Showing posts with label Vogue. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vogue. Show all posts

Vogue + Ewan McGregor = Swoon!





I came across the July American VOGUE today (with the gorgeous Marion Cottillard on the cover) and while casually flicking through it I came upon a very luxe and beautifully shot editorial.




Photographed by the masterful Peter Lindbergh featuring Natalia Vodianova modeling the best of the Fall/Winder 2010 collection and styled by none other than Grace Coddington.   




What I love most about this splendid pictorial is Ewan McGregor. I have always had a crush on Ewan and seeing him looking so well-dressed in the pages of VOGUE, well, how fantastic is he?  I'm pleased as punch!
  


The story is a play on a 50s marriage gone wrong, (or is it 60s?  Because with her hair very much styled in 60s fashion, the story seems much more a 60s marriage gone wrong).  It reminds me a little of the famous W shoot by Steven Klein "Domestic Bliss" with Brad and Angelina.  




Anyway, I digress... As much as I believe in Ewan's character in these shots, I'm not so convinced about Natalia.  Sure she looks amazing in the couture, but she doesn't carry the role of 50s housewife and adulterer.  She looks too European really and even though she's the mother of 3 children in real life, she still looks too doll-faced for me to appear anything other than Lolita-esque (sorry Natalia).  I think perhaps a better choice for this may have been Jessica Stam, Raquel Zimmerman, or Angela Lindvall.






Peter Lindbergh's photographs convey a lot of emotion, and it is divine to see him back shooting for VOGUE for the first time in (I think) fourteen years.  I'm not sure why Ewan was selected for this editorial, perhaps it has something to do with an upcoming movie promotion, but no matter the reason, it sure is nice to see him in a Dior Homme 3-piece suit nonetheless. 


Oh and the couture wasn't half-bad either.


H

Mario Testino - The Peruvian Magician


If you don't know who Mario Testino is, chances are you would have seen his work.
I love Mario Testino's ability to elicit magic from his subjects.  He captures life and light in the eyes of his subjects and is able to make his subjects look as if they are having the time of their lives, so relaxed, so in the moment.  He brings out beauty in a person that we may have not seen before by making a person look more beautiful than thought possible.  That is his magic!  His style of photography has been described as "luxury realism" but for Mario, it's all about having fun.

 The Jolie-Pitt clan, well one third of them.

He is a master at encouraging his subjects.  But he won’t photograph just anyone (damn, there goes that family portrait I was hoping for).

 Natalia Vodianova and daughter photographed for American Vogue April 2009.

According to British Vogue, Mario is credited with bringing an end to the reign of the supermodel because he refused to pay the fees demanded by Linda, Naomi and friends in the early nineties.  Models like Kate Moss and Stella Tennant became the new favourites of the fashion world as a result.

Kate Moss has always been his favourite model.

His popularity with designers and fashion editors stems as much from his professionalism and good nature as his unerring ability to take beautiful pictures which sell clothes and as a result you would find it virtually impossible to open a Vogue magazine and not see his work either on the cover or between the pages.  There is a tongue-in-cheek attitude in his photographs, even though he photographs serious couture and ad campaigns for serious fashion houses like Burberry (below).



His most famous subject and shoot to date has been Princess Diana who he shot for Vanity Fair in 1997, just five months before her untimely death.


"Playfully he cast his eyes on the cool blonde seated on the couch, wondering what it would take to make her melt.  He wanted her to laugh.  He wanted her to roll around in her couture silks, right there on that big, gleaming boat of a sofa - and laugh."


"On the day of the shoot, in a studio in South London, he just started talking, about this and that, nothing too personal.  Mario has a marvelous voice - very warm, very satisfying, like one of those macerated cherries you get at the bottom of a good Manhattan.  He just kept it light.  He put on some music - Dalida, a French dance diva... the energy started to percolate.  She got into it, laughing and tossing her head back and throwing off the most languid looks."


"Not long after lunch she wanted learn to catwalk.  Imagine, the most celebrated woman of our time - glamorous princess, champion fund-raiser, benefactor to the poor, mother of England's future King - learning to strut like a runway queen!"

What got to Mario was the way the lady dropped her guard, as if it were one of the Queen's prized pieces of millinery.  She was so open and engaging, in fact, that he jokingly said he didn't think he could address her properly as "ma'am."  She just looked up and grinned.  "Then by all means," she said, "call me Diana."" - exerpt written by Cathy Horyn from Vanity Fair, July 1997.

