Archive | April, 2013

Olivier Theyskens, from Couture to Luxury Streetwear

28 Apr

Olivier Theyskens

 (Photograph by Irving Penn, 2003)

I met Olivier Theyskens ones in Paris, many years ago. I was walking the streets with a friend, who was modeling at the time and knew Olivier. I had seen pictures of his work and admired his style, but at the moment we met I didn’t know he was the Olivier Theyskens and just stood there fascinated by his beautiful androgynous face…

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Born in Brussels, Belgium, in 1977, Olivier Theyskens decides at a very early age he wants to design Haute Couture. His parents are always very supportive of his dreams. At eighteen he registers at Brussels’ prestigious La Cambre school of visual arts, but two years later he drops out because he thinks he’s wasting his time and his parents money. He starts his own label Olivier Theyskens. His first collection is titled Gloomy Trips.

Gloomy Trips by Olivier Theyskens

(garment from first collection is titled Gloomy Trips)

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Olivier believes in design for design’s sake. So much so that he creates his debut collection in 1997 with no intention of ever selling it. When the fashion director of Barneys New York approaches with an offer to buy the entire line, wholesale, the stubborn 20-year-old will not budge: Yes, his Gothic garments can go on display in the windows of the chic department store’s Manhattan flagship, but the sales floor? No.

His first collections are often referred to as ‘Gothic extravaganzas’.  “My first collection was made from sheets that my grandmother, who lived in Normandy, had been collecting for a long time”: Olivier tells later.  His cutting-edge vision quickly makes him one of the most acclaimed and respected designers of his generation.

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(for 15 years  this ‘Melissa auf der Mauer wearing Olivier Theyskens’ picture hangs on my ‘inspiration-wall’)

One year later stylist Arianne Phillips sees photographs of his collection and dresses Madonna in his black silk satin coatdress for the Academy Awards and this brings his name to public attention.

Olivier Theyskens collection s/s 1999 (part 1 & 2)

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But without sufficient financial support, Olivier is forced to close his label in 2002. He begins costuming an opera for the Théâtre Royal de la Monnaie in Brussels, but is soon recruited by Rochas, to become the houses’s new creative director.

For Rochas, Olivier designs collections inspired by “elements of lace, a Parisian couture approach, a femininity that is very intellectual and very beautiful but not that girly.”  His brief is to modernize the brand, making it more hip.

Debut collection Rochas  f/w 2003

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While Olivier’s dark aesthetic softens and gives a more romantic feel during his tenures at Rochas (and Nina Ricci), his approach is met with some criticism and is ultimately not sustainable. He is a champion of “demi- couture”—creating clothes for the retail market using techniques from the haute couture atelier. It is certainly an appealing concept, but hours of hand-stitching or embroidery drives the price of his pieces up and out of the range of his target customer. Olivier also takes a purer approach to fashion and doesn’t rely, like many fashion houses, on accessory sales for a reliable source of revenue. Olivier’s refusal to create a marketable accessories line, combined with the fact that he undermines the importance of advertising makes his position by Rochas very difficult.

In 2006 Rochas fashion division is discontinued by the line’s parent company, Proctor & Gamble, even though Olivier receives the CFDA International Award for his work at Rochas. A couple of months later he is appointed creative director at Nina Ricci.

Olivier’s first show for the House of Nina Ricci established him as being somewhat wiser in a business perspective. “He is now aware of the fact that fashion needs to address a younger, more casual level of dressing.” This is in stark contrast to the couture-like dresses he created for Rochas.

In March 2009, seven months before the end of his contract, Olivier is dimissed from Nina Ricci by the parent company, Puig.

Debut collection Nina Ricci a/w 2007

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Nina Ricci Fall 2007 Ready-to-Wear Collection Slideshow on Style.com

Nina Ricci Fall 2007 Ready-to-Wear Collection Slideshow on Style.com (2)

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In 2010 Olivier designs the capsule collection for Theory (a Japanese owned, New York based company), which is loved by the public and is almost sold out (this rarely happens anymore in economical difficult times).

