Thursday, May 23, 2013

Helmut Newton / Porno Chic / Anne Tucker



l25newton1
This Article In LITERAL 25


Rose Mary Salum

Porno Chic: Helmut Newton


A Conversation with Anne Tucker, Curator

The first large-scale U.S. exhibition of Helmut Newton’s work premieres at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston on July 3. Helmut Newton: White Women • Sleepless Nights • Big Nudes encompasses the entire contents of his first three groundbreaking books. Newton (1920-2004) survived Nazi Germany as a self-supporting, nomadic teenager to emerge a world-renowned photographer. He first cemented his international reputation as the supreme recorder of female identity with his early booksMore than 200 photographs from these publications will be displayed for the first time in their entirety at the MFAH. Manfred Heiting, an Amsterdam-based collector and friend of the Newtons, with Anne Tucker, the MFAH’s Gus and Lyndall Wortham curated this event. Literal had the opportunity to talk to Anne Tucker.
* * *

How did Newton transform fashion photography from a mere photographic report of current styles into art?
Newton introduced erotic subjects and content into fashion photography, and then, often used the same models, clothes, and settings (with alternations) to make “a more Newton version” of the picture. Thus, both of his major concentrations of picture-making–fashion and nudes–were connected in his admiration of a certain type of woman: tall, often Germanic, self-confi dent, with an “I am available” way of dressing, stance, and expression. As Newton wrote, “I think the woman who gives the appearance of being available is sexually much more exciting than a woman who is completely distant.”
His women were not passively available. In one of his more controversial pictures (at least controversial to the magazine’s subscribers) a fully clothed woman eyes a shirtless male in the same estimating way that was traditionally the prerogative of the male. Newton’s women stride, tease, and reach for what they want. While contemporary work is more explicit than Newton’s, his work opened the path for other photographers to follow. He was direct about what he wanted the viewer to see and unapologetic. He walked on the edge of being provocative while not being crude or pornographic.
In White Women, Newton pays homage to the naked female form, showcasing beautiful models provocatively photographed. How and why he chose to mix luxury and decadence at this period of his artistic carrier?
Newton needed to work for a living. It was only late in his life that he was truly financially secure from both his commercial work and the sale of his prints. He believed that his best fashion work was done for French Voguebetween 1969 and 1983, when editor- in-chief Francine Crescent would publish photographs too risqué for other magazines. Newton wrote that French Vogue “let us photographers loose in the streets of Paris like wild dogs to bring back the most outrageous pictures that only French Vogue would ever have the courage to publish.”1These are also the years when the photographs in his first three books were made. The fashion work fed his personal work and working for fashion magazines, particularly French Vogue dictated the presence of luxury in the pictures. The edge of decadence was his own imprint.
Newton was audacious indeed. So, when he proposed to go to the streets and once his books were published, how did the readers, and the art critics respond?
One can’t discuss a single response to Newton’s work. Regarding readers, his books have gone into many reprints and the three books from which the featured works in the exhibition have been drawn continue to sell well, as do his prints in auctions and galleries. He had commissions to work until his death. So, the demand to own originals or books has been steady, and magazines were confident that work from new commissions would be a positive component in their magazines.
On the other side, here is a passage from one of his obituaries:
His aesthetic was branded ‘Porno Chic’. To radical feminists, Helmut Newton was the antichrist. His work outraged many and they protested one of his exhibits by throwing paint on his photos. (Helmut Newton,Autobiography, New York: Doubleday, 2002, 184.)
His retrospective a few years ago in Europe broke records of attendance in the many museums on the tour.
In his book Sleepless Nights, he explores bondage culture and fashion. What in his life and art made him conjugate these opposite characteristics?
I can’t answer this as it would only be speculation on my part.
But I would mention how often he referred to other works of art. He did a fashion shoot inspired by James Bond and another where he had a bi-plane chasing the models based on the famous scene with Cary Grant in North by Northwest. According to Karl Largerfeld, the pictures with women wearing medical implements on their legs and necks was inspired by the neck brace worn by Erich von Stroheim’s character in Jean Renoir’s La grande illusion(1937). He wanted to break open what could infl uence fashion pictures and he did.
In Big Nudes, the artist presents pairs of black-and-white images of powerful models photographed both clothed and then clad only in high heels. Is this when his art became more sexually aggressive? Why?
I can’t speculate on “Why” specifically for Newton but that series impressed me as Newton doing what many men do which is mentally undress women. But again, Newton’s women are not passive. They are confident, assertive. The high heels are purely Newton.
I have talked to women who found his work liberating and it affected the way that they dressed.
All the works that will be exhibited at the MFAH established Newton as the definitive modern photographer of women. Do you think women still want to be portrayed that way?
Only some women ever wanted to be portrayed that way and those numbers were higher in Europe than in the US. I have talked to women who found his work liberating and it affected the way that they dressed. I think that is still true. As many women have told me that they are looking forward to the exhibition as men, but only women have also been expressively negative about the show. There is little neutrality about Newton’s work. Both women and men have said “I have every one of his books.” But to my knowledge only men have built large collections of his photographs.
June Newton, the artist’s widow, first concieved this show. But this is only an expression of her marriage. Can you talk to us about their relashionship?
By all accounts by Helmut Newton and by the Newtons’ friends and collaborators, June Newton was an integral part of Helmut’s career. They discussed his fashion assignments; she edited and sequenced some of his books; etc. She is still today the protector of his reputation and guardian of his work. She had her own career as a photographer after she stopped acting, but she was still a vital part of his career.





Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Helmut Newton / Prince of Porn


Prince of Porn


Helmut Newton – a master of perversion, a provocateur, a permanent scandalist, a king of life, an eternal boy. And a frighteningly talented photographer. For dozens of years he was responsible for exciting photo shoots for Vogue and Harper’s Bazaar, although fashion seemed to be merely a pretext there, since it was women that he was obsessed with and who were the true heroines in his photographs. No wonder then that the latest exhibition of photographs by Newton held in his Berlin foundation is called ‘World Without Men’.
His first memory was the sight of his half-naked nanny sitting in front of the mirror, wearing a petticoat, and the view of his mother, who – just before putting on her evening attire and leaving for a party – would come to his room to kiss him goodnight, wearing only a bra, stockings and a silk, flesh-coloured petticoat and smelling of Chanel No 5.

Born into a rich family of Jewish manufacturers, Newton bought his first camera at the age of 12 and got a practical training in the Berlin studio of the famous photographer, Yva. Then Crystal Night came and the 18-year-old Helmut fled the country, first to Singapore and then to Australia, where he opened his first studio in the city of Melbourne. In the 1950’s he moved to Paris.

He would always say that his desire was to become a great fashion photographer. While proposing to his future wife, Alice, he said, ‘photography will always be my first and you my second greatest love.’ He gradually became world-famous and earned his nickname of the Prince of Porn.
Helmut Newton’s archives are located in Berlin, where in 2002 the city authorities presented the famous photographer with a building that became the headquarters of the Helmut Newton Foundation. ‘We stopped at the backdoor to the gorgeous zoological garden and the Bahnhof Zoo,’ wrote Newton about the search for the right location in his Autobiography, ‘and I saw it. A real palace! A beautiful two-storey building from the early 20th century, with its magnificent façade (…) We were ushered inside and there were more wonders there: the interior was in an almost perfect condition, as if it had been waiting for me. Looking though the windows, on the other side of the street I could see the railway station where I had said ‘goodbye’ to my parents some 60 years before, while on my way to the big wild world. I am not a sentimental type, but I couldn’t help shivering while remembering that day.’
The place is truly splendid. On the ground floor you can trace back Newton’s life, have a look at his front covers of various colourful magazines, his private photos, his collection of cameras and even his clothes and his car. Upstairs you will always find a huge exhibition of his photos that come from the enormous archives. The Helmut Newton Foundation also organises the exhibitions of other photographers (at the moment the portraits by Francois-Marie Banier). It’s always worth visiting, even if you already know Newton inside out.
Helmut Newton, World Without Men, open till 19/05/2013



Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Helmut Newton / Elsa Peretti


Helmut Newton
Elsa Peretti, New York, 1975
Gelatin Silver Print


Elsa Peretti
by Helmut Newton


In 1968, jewelry designer Elsa Peretti first moved to New York, where she worked as a fashion model and began to design jewelry. Her long association with Tiffany & Co. began in 1974, the year before she posed for this photograph in a bunny costume by Halston on a midtown Manhattan terrace. This is one of Newton’s most iconic images.




