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History of Fashion Photography There is a contradiction in fashion photography: In theory, its purpose the same as that of a catalogue: to depict the clothes and help to sell them. In practice however, fashion photography has been used as a vehicle for self-expression by some of the world's greatest photographers. Often, the creative desires of the photographers are at odds with the intentions of the editor, as Anna Wintour, fashion editor at Vogue, illustrates: Our needs are simple. We want a photographer to take a dress, make the girl look pretty, give us lots of images to choose from, and not give us any attitude. Photographers - if they are any good - want to create art. Through this tension have come about some of the most memorable images in the history of photography, transcending the time in which they were made, and representing that time for us today. I became actively interested in fashion photography when, in 1991, I saw an exhibition at the Victoria and Albert Museum, detailing the development of the genre in the post war years. I found many of the images extremely captivating and interesting. Though I had enjoyed the fashion photography of contemporary magazines such as Harpers and Queen and Vogue, I had never before seen so many original prints from earlier decades and I responded to them with enthusiasm, hoping to introduce elements of their technique and atmosphere into my own photography. I intend to use this piece of writing as an opportunity not only to learn more about the history and development of the fashion photograph, but also to analyse, by the use of many of my favourite images, what it is that underlies their timeless appeal, and, from the point of view of a student of photography, the techniques the photographers used to achieve their desired effects. The precursors of fashion photography go back to the eighteenth century, when images of fashionable clothes were printed i n magazines and often hand-coloured. Paris was at that time a centre for the production of such magazines, many of which were imported into England. Figure 1 shows a typical example of such an image. The technique of photography was developed in the 1830s, but it wasn't until much later that the métier of fashion photography came into existence. The earliest popular photographic technique, the daguerreotype, could not be used for mass printing. A later technique enabled the production of the "Carte de Visite" which were made for individuals and which also depicted famous theatre and music hall personalities of t he age. It wasn't until advances in halftone printing techniques that fashion photographs came to be featured in magazines. This happened in about the first decade of the 20th century.

History of Fashion Photography

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History of Fashion Photography

There is a contradiction in fashion photography: In theory, its purpose the same as

that of a catalogue: to depict the clothes and help to sell them. In practice however,

fashion photography has been used as a vehicle for self-expression by some of the

world's greatest photographers.

Often, the creative desires of the photographers are at odds with the intentions of the

editor, as Anna Wintour, fashion editor at Vogue, illustrates:

Our needs are simple. We want a photographer to take a dress, make the girl look 

pretty, give us lots of images to choose from, and not give us any attitude.

Photographers - if they are any good - want to create art.

Through this tension have come about some of the most memorable images in the

history of photography, transcending the time in which they were made, and

representing that time for us today.

I became actively interested in fashion photography when, in 1991, I saw an

exhibition at the Victoria and Albert Museum, detailing the development of the genre

in the post war years. I found many of the images extremely captivating and

interesting. Though I had enjoyed the fashion photography of contemporary

magazines such as Harpers and Queen and Vogue, I had never before seen so many

original prints from earlier decades and I responded to them with enthusiasm, hoping

to introduce elements of their technique and atmosphere into my own photography.

I intend to use this piece of writing as an opportunity not only to learn more about the

history and development of the fashion photograph, but also to analyse, by the use of 

many of my favourite images, what it is that underlies their timeless appeal, and, from

the point of view of a student of photography, the techniques the photographers used

to achieve their desired effects.

The precursors of fashion photography go back to the eighteenth century, when

images of fashionable clothes were printed in magazines and often hand-coloured.

Paris was at that time a centre for the production of such magazines, many of which

were imported into England. Figure 1 shows a typical example of such an image.

The technique of photography was developed in the 1830s, but it wasn't until much

later that the métier of fashion photography came into existence. The earliest popular

photographic technique, the daguerreotype, could not be used for mass printing. A

later technique enabled the production of the "Carte de Visite" which were made for

individuals and which also depicted famous theatre and music hall personalities of the

age. It wasn't until advances in halftone printing techniques that fashion photographs

came to be featured in magazines. This happened in about the first decade of the 20th

century.

