Wednesday, April 14, 2010

David LaChapelle






David LaChapelle is an american photographer from Conneticut. He was offered his first job by Andy Warhol after meeting him at Studio54. His vibrant works emphasize color and have appeared within a healthy variety of publications such as GQ, Rolling Stone, Vouge, and Vanity Fair. He says his goal with every photograph is to, "Create an image that a college student will rip out of a magazine and stick onto their fridge". As well as photography, LaChapelle is a director. His movie Rize, chronicles the the start of the krump movement, a hardcore street style of hip hop dance.

Jean Paul Goude


Jean Paul Goude is a french graphist, illustrator, and photographer. He served as the artistic director for esquire for ten years and is mostly known for his high profile photographs and music video directing work for entertainer Grace Jones. Many followed in his footsteps using similar techniques for avant garde fashion photography.


many works can be viewed here:

Thursday, April 1, 2010

!1950s FASHION PHOTOGRAPHY!

In the 1950s, fashion photography exploded. Magazines such as Harpers Bazaar and Vouge began featuring very high quality detailed photos depicting women and fashion in ways never shown before. The assumed "golden" era of vouge, the period established the idea of high fashion. This was the point were models began to become increasingly svelte and certain poses were cemented into popular fashion jargon. Photographers such as Richard Avedon, William Klein, and Frances Pellegrini helped bring this movement to light, and their iconic images exist still.

Richard Avedon was probobly the most well known of the last half century of fashion photographers. His photographs and portraits in particular helped difine the life and style of the time. His photographs appeared in Life, Vouge, Harpers Bazaar, and other esteemed publications.

Although lesser known than Avedon, Frances Pellegrini did her part in the fashion photography evolution. Playing with perspective and angles to a new and innovative degree. She used her photographs as a tool for social change and personal expression.




Together, William Klein and Avedon were known as the two main figures of 1950s fashion photography. Although Klein was originally trained as a painter, he gained his fame when he moved onto photography, particularly fashion photography. Known for his wide angle and telephoto lens, Klein's work is best known for its "ambivalent and ironic approach to the fashion world" and its "uncomprimising rejection of the then prevailing rules of photography".

Thursday, March 25, 2010

Tuesday, March 16, 2010