called Model Morphosis which shows models before and after makeup. Greg Kessler captures with these shots the transformations of the model but also the transformation of the identity of the person and her look. For his series he shot backstage at shows of various fashion designers. This repeat of faces and transformations, is one of the aspects which turns the Model Morphosis series also into a very interesting and inspiring conceptual model.

A part of the series has been posted on the T Magazine blog, the style magazine of the New York Times. Instead of a side-by-side placement, there is a flash sliding bar that you move over the photo to reveal the full transformation.

Find the Model Morphosis flash slider series on the NY Times Style Magazine here .

Warmenhoven & Venderbos Blog Greg Kessler Fashion Model Morphosis Karolin Wolter

 

Photos: Greg Kessler | New York Times Style Magazine

Photo top, Hair: Guido Palau, Makeup: Pat McGrath, Model: Edita Vilkeviciute | Photo bottom, Hair: Martin Cullen, Makeup: Alex Box, Model: Karolin Wolter

Irving Penn retrospective exhibition: Portraits

Warmenhoven & Venderbos designers fashion Blog: Irving Penn Portraits Voque

Warmenhoven & Venderbos designers fashion Blog: Irving Penn Portraits, Marlene Dietrich

 

The National Portrait Gallery in London has dedicated a retrospective exhibition to the work of one of the twentieth century’s most celebrated photographers, Irving Penn (1917-2009).

The exhibition is brought together from major international collections and includes over 120 silver and platinum prints, many vintage, ranging from his portraits for Vogue magazine in the 1940s to some of his last work. The exhibition is a survey of Penn’s portraits of major cultural figures from the worlds of literature, Fashion, music and the visual and performing arts brought together from many international collections. Portraits include Truman Capote, Salvador Dalì, Marlene Dietrich, Christian Dior, T.S. Eliot, Duke Ellington, Alfred Hitchcock, Nicole Kidman, Willem de Kooning, Kate Moss, Jessye Norman, Rudolph Nureyev, Edith Piaf, Pablo Picasso, Harold Pinter, Igor Stravinsky, and Tennessee Williams.

Warmenhoven & Venderbos designers fashion Blog: Irving Penn Portraits

Warmenhoven & Venderbos designers fashion Blog: Irving Penn Portraits, Jasper Johns

 

Warmenhoven & Venderbos designers fashion Blog: Irving Penn Portraits

Penn’s photographs stand out for their elegance, the clean look of their images, a strong contrast between subject and background and a “less is more” aesthetic. These are the distinctive features of an oeuvre that marked and captured an epoch. The power of Irving Penn’s visual language is often found in the details and shades of his portraits. Through his sublime techniques of composition, light and printing, the character of his subjects is stripped naked before the camera lens.

Irving Penn said in 1975:
“Sensitive people faced with the prospect of a camera portrait put on a face they think is one they would like to show the world… very often what lies behind the facade is rare and more wonderful than the subject knows or dares to believe.”

Warmenhoven & Venderbos designers fashion Blog: Irving Penn Portraits

Warmenhoven & Venderbos designers fashion Blog: Irving Penn Portraits

Warmenhoven & Venderbos designers fashion Blog: Irving Penn Portraits, Kate Moss

 

Warmenhoven & Venderbos designers fashion Blog: Irving Penn Portraits

 

Warmenhoven & Venderbos designers fashion Blog: Irving Penn Portraits

 

Warmenhoven & Venderbos designers fashion Blog: Irving Penn Portraits, Red lips, Mouth

 

The exhibition in the The National Portrait Gallery in London will run until the 6Th of June 2010 and will travel afterwards to Rome’s Palazzo delle Esposizioni where it will be on display from the 1st of July to 19Th of September 2010.

Photos: Irving Penn | Photo top and 6Th photo: Shannon Stapleton/Reuters | Photo bottom: Cate Gillon/Getty Images | The National Portrait Gallery

Juergen Teller Go-Sees interview

An already older but still interesting video interview with photographer Juergen Teller for TateShots, the Youtube channel of the Tate Modern Art gallery.
Juergen Teller turned his lens on the fashion industry with his Go-Sees series. Weary of the hype generated by model agencies desperate to sell him the ‘next big thing’, he decided to take the picture of every girl that came to see him on the doorstep of his studio. In this interview, Teller tells Tateshots how the resulting photographs expose the troubling power of the male photographer.

 

 

Photos: Juergen Teller | Source and video: the Youtube channel of the Tate Modern Art gallery | TateShots