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Baron de Meyer (1868 - 1946) called "The Debussy of the Camera", had wealthy,

though not aristocratic origins. He was born Demeyer Watson, of a French father and

a Scottish mother, and grew up in Saxony. He came to London and married into

nobility. He was given the title Baron de Meyer and set out on a life of extravagant

entertaining

His main characteristic was a wonderful use of backlighting and the soft-focus lens. In

Fig. 2, we see many of the characteristics of his style. Though static, the pose is

natural, and the picture is arranged using a strong pattern of vertical elements, giving

a sense of authority and formality. We can see a clear use of the "rule of thirds" in the

placement of the curtains and chair.

What strikes us as being special to Baron de Meyer, however, are the glinting

reflections from the background material and the jewels. The overall key is a light

grey, the only dark areas being around the sitter's face, arms and lap. It's interesting to

note that the chair is hardly a suitably aristocratic-looking piece of furniture, but

perhaps he chose if for its colour, more than anything else.

Edward Jean Steichen (1879-1973) was born in Luxembourg, but his family moved to

the USA in 1881. With Alfred Stieglitz, he founded the Photo-Secession Galleries in

New York. He first photographed fashion models in 1911 for the magazine "Art and

Decoration", and worked with Conde Nast during the twenties. This photo (fig. 3) was

made for American Vogue in 1920, and shows Marian Moorehouse, wife of the poet

E.E. Cummings, wearing a Chanel gown.

The arrangement of rectangular shapes shows the influence of constructivist art,

which was influential at the time. The vertically placed white rectangular card has

been carefully positioned to show the shape of the falling drapery, which shows signs

of considerable retouching. A piece of horizontally placed black card provides further

contrast.

The head and shoulders stand out from the mid grey of the wall, and the toe of the

shoe, pointing elegantly downwards, protrudes into the area of white on the floor. A

white and black vertical band just to the left of the model, divides the upper part of thepicture, and completes the background. The lighting is a combination of general light

plus sidelighting, on both sides, giving the flesh tones a mid to high key, contrasting

with the solid blacks.

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skilfully uses very simple props to create an elegant arrangement of forms, modernist

in flavour, but classical in order and arrangement.

George Hoyningen-Huene (1900 - 1968) was another of the aristocratic practitionersof early fashion photography, and did most of his most memorable work between the

mid-twenties and the end of the Second World War. He was born in St Petersburg, but

moved to Paris in 1920, where he first did fashion illustration and then photography.

He moved to New York in 1935, and worked mainly for Harper's Bazaar. He spent

the latter part of his life in California.

The famous swimwear ad by George Hoyningen-Huene (Fig. 4) is familiar to

contemporary eyes, having been used recently in advertising for perfume. It displays a

combination of chic and classicism typical of the age. The image shows a meticulous

attitude to detail and arrangement. The models are placed very carefully, with closeattention to the effect of light and shadow. The combined outline forms a pleasing U

shape, similar to a Greek vase. By illusion, the scene appears to be outdoors, but on

closer inspection, we can see that, like most fashion shots of the day, it was taken in a

studio, and the "sea" is an area of light grey, with the "sky" and faintly painted clouds

above it. A very realistic effect of daylight is achieved by a strong, single light, placed

to the above left of the subjects.

If you went to the sea and took a photo of it around midday, the sea would almost

certainly appear much darker. The effect of this unnaturally light background is

twofold: it makes the models stand out, but more interestingly, it actually simulateshow we would see the background in harsh sunlight without sunglasses- very light

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and slightly fuzzy, due to the smarting of the eyes. The visually inaccurate, but

psychologically correct portrayal of the background gives this image its mysterious

appeal. The enigmatic quality is heightened by the fact that the models stare away

from us, so that we can't see their faces, and appear to be looking at something out on

the "sea", to the right, and beyond the frame of the picture. What are they looking at?