Olivier is appointed Artistic Director of the global Theory brand, as well as Head Designer of the Theyskens’ Theory collections. He’s also gaining creative control of everything from accessories to menswear. He has matured, and lessons had to been learned: “It’s about designing fashion that makes it more affordable, more accessible.” This brand allows him to offer a new point-of view on modern fashion.

Theyskens’ Theory is a worldwide succes.

http://theyskenstheory.com/

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Debut collection Theyskens Theory s/s 2011

Theyskens' Theory Spring 2011 Ready-to-Wear Collection Slideshow on Style.com

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Theyskens' Theory Spring 2011 Ready-to-Wear Collection Slideshow on Style.com (3)

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Tim Walker creates his own world

21 Apr

Tim Walker

Tim Walker, born in 1970 in England, ‘invented’ a whole new style of (fashion) photography.

Extravagant staging and romantic motifs characterise his unmistakable style and his work is instantly recognisable.

On graduation in 1994, Tim Walker worked as a freelance photographic assistant in London before moving to New York City as a full time assistant to Richard Avedon. On returning to England he initially concentrated on portrait and documentary work for UK newspapers. At the age of 25 he shot his first fashion story for Vogue, and has continued to do so ever since.

Tim Walker lives in London.

There’s só much beautiful work by Tim Walker, I can’t show it all….

Earlier Work

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Interview with Tim Walker

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Portraits

Alexander McQueen

Dame Vivienne Westwood

Helena Bonham Carter

Alber Elbaz

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Like a Doll

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Lady Grey

“Jean Cocteau really influenced me, especially his film Beauty and the Beast”, so said Tim Walker. “I love the fact that the house in this photo shoot is falling into decay, its inhabitants have become part of the building, they will keep on living here forever, only appearing when other people come; it’s as if the house were a living being, composed of the building itself and its former dwellers.” Walker has been long dreaming of creating pictures that would combine his obsession for decay, mythology, and the vanished grandeur of the most exclusive couture, but only recently he’s found the perfect place. “Howick Hall, the home of Earl Grey,” he explains, “has been closed since the Thirties and it’s very spectacular, romantic, tumbledown; its rooms are huge, there’s still the tapestry from the 1920s, almost torn to pieces. The old doors and structures created the perfect atmosphere for our magical sets.”

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Mechanical Dolls

Vogue Italia October 2011

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Dreaming of another world

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An Awful Big Adventure

British Vogue December 2012 in Mongolia

I travelled on the ‘Trans-Mongolian Experience’ from Moscow to Beijing a couple of years ago and I fell in love with Mongolia, the most beautiful country I’ve ever seen.

(Thank you Ellen for sharing this memorable journey)

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Stranger Than Paradise

Tilda Swinton in Las Pozas (Mexico)  for W magazine May 2013

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Story Teller

Book cover

http://www.amazon.com/Tim-Walker-Teller-Robin-Muir/dp/1419705083

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I would love to spent one day in Tim Walker’s magical world…

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Tim Walker

           

Linda Evangelista, the Chameleon

14 Apr

vogue-italia-march-1993-linda-evangelista-by-steven-meisel “I love, love, love fashion so much, that’s why I became a model in the first place.”

A kind of Stradivarius” of models, Karl Lagerfeld, the Chanel designer, said of Linda Evangelista. “You can play her like you can play no other instrument.”Unlike some who are more famous for their temperament than their actual professional skills, Evangelista seems to win the respect of everyone she works with. In 2009, the photographer Steven Meisel recalled the first time he shot the eager young model, in the late eighties. He was working with the makeup artist François Nars and the hairstylist Oribe. “It was like crystal, like champagne corks popping. That smile! Her gums! Her eyes just twinkled! We were just very, very inspired and in love.” (The adoration was mutual) . Julien d’Ys cut her hair into what she described as “a bowl cut with sideburns”. She cried during the haircut but it turned out to be the defining moment of her career.
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I was intrigued by Linda Evangelista during the 90ties. She was one of The Supermodels, but for me she was the one. She had more courage than any other model! Her constant changes in hairstyles and colors and her drive, passion and commitment in front of the lens. She was the one that inspired even other models. “Linda probably loves modeling more than anyone I know,” her colleague Amber Valletta once observed. “That’s why we all love looking at pictures of her.” I loved her appearance the most in the photographs by Peter Lindbergh and Steven Meisel.
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Linda Evangelista’s place in fashion history has been cemented at the level of icon. She appears ageless. “I decided when I was twelve that it’s what I wanted to do, and I count my blessings that I got to realize my dreams,” she said in 2006. “Being a rock star was out of the question. I can’t sing.”
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Short Biography

