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Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts

Friday, 14 February 2014

The Look of Love

Call me a hopeless romantic, and I'll agree with you. Whilst Valentine's Day can get lost in a sea of tacky cards and wilting red roses, telling someone you love them - on any day of the year - is always a good thing.  I wrote about finding your soulmate in a post entitled Vive l'Amour,' last year, and I'm more than happy to have an excuse to return to the subject.

Photo: Robert Doisneau: A Bouquet of Daffodils - 1950

My love story with English Gent began 25 years ago this week - that first lunch date a mix of butterflies and flirting, of hope and possibility - who knew a shared burrito would prove so life-changing? And over the years, I've learnt that the waiting, the knowing and the wanting don't fade, as Walt Whitman's poem 'A Glimpse' captures so well :

A glimpse through an interstice caught,
Of a crowd of workmen and drivers in a bar-room around the stove late of a winter night, and I unremark’d seated in a corner,
Of a youth who loves me and whom I love, silently approaching and seating himself near, that he may hold me by the hand,
A long while amid the noises of coming and going, of drinking and oath and smutty jest,
There we two, content, happy in being together, speaking little, perhaps not a word.

Photo: Robert Doisneau: Middle Aged Couple come to the Bals Musettes - 1950

After all these years there's really no-one else's hand I'd rather hold, and he still takes my breath away.

Photo: Robert Doisneau - The Kiss 1950

So wherever you are and whoever you are with, I hope you get to feel the love and have a very Happy Valentine's Day.


PS - I just found out that the man who was the voice of 'Mickey Mouse' actually married the voice of 'Minnie Mouse' - now that's what I call true love.


Tuesday, 23 April 2013

English Gent, English Genius

No, this isn't a post about my darling husband, (though of course he's a genius), rather one about the supremely talented English fashion and portrait photographer Norman Parkinson who was the subject of a brilliant Arena documentary on BBC Four last Sunday night 21st April - the centenary of his birth.

Norman Parkinson Self Portrait

With a career spanning 50 years, which is considered unprecedented for a photographer, 'Parks' as he was known, was the true English dandy and gentleman whose love of women and the way they moved, resulted in some of the most iconic images in fashion photography from the 1940's through to the 1980's.


Jerry Hall

In his early career, working as a portrait and fashion photographer for Vogue from 1945 to 1960, Parkinson revolutionized British fashion photography by taking his models outside of the confines of the studio and imbuing his images with a humour and wit hitherto not seen in fashion photography.

Parkinson's wife Wenda

His beautiful wife Wenda was one of his earliest muses, and she was more than happy to push the boundaries of conventionality to get a groundbreaking shot.

Wenda Parkinson

His portraits of her are equally beautiful. Jerry Hall says of them: "I love the pictures he took of his wife, Wenda. They’re beautiful in that sort of “1950s-perfection” way, but something about her seems very intelligent and special."

Wenda Parkinson

As times changed, Parks embraced the Swinging Sixties, working for Queen magazine and found new muses in Celia Hammond, and Nena von Schlebrügge, Uma Thurman's mother:

Parkinson & Celia Hammond


Celia Hammond US Vogue cover


Nena von Schlebrugge


Nena von Schlebrugge

Yet he never allowed himself to get stuck in a decade so by the time the 70's came along with all its swagger and glamour, he was ready for Jerry Hall and her Amazonian beauty:

Jerry Hall Montego Bay

Jerry Hall & Antonio Lopez

Hall and Parkinson became life long friends and she credits him with not only kick starting her career in the US and the UK but also with introducing her to Bryan Ferry - apparently one look at Parkinson's photos of Jerry and he was hooked - it's not difficult to see why...

Jerry Hall

However, perhaps one of the most fruitful collaborations Parks ever had during his lengthy career - he went freelance from 1964 - was with Grace Coddington, US Vogue's inimitable Creative Director, who started life as a model before moving into the world of fashion editing, thus working with Parkinson both in front of and behind the camera.

Grace Coddington

In the Arena documentary Coddington talks of Parks with great affection and recalls how an inaugural trip they made to Bird Island, the Seychelles, triggered her love of narrative fashion, where the images tell a story, which in turn brings an extra edge to the shoot, lifting it from the ordinary to the extraordinary.

Bird Island - The Seychelles

Coddington has been doing this ever since. She says that her eye was trained by Parkinson, who advised her never to fall asleep in a car as she would miss the potentially inspiring views out of the window and she considers him her number one mentor to this day.

Parkinson with Grace model Andrea Holterhof. Photo: Chuck Zuretti
 
Bath in Fashion 2013 is celebrating the centenary of Parkinson's birth with an exhibition entitled 'Mouvements de Femmes' curated by Roland Mouret from April 13th-May 12th, and Vogue's Sarah Mower has written an excellent birthday tribute which includes an excerpt from the Arena documentary. (It's being repeated on Wednesday so catch it if you can). Without doubt, Norman Parkinson was a flirt, a dandy and a true genius, never without his lucky hat, and (as he modestly used to call them) his "snaps" are an enduring testament to his vision and his artistry. Happy Birthday Mr. Parkinson, your fashion legacy is alive and well.

Friday, 12 April 2013

Yoga - remember it's only about you...

"It's not where you are in a posture, it's how aware you are in a posture" - I read this in a yoga magazine recently and I'm trying VERY hard to apply it as I contort my body into some new pose and resist sneeking a peek at my neighbour to see how they are doing.  Such simple words but boy, are they difficult to put into practice.

Photo: Marc Quinn

Tuesday, 12 March 2013

Mothers of Style

Continuing my celebration of mothers, I couldn't resist posting a few photos of these wonderfully stylish women and their beautiful children. Enjoy.

Audrey Hepburn & son Sean, 1961

Jackie Kennedy & daughter Caroline 1959. Photo: Mark Shaw

Jackie Kennedy & JFK Jr. 1963.  Photo Mark Shaw

Grace Kelly & son Albert. Photo: Rue des Archives/BCA/RSU, 1967
 
Ingrid Bergman & twins. Photo: Magnum

Catherine Deneuve & son, 1963

Romy Schneider & son David

Jane Birkin & daughter Kate Barry

Princess Diana & Prince William

Whilst compiling this post I realized that there is a great poignancy to some of these photographs, as more than one of the lives portrayed above has sadly ended in tragedy.  I like to think however that thanks to these lasting images we can still celebrate and share in their legacy of motherly love.

Thursday, 28 February 2013

La Dolce Vita

The celebrated Italian photographer Willy Rizzo has died at the age of 84.  Through his photographs, taken at a time when the world of celebrity was not as overexposed as it is today, he gave us a rare glimpse into the worlds of cinema, fashion and art and the shining stars of the day.

Brigitte Bardot 1958

Sunkissed and gorgeous, Bardot's look still resonates today.

Marilyn Monroe 1962


I don't think I've seen Marilyn looking more fragile and vulnerable than in this photograph.

Marlene Dietrich 1956

Marlene, effortlessly chic as ever in her white shirt and cropped black trousers. 

Catherine Deneuve 1965

Belle de jour indeed.

Salvador Dali
Wonderfully surreal.

Gene Kelly

That unmistakeable Hollywood razzle dazzle.

Willy Rizzo/Photo: EPA

Grazie per la dolce vita Signor Rizzo.