What are their faces like? And where exactly is this seaside location?

Horst P Horst (born 1906, lives in New York) was a friend of Hoyningen-Huene, and

also had a fascination for classical imagery, indeed he made a detailed study of 

classical poses, using Greek sculpture and classical paintings, paying special attention

to the positioning of hands. In his studio, he used all manner of props, such as plaster

statues, mirrors, crumpled paper, using them to both neoclassical and surrealist effect.

This photo (Fig. 5) of Helen Bennet is a good example of an image with a strongly

classical effect. A single spotlight shines down on the model from the top right. The

edges of the spot place shadows on the edges of the pleated cloak, which is exhibited,

peacock-fashion in a wonderful display of light and shadow. The model is standing in

front of a column, and we can see the shadow of the spotlight forming an arc just to

the right of the model's face. The light falls on the face to form a perfect jaw line, with

 just the right amount of shadow on the cheekbone (although this might have been

retouched).

The pose is statuesque and painterly, reminiscent of the paintings of Alfred Moore.

The background is a graduated dark to lighter grey, made apparently by a diffused

light placed behind the base. Around the base, there are three pieces of Greek-style

plaster sculpture, though these are partly cropped out of the picture. One criticism

might be that this arrangement looks botched and amateurish, and that the

photographer couldn't make up his mind whether or not to leave out the base

altogether, but decided to crop it half way! In my opinion this doesn't matter, as the

main focus of the image is the model, and her outfit. In his use of props, he was only

trying to create an effect of the antique, not, as perhaps in a painting, a detailed and

accurate recreation of the real thing.

Cecil Beaton (1904 - 1980) was a contemporary of Horst P Horst and Hoyningen-

Huene, and was based in London. His exhibition in 1927 at the Cooling Galleries,

London established him as a major photographic figure. Like Horst, he also used

elaborate studio props and experimented with surrealism. In the picture of Miss Mary

Taylor (Fig. 6), the image is dominated by two large and highly ornate oval-shaped

hanging decorations, with flowers and patterns similar to peacock tails. The left hand

one is closer to the camera, and is to the model's right. The right hand one is hanging

behind the model, and the edge intersects her face at eye level.

According to traditional rules of composition, the model is too low in the frame, but,like others pictures by Beaton, it is not intended to be a portrait, but an arrangement of 

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forms, patterns, textures and tones, in which the model is included. The decorations,

which were probably made up specially for the shot, and don't resemble anything I've

ever seen elsewhere, dominate the image, and almost have a life and character of their

own, subjugating the model. There is a light source coming from the right,

illuminating the rear wall, and the model's face. A less intense, more diffuse light on

the left fills in dark to mid grey shadows on the model's face and lights the front of 

her garment. The placement of the fingers adds an extra element of theatricality to the

image.

An interesting development during the 1930's was a change in Beaton's attitude

towards the romanticism and indulgence in his earlier work. This quotation from "The

Best of Beaton" written in 1968, gives us the photographer's insight into the changing

mood:

The posed, static hands with the pointed index finger and arched wrist acquired an

overnight vulgarity; the celestial expression in the eys suddenly became a joke shared

by everyone except the sitter. The earlier pictures appeared over re-touched and

altogether too artificial with ladies with forced rosebud simpers and impossibly

goldern curls.

In the meantime, Beaton had developed a more realistic style:

'The results of my experiments in this genre of photography were considered to prove

that I had at last grown up, and had acquired a new sense of reality. "Reality" was

taken up by editors as the "new thing"'.

A result of this change of direction was a contributory factor in the termination of his

contract with Vogue in 1938. In the ensuing years he took many war photographs, and

a famous example of the then, still prevalent idea of "reality" was this study (Fig. 7)

of a model standing in a Paris courtyard. The look of the model and the clothes could

almost be contemporary. She couldn't be further removed from the high fashion

models of earlier years. The photograph is almost of snapshot character, with very

little attention wasted on artful arrangement of forms. The face appears exactly central

in the frame, which doesn't conform to traditional conventions. There are however,

subtle evidences of the photographer's eye - the natural light coming from above is at

 just the right angle to scupt the model's face.