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At nineteen Linda moves to New York, where she where she stays at Elite’s Upper East Side apartment for models until the agency sends her to Paris. She becomes engaged to Elite agency owner Gérald Marie at Christmastime. “He put the ring on my finger and I went into shock.” she later recalls. They get married when Linda is 22 and stay married till 1993.
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In the meantime Linda poses for Steven Meisel, Arthur Elgort, Wayne Maser, Bill King, François Halard, and Alex Chatelain in Vogue. Linda Evangelista, Naomi Campbell, and Christy Turlington (the Trinity) are booked together for the Paris shows.
In october 1988 photographer Peter Lindbergh requests Julien d’Ys to crop Linda’s long brown hair supershort. “I thought I was finished when they cut my hair,” she will later recall. But the daring do only adds more fuel to her career: “Within two months I made the grand slam: covers of American Vogue, Italian Vogue, British Vogue, and French Vogue.” Women everywhere ask their hairdressers for the Linda; a British wigmaker even dubs one the Evangelista. “Sure, I like my short hair. It also quadrupled my rate. I did get sick of seeing it on everybody, though—every stewardess, every salesclerk, and in every restaurant,” she later says.
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 Super Linda: W magazine Dec ’12, by Steven Klein

stylist: edward enninful
hair: julien d’ys
make-up: peter philips
manicure: bernadette thompson
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In 1990  Linda features alongside Turlington in “Pretty Women,” Jonathan Van Meter’s profile on the top models and best friends; Evangelista jokingly utters what will become one of the most famous phrases in the fashion world: “We don’t wake up for less than $10,000 a day.” The comment—once described as the “Let them eat cake” of the twentieth century—triggers a backlash against Evangelista and the Trinity, “until it drove the whole supermodel train right off the tracks,” Van Meter will later note. “I feel like those words are going to be engraved on my tombstone.” Linda Evangelista later says.
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Peter Lindbergh makes the fantastic documentary Models: The Film, in which you can see Linda Evangelista at work.
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To see the whole movie ,click on the following link :     Models/ The film
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In 1992 Linda meets Twin Peaks actor Kyle MacLachlan at the Barneys New York’s fall campaign and soon separates from her husband. Linda and Kyle become a couple.
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Linda is so taken by the talent of John Galliano, she walks his first catwalk show for free.
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A couple of years later, Linda and Kyle MacLachlan split up and she begins dating French World Cup soccer player Fabien Barthez.  In wake of negative press—calling her out of shape and run-down—during her run at Portugal Fashion Week, retires from the runway. “I was in love and wanted it to work. I was tired of traveling, tired of the whole scene, just tired,” she will later tell. In 2002 she appears on the cover of Vogue with the headline, “Linda Evangelista’s Stunning Return.” Jonathan Van Meter pens the cover story.
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In 2004 the magazine i-D devotes its cover and an eighteen-page fashion portfolio to the modeling icon. Linda also begins a long-running role as ambassador for the Viva Glam V charity campaign of Toronto-based M.A.C. Cosmetics (which gave a teenage Evangelista free makeup when she was just starting out).“Now I get out of bed for a much better reason,” she will later say. “I’m part of a team that raises millions of dollars and raises awareness of HIV and AIDS all over the world.” This is not the only charity she works for, she even started her own charity with the singer Brian Adams years before she joint Viva Glam V.
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Linda gives birth to a son in 2006, Augustin James Evangelista. (The father is unnamed) In late June 2011, she files court papers that revealed her son was fathered by billionaire Frenchman François-Henri Pinault, by then the husband of actress Salma Hayek. After several court appearances aimed at establishing a child support agreement, on August 1, 2011, Linda formally filed for a child support order in Manhattan Family Court, seeking $46,000 in monthly child support from Pinault.A heavily-publicized child support trial began on May 3, 2012,and included testimony from both Pinault and LindaEvangelista, with Evangelista’s attorney claiming that Pinault had never supported the child.Several days into the trial, on May 7, 2012, Evangelista and Pinault reached an out-of-court settlement.
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In 2010 pondering the decade to come, stiletto maestro Manolo Blahnik tells WWD,I think Kate Moss will have huge longevity, and Linda Evangelista will be eternal”
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Linda Evangelista by Mario Testino for V Magazine, Fall ’06

