Showing posts with label Noami Campbell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Noami Campbell. Show all posts

Sunday, March 11, 2018

How the supermodels of the 1990s defined an era


Supermodels
Photo by Peter Lindbergh



HOW THE SUPERMODELS OF THE 1990S DEFINED AN ERA

by Lily Le Brun, May 2016



In January 1990 Peter Lindbergh, whose work features in the Photographs sale in London on 19 May, shot an era-defining cover for British Vogue. His relaxed black-and-white photograph of the models Naomi Campbell, Linda Evangelista, Tatjana Patitz, Christy Turlington and Cindy Crawford exuding natural beauty, smiling easily at the camera, embodied the new woman for the new decade.



"THERE WILL NEVER BE ANYTHING LIKE THE ERA OF THE SUPERMODEL AGAIN. THEY WERE MORE THAN A GROUP OF MODELS, THEY WERE CARRYING A MESSAGE AND REPRESENTED A LOT OF THINGS AT THE SAME TIME. IT WAS EXTRAORDINARY."






"There will never be anything like the era of the supermodel again," Lindbergh said years later. "They were more than a group of models, they were carrying a message and represented a lot of things at the same time. It was extraordinary." Although the term supermodel had been around for a while – Twiggy was a household name in the 1960s – it was during the late 1980s and 1990s that a select, powerful coterie of ten or so women helped redefine their profession.

Together, they reclaimed the covers of magazines from film stars and rivalled their salaries (Linda Evangelista famously told Vogue that she and Christy Turlington wouldn’t get out of bed for less than $10,000 a day). Dating prize-fighters (Naomi Campbell and Mike Tyson), royalty (Claudia Schiffer and Prince Albert of Monaco) and marrying Hollywood heartthrobs (Cindy Crawford and Richard Gere), they were the toast of glamourous parties and gossip columns.

The "supers" rise to fame had as much to do with their individual identities as it did with the impression they gave of belonging to a supportive sisterhood. Naomi Campbell has since said: "My girls stood up for me to so many designers who didn’t want to use black models. They were like, ‘If you don’t put Naomi in, we’re not doing the show, either.'" Their look emanated a similar strength and independence. "We were the glamazons," Cindy Crawford later recalled. "You couldn’t be too tall, the hair couldn’t be too big, and the boobs were pushed up and out."

And then, fashion being fashion, in the mid-1990s that look quickly went out of style. Kate Moss and grunge marked the arrival of an androgynous, understated "heroin-chic" aesthetic that has proved tenacious, while singers and actresses have once again conquered magazine covers and fashion campaigns.



LINDBERGH WAS NOT WRONG: THE TERM "SUPERMODEL," USED FAR LESS FREQUENTLY TODAY, WILL FOREVER BE ASSOCIATED WITH THE ORIGINAL GROUP OF WOMEN WHO HELPED MERGE FASHION AND CELEBRITY INTO THE HYBRID WORLD WE KNOW TODAY.






But it is exactly because of this achievement that they have their parallels today. The Victoria’s Secret Angels form another curvaceous clique with the power to make a career go stratospheric. And like their iconic predecessors, the fêted faces of Kendall Jenner, Gigi Hadid and Cara Delevingne are known as much for the personalities they reveal to their millions of Instagram followers as they are for their ability to straddle catwalk and campaigns with ease. The legacy of the supers strides on.

Lily Le Brun is an arts and culture writer based in London. She has written for publications including Sunday Times Style, the Financial Times, Frieze, The Economist and Apollo.

PETER LINBERGH






Wednesday, June 14, 2017

Peter Lindbergh's best photograph / The birth of the supermodels

ineties here we come …
From left, Naomi Campbell, Linda Evangelista, Tatjana Patitz, Christy Turlington and Cindy Crawford.
Photograph: Peter Lindbergh


Peter Lindbergh's best photograph: the birth of the supermodels


‘They were a revolution – fresh, fun, outspoken, poking at you, making edgy jokes, getting involved. Wow!’

Dale Berning Sawa
Wed 14 june 2017



L
iz Tilberis, the editor of British Vogue, asked me to do a shoot. “You have to do the January 1990 cover,” she said. “You’re the one.” She wanted something that would preview the decade to come. My reaction was: “Oh my God, who could that be? You can’t hang the next decade on one face. It won’t work.” But I knew what would.

Friday, August 16, 2013

Herb Ritts / Carla Bruni and other nude women

Carla Bruni, 1990
CARLA BRUNI
AND OTHER NUDE WOMEN
by Herb Ritts

Neith with tumbleweed, 1986
Now and Zen 1, El Mirage, 1999
Helena Chritensen, 1996
Helena Chritensen
Malibu, 1996

Christy in White, Los Angeles, 1988

Cindy Craswford, 1988

Cindy Crawford
Malibu, 1993
Cindy Crawford
Malibu, 1994
Cindy Crawford
Cindy Crawford
Costa Careyes, México, 1998
Cindy Crawford, 1995

Cindy Crawford
Hawaii, 1988
Cindy Crawford
Woman in the sea
Hawaii, 1998
Cindy Crawford

herb ritts


Female torso with veil, 1984

Female torso detail, 1989
Rachel Holding Sphere
Hollywood, 1989
Waterfall woman with sphere, 1989


Chrity Turlington
Versace Dress, Back View
El Mirage, 1990


Stephanie, Cindy, Christy, Tatjana, Naomi
Hollywood, 1989

Nadja Auermann
Charlize Theron
Versace Veiled Dress
El Mirage, 1990

Noami Campbell
Hollywood, 1990
Noami Campbell, 1988
Naomi Campbell, 1990
Noami Campbell, 1990

Noami Campbell, 2012
Alek Wek





Thursday, March 28, 2002

The Guardian Profile / Naomi Campbell



Noami Campbell

The Guardian Profile: Naomi Campbell

Sarah Hall
Thu 28 Mar 2002

Born May 22 1970, in Streatham, London. Raised by grandmother
Career highs First black model to appear on front cover of Time magazine and French and British Vogue; perfume contract with Wella; described by Nelson Mandela as his "honorary granddaughter".
Career lows Pleading guilty to assault in 2000 after hitting former PA Georgina Galanis over the head with a mobile phone; allegedly overdosing on barbiturates after rowing with boyfriend Joaquin Cortes in 1997; attending clinic for "anger management" treatment in 1999; accused of smuggling cocaine in the News of the World in 2002
Behaviour in court Petulant, coquettish, angry
What was said about her "She lied on oath" (Mr Justice Morland)
What she said on privacy "They've been having a go at me for years and I've put up with it. But this time they've gone too far."