His pictures of the Princess are the most enduring ever taken of her.  We had never seen the Princess looking so radient or at ease in a photo shoot before.  She was photographed by Testino in the gowns she had chosen to auction (at the suggestion of her son Prince William) for charity.  The shots of Diana were to become legendary and not just because they were taken so close to her death but also because of the light and love he brought out of her during the shoot that simply radiates from the pictures.


He has photographed many fashion campaigns, some of them including Burberry, Gucci, Zara, Michael Kors, Dolce & Gabbana, Estèe Lauder, Valentino and Versace as well as just about any person you can think of...

 Reece Witherspoon
Madonna
Kate Winslet
Drew Barrymore
Princes Harry and William

Mario has published seven books thus far.  His first book of photography, a raunchy and vibrant collection of images entitled Any Objections, in 1998 then Front Row Back Stage in 1999.  In 2001 he published Alive with a forward by Gwyneth Paltrow.  In 2002 he published Portraits to accompany his exhibition at The National Portrait Gallery.  Later in 2003 he published Kids which featured portraits of children of close friends with proceeds donated to childrens cancer charity Sargent Cancer Care.  Then in 2005, his exhibition of Diana photos, Diana: Princess of Wales, opened at Kensington Palace.  Most recently in 2007 he published his definitive guide and tribute to his hometown, Lima Peru and  Let Me In! with forward written by Nicole Kidman.



Demi Moore and Ashton Kutcher
"As an artist he responds instinctively to his environment, it becomes part of his photographs, and you, the subject, become an integral part of the environment. Among his many gifts is the ability to capture something about the sitter’s essence, an immediacy, a shared moment. What’s more, he makes you feel special, which is a lovely way to feel, especially under the scrutiny of a camera lens." Nicole Kidman from her forward in Let Me In!


The man who once said it was his "greatest pleasure in life" to make people laugh is a consummate professional.  A man who takes photographs that are intimate, timeless, provocative and enduring.

I've never wanted to be famous, but I would be, just for one day if it meant I could have my portrait taken with my hubby and my girls by Mario Testino. 



All photographs are by Mario Testino.
Images from Google, British Vogue, Vogue Italia, and Amazon.  I apologize if I have missed anyone here, please let me know if I have.  


I Heart Vogue

For me, magazines are the ultimate way to pass the time.  One of my favourite things to do is to find a quiet corner, put my feet up and read a magazine from cover to cover, completely undisturbed.

Linda, Christy, Cindy - Vogue US
In The Devil Wears Prada, Stanley Tucci's character Nigel makes a statement to Andy about the how the magazine has published some of the greatest artists of the century.  I love that because it rings true, it is not just words in a script.

Nigel:  "Don't you know that you are working at the place that published some of the greatest artists of the century? Halston, Lagerfeld, de la Renta. And what they did, what they created was greater than art because you live your life in it. ... You think this is just a magazine, hmm? This is not just a magazine. This is a shining beacon of hope... "

Naomi, Linda, Tatiana, Christy, Cindy - 1990

They say to never judge a book by its cover.  Well, when it comes to magazines, the cover is the most important aspect of the whole magazine.  If the cover does not make you want to instantly buy it, then the editor has not done their job properly.


 Christy Turlington - Vogue Italia 1993


Vogue magazine has some of the most memorable covers of all time.


The fact that the magazine dates back to 1892 means that there are hundreds of covers that have been produced over the years.  Add to that the 21 countries that Vogue is published in around the world, then that's a huge collection of covers.  I have over ten years of Vogue Australia that I have collected over the years, and I also have numerous editions from the US, UK and Paris.  I just can't part with them, I hope that my two little girls will appreciate that I have lugged them around the country-side and the world for them!

Australia
 
 Brazil

 China

 France

Germany


 Greece

India

 Italy
 
 Japan

 Korea

 Portugal

 Russia

 Spain

 United Kingdom

 United States

Vogue was described by book critic Caroline Weber in The New York Times in December 2006  as "the world's most influential fashion magazine."

"Vogue is to our era what the idea of God was, in Voltaire's famous parlance, to his: if it didn't exist, we would have to invent it.  Revered for its editorial excellence and its visual panache, the magazine has long functioned as a bible for anyone worshiping at the altar of luxury, celebrity and style.  And while we perhaps take for granted the extent to which this trinity dominates consumer culture today, Vogue's role in catalyzing its rise to pre-eminence cannot be underestimated."

Hmm, cannot be underestimated.  Fascinating, n'est pas?



Images from Google.

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