Personally, I feel that the photographer wasn't being honest with himself. A deliberate

urge to throw out former principles and techniques, and go to another extreme, is

perhaps a way of trying to prove his versatility or an attempt not to be typecast.Maybe the picture is a product of its time - after six years of gruelling war, people

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were weary, more concerned with making the best of meagre rations, whether food or

cloth, than indulging in opulent fantasies.

By 1948, however, the elegance was back, revived by Christian Dior's "New Look"

collection of 1947. This image (Fig. 8), epitomises the return to grand style, but in a

plainer, more direct way than in earlier decades. Eight models are posed in a neo-

classical salon, talking and drinking cups of tea from dainty teacups.

There are three sources, two shining in from the sides, and one very bright one placed

behind the two models to the centre left. An additional, low key diffused light shines

in from the left of the camera, illuminating very nicely the patterns of silken drapery.

The lighting ensures a full range of tones from very bright to near black.

Reproductions of this image in two different books turn out, on closer inspection to be

slightly different. The poses are almost exactly the same, except for a couple of small

differences.

This must indicate that considerable effort must have gone into placing the models in

definite and highly stylised poses, artificial some would say. As we will see, there was

a reaction against this which would leave behind the famous pre-war photographers,

and usher in a new, post war era of spontaneity.

Norman Parkinson, (born in 1913) a contemporary of Beaton, also photographed the

beau monde during the twenties and thirties, but, as he explains, with certain

differences:

'I was hardly aware of other photographers' work until I went to Harper's, when I

learnt about Steichen, Hoyningen-Huene, Durst and Beaton. But the women in their

photographs were a rarefied few, an elitist handful. My women behaved quite

differently - they drove cars, went shopping, had children and kicked the dog. I

wanted to capture that side of women. I wanted them out in the fields jumping over

the haycocks - I did not think they needed their knees bolted together. There was

always room in a magazine for the scent-laden marble-floored studios with lilies

falling out ot great bowls of flowers. but there was also room for my sort of 

photography.'

(Norman Parkinson Lifework, page 35).

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A good example of this type of portrayal are the next two pictures, both taken by

Norman Parkinson in 1937. The first one (Fig. 9) has an irresistible quality of 

exuberance, 30's style and femininity about it, but why is the image so successful? It

would have been difficult to pose the models carefully, though the photographer

might have asked them to "act out" seeing someone on another boat, and waving.

In any case, the three poses are complementary, the left hand model is holding her left

arm vertically, the middle one holding her left arm horizontally, index finger pointing

upwards, the right hand model has a relaxed, leaning pose. The outstretched leg of the

left hand model reaches over to the far side, close to the leaning model. The effect of 

the wind, the sense of movement and shifting balance, gives the image great

dynamism, added to by the swathe of foam stretching from the bottom right to near

the top left. But by what means was the photographer able to attain this pleasing

arrangement in such unpredictable circumstances? Perhaps the gift of the

photographer is to click the shutter exactly the right time:

'I was using, on location, my by-now faithful Graflex quarter plate camera, and was

trying to make moving pictures with a still camera. many photographers who attempt

this technique have come to realize that if you see on the ground glass the image you

are striving for, and it is a moving or air-borne image, you are too late. The secret is to

direct the shot and to have the luck to anticipate it. It was discovering that I had the

exceptional good fortune to be able to do so that convinced me and I was hooked for

all time on photography'.