Elsa Peretti
  • BORN
  • FLORENCE
  • ITALY




Elsa Peretti was a successful model and fully paid-up member of the sixties New York party scene before she started designing jewellery and accessories for her friends, including Halston and Oscar de la Renta. In 1974 she started working exclusively for Tiffany & Co at which she designed her eponymous Diamonds by the Yard, Bean, Open Heart, Sevillana, Teardrop and Bottle collections.
  • Peretti was born in Florence on May 1 1940 - the youngest daughter of a wealthy Roman businessman. She later studied interior design at Volbicela School in Rome before relocating to New York to further her modelling career.
  • A distinguishing moment in her modelling career was posing with Salvador Dali in 1966 wearing a Paco Rabane dress.
  • In 1968, Peretti began designing jewellery for Halston, Oscar de la Renta, Giorgio di Sant'Angelo. One of her first pieces was a small silver bud vase pendant. The vase, holding a flower, made its first public appearance in a Giorgio di Sant'Angelo show in 1969.
  • Peretti picked up the Coty Award for Jewellery in 1971.
  • In 1973 Halston asked her to design the bottle for his soon-to-be iconic perfume (which became the second-biggest-selling fragrance of all time after Chanel No. 5).
  • Peretti posed for Helmut Newton in a Playboy bunny suit for French Vogue in 1975.
  • In 1981 Peretti won the Rhode Island School of Design President's Fellow Award.
  • To mark the 15th year of Elsa Peretti's association with Tiffany and to celebrate Peretti’s 50th birthday on May 1 1990, jewellery and tableware by Peretti was put on display at the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York.
  • In 1996, the Council of Fashion Designers of America named Peretti Accessory Designer of the Year.
  • Elsa Peretti celebrated her 25th anniversary with Tiffany in 1999 and the company established the Elsa Peretti Professorship in Jewellery Design at the Fashion Institute of Technology.
  • In 2001, the designer was presented with an honorary Doctor of Fine Arts degree from FIT.




Friday, May 17, 2013

Edward Gorey / Floating Worlds

FLOATING WORLDS

Edward Gorey's Never-Before-Seen Letters 

and Illustrated Envelopes

by Maria Popova

What a housefly has to do with Tim Burton and everything that makes snail mail great.


It’s no secret I’m an enormous fan of Edward Gorey´s, mid-century illustrator of the macabre, whose work influenced generations of creators, from Nine Inch Nails to Tim Burton. Between September 1968 and October 1969, Gorey set out to collaborate on three children’s books with author and editor Peter F. Neumeyer and, over the course of this 13-month period, the two exchanged a series of letters on topics that soon expanded well beyond the three books and into everything from metaphysics to pancake recipes.
Today, Neumeyer is opening the treasure trove of this fascinating, never-before-published correspondence in Floating Worlds: The Letters of Edward Gorey and Peter F Neumeyer — a magnificent collection of 75 typewriter-transcribed letters, 38 stunningly illustrated envelopes, and more than 60 postcards and illustrations exchanged between the two collaborators-turned-close-friends, featuring Gorey’s witty, wise meditations on such eclectic topics as insect life, the writings of Jorge Luis Borges, and Japanese art.
In light of his body of work, and because of the interest that his private person has aroused, I feel strongly that these letters should not be lost to posterity. I still read in them Ted’s wisdom, charm, and affection and a profound personal integrity that deserves to be in the record. As for my own letters to Ted, I had no idea that he had kept them until one day a couple of years ago when a co-trustee of his estate, Andras Brown, sent me a package of photocopies of my half of the correspondence. I am very grateful for that.” ~ Peter F. Neumeyer
Equally fascinating is the unlikely story of how Gorey and Neumeyer met in the first place — a story involving a hospital waiting room, a watercolor of a housefly, and a one-and-a-half-inch scrap of paper with a dot — and the affectionate friendship into which it unfolded.
There’s a remarkable hue to Gorey’s writing, a kind of thinking-big-thoughts-without-taking-oneself-too-seriously quality. In September of 1968, in what he jokingly termed “E. Gorey’s Great Simple Theory About Art,” Gorey wrote these Yodaesque words:
This is the theory… that anything that is art… is presumably about some certain thing, but is really always about something else, and it’s no good having one without the other, because if you just have the something it is boring and if you just have the something else it’s irritating.”





From the intellectual banter to the magnificent illustrations, Floating Wolds, which comes from the lovely Pomegranate, is as much a powerful personal memoir of an unusual friendship as it is a priceless cultural treasure containing the spirit and legacy of one of the twentieth-century’s most unique, influential and prolific creators.