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Linda Evangelista as Katharine Hepburn, photographed by Steven meisel

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Love Magazine, s/s 2012

The Misfits, Photographers: Mert Alas & Marcus Piggott, Stylist: Katie Grand

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(Linda Evangelista has modelled for more than 300 magazine covers)

Veruschka, the Amazonian Barbie

7 Apr

Veruschka by Avedon

Here I am. That was the only line uttered by Veruschka—famous enough in 1966 to play herself—in her classic scene from Michelangelo Antonioni’s Blow-up. But here was a case where action—those three minutes of leggy writhing on the studio floor for David Hemmings’ Bailey-esque fashion photographer—truly spoke louder than words.

It’s no exaggeration to say that Veruschka changed ­fashion for good. She was the first superstar model of the Sixties. Her six-foot frame, with its improbably long limbs, was revolutionary, ­following as it did the more womanly shapes of the models that came before her.

When the director Antonioni came to London in 1965 to film Blow-Up, the fashion movie that defined the decade, he cast Veruschka as the model who cavorts in front of the lens of the ­character based on David Bailey.

The part was only a cameo, lasting no more than five minutes, but it made her a superstar. Slinking like a cat toying with a mouse—half-naked on the floor in a beaded dress—while the photographer shouted encouragement (“Give it to me! Give it to me! . . . Work, work, work!”), she was sixties sexuality incarnate.

Veruschka in Blow-Up

Veruschka single-handedly started the trend to be super- thin; Twiggy burst on to the scene only once the film was in the can.

‘I was tall and I was thin. But just before shooting started I had been on a fashion assignment in Mexico and became terribly sick from drinking the water. I lost so much weight and was really ill and weak when I made the movie.’

Start of the super-thin trend: Veruschka admits she was too thin when she played a model who cavorts in front of the lens of the ­ it-fashion photographer in the film Blow Up. Dysentery. Not the most glamorous of muses for a new look.

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Veruschka’s scene in the film Blow Up has been voted the sexiest cinema moment in history

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veruschka

Biography

Vera Gräfin von Lehndorff-Steinort or Veruschka von Lehndorff (born 14 May 1939 in Königsberg, East  Prussia, Russia) is a German model, actress, and artist who became popular during the 1960s. Known  professionally as Veruschka.

Vera’s father, Count von Lehndorff, is serving in the German army reserves when he witnesses Nazi atrocities in Balarus. The count takes part in the famous Operation Valkyrie plot to kill Adolf Hitler at the Wolf’s Lair. He is arrested the day after the conspirators’ bomb fails to kill the Führer.  “I have done this because I consider Hitler to be a murderer,” Von Lehndorff  tells the court at his trial. He is convicted and hanged. Vera and her sisters are separated from their mother and taken to a labor camp. “You will change your names and Hitler will educate you and you will never see your mother again,” the girls are told. Vera is five, her eldest sister seven.

In 1945 World War II ends in Europe. The von Lehndorff family is shattered, homeless, moving from place to place. Vera will attend thirteen different schools before studying at an art college in Hamburg.

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Although she had grown up dreaming of becoming an artist, she moved to Florence, where she was discovered at age 20 by the photographer Ugo  Mulas and became a full-time model.

In 1961 Veruschka, a twenty-something, aspiring model who stood more than six feet tall, is still going by her given name, moves to New York City. Her modeling career fails to take off. She is unable to secure even one booking, despite having met Eileen Ford, head of powerful Ford Modeling Agency. After a brief sojourn in Europe, she brings a new, exotic name back to Manhattan: Veruschka. “I dressed all in black and went to see all the top photographers, like Irving Penn,” she will later say. “And [I] said, ‘I am Veruschka, who comes from the border between Russia, Germany, and Poland. I’d like to see what you can do with my face.’ ”Her audacity, and her exoticism, are entrancing.

The transformation did the trick: Soon, everyone was clamoring to work with her. Richard Avedon called her “the most beautiful woman in the world.” (Her boyfriend, the photographer Franco Rubartelli, was reported to be jealous)

 Richard Avedon & Veruschka

Veruschka & Richard Avedon

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Franco Rubartelli & Veruschka

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For one landmark shoot, with Avedon and the fashion editor Polly Mellen, Veruschka spent three weeks in Japan, modeling exotic furs on icy peaks, on the slopes of a dormant volcano, and in a shogun’s shrine. “Fashion isn’t about being beautiful. It’s about never being forgotten once a photographer has seen you,” she once said.

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In 1963 she poses for Salvador Dalí as a living sculpture covered in shaving cream. Models for the first time in Vogue, in a fashion portfolio on the “new crepe chic” by Irving Penn. Called in for a meeting with Diana Vreeland. “She was charming and had a great  presence,” the Vogue editor in chief will later recall. “Her looks, of course, were superb.”

Veruschka & Dalí(Salvador Dalí & Veruschka)

In 1967 Veruschka is one of the highest-paid models in the world and she makes the cover of Life magazine. The accompanying feature is titled “Bizarre, Exotic, Six Feet Veruschka—The Girl Everybody Stares At.”

Grace Mirabella, the new editor of Vogue, brings her in to do a Paris collections portfolio in 1972. The makeup, however, takes five hours to apply—leaving the model exhausted by the time they are ready to shoot. “It absolutely showed in the pictures: They were dead; I had no expression,” she says. Mirabella and Condé Nast editorial director Alexander Liberman suggest she try a new look, “to cut my hair and be more like other models.” (Veruschka said about th disagreement, “Grace Mirabella wanted me to be bourgeois, and I didn’t want to be that”) Veruschka: “I said no. I realized it was no longer my moment. After that, I decided not to work in fashion again.”

Veruschka

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Sensing that her moment had passed, Veruschka retired from modeling in 1975. She reverted to her given name and rediscovered her first passion: art. Working with Holger Trülzsch, a painter and sculptor, she collaborated on photographic self-portraits in which her camouflage body paint blended into the background; they were an “exploration of visibility and disappearance, a near-perfect but uncomfortable analogy for [her] own life,” according to Frieze magazine.

Her first photo book, Veruschka: Trans-Figurations—in collaboration with artist Holger Trülzsch—is published in 1986. In the arresting images, her body is painted to appear clothed.

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In October ’94, Veruschka makes a surprise runway appearance at the Chanel spring show in Paris (“looking sensational,” one reviewer says).And in 2002 “Veruschka Voyage” is the title of designer Michael Kors’s latest collection for French fashion house Céline.

In 2006  Veruschka appears as Gräfin von Wallenstein in latest Bond flick, Casino Royale.

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Veruschka, a sumptuous $500 limited-edition coffee-table book, is published by Assouline. The foreword, by Richard Avedon, is reprinted from a May 1972 issue of Vogue.        

http://www.assouline.com/9782759402960.html

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Book cover Veruschka

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Veruschka: ‘It has not been hard to grow older, because I believe if you have something you believe in that will keep you alive far more than plastic surgery or Botox. I know that there are many things I could do, but I’m not interested. It’s more important to be loving and to have a lively mind.’

Occasionally Veruschka still appears on catwalks.

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Veruschka