(Norman Parkinson Life Work page 28)

Interestingly, the eyes of the middle model are exactly level with the horizon, and this

is also a characteristic of the second picture by Norman Parkinson, showing a woman

walking along a country track. The eyes are level with the horizon, adding an extra

element of horizontality to the image. Again, the converging diagonals of the lane,

going out of focus as they stretch into the distance give a sense of movement, added

to by the brisk walk of the model. The pose is full of confidence. She looks directly to

her right, along the line of the horizon, striding forward towards the camera.

The movement of the body and the texture of the material act together to dynamicallyportray the clothes.

A familiar and recurring issue in fashion photography, and perhaps photography in

general, is the dichotomy between "realism" and "artificiality". At any one time, both

have been in currency. The outdoor shots of Norman Parkinson were being made at

about the same time as the posed and stylised studio works of Hoyningen-Huene. One

photographer whose work was more at the romantic and impressionistic end of the

spectrum was Lillian Bassman, a protegee of the legendary Alexei Brodovitch at

Harpers, New York.

This image, dating from 1949, and entitled "New York", is timeless, almost

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contemporary in its look. With the depiction of a corset, we can see a return to more

traditional, romantic vision of femininity. The image looks as if it was exposed sharp

in the camera, but given a soft-focus effect at printing. There is slight double

exposure, with probable use of a diffusing filter, or possibly an additional exposure

was made out of focus. The pose has a sweeping sense of movement, the face and

upper body are tipping forwards, the arms are pulling the strings backwards and

upwards. The waist is tightly, painfully drawn in, to the extent that it looks

unnaturally narrow. The tightness is contrasted with the looseness of the four hanging

straps.

A moment is caught in time by the camera, a fleeting glimpse echoed by the reflection

in the mirror.

At first the image looks primarily decorative, but in addition to beauty of form, a

powerful feeling of constriction is expressed. Perhaps the fact that the photographer is

female made her better able to empathise with how it feels to wear a corset.

Like Lillian Bassman, Louise Dahl-Wolfe also worked for Harpers Bazaar, and not

long after her arrval at the magazine in 1935, was one of the first to use one-shot

Kodachrome, which had just been brought onto the market. Many of her pictures

feature swimwear fashion, and have a relaxed and luxurious feel, with tall, slim

models in elegant, outstretched poses.

This shot by Louise Dahl-Wolfe (Fig. 12), made in 1950, has an attractive period feel

due to the combined effect of the early fifties swimsuit style, and the yellowness of the colour balance, typical of early colour film. A familiar hallmark of this

photographer is the reclining female model, the repeated curves of her body, and of 

the swimsuit material, set against the screen.

A rough division into vertical and horizontal thirds is visible. The bowl of fruit with

tumbling exotic flowers recalls a still life. As if to contrast with the image by

Hoyningen-Huene of the chic couple in swimsuits in an imaginary and unspecified

location, this one is taken in a real-life place, as indicated by the map of Tunisia. The

point of the star appears to indicate the exact place, a nice, cryptic touch.

The one photographer who more than any other came to symbolise the new direction

which fashion photography took after the Second World War is Richard Avedon, who

was born in 1923. He has been a leading figure in the world of photography since

1945, and is still active. He gained his first professional photographic experience in

the Merchant Marine, taking ID photos. It was the innovative, 'in-and-out-of-focus'

style of his shots of merchant seamen twins that caught the eye of Harper's Bazaar art

director Alexei Brodovitch, and persuaded him to try some fashion photos for the

magazine. Soon, Avedon came to be regarded as the number one young photographer,

creator of the "NewVision".

Junior Bazaar, a separate edition, aimed at young people, ran for 3 years up till 1948,

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and featured a new brand of fresh and innovative photography, much of it contributed

by Avedon. In its use of movement, the "in-and-out-of-focus" effect, motion blur,

cropping and the plain white background, we can see in this picture, (Fig.13) shot

using Kodachrome, a startling break with many of the basic principles of 

photographers like Hoynignen-Huene, who by the time this photo was published, had

given up fashion photography altogether.

Despite the apparently casual nature of the arrangement of the figures, the effect is

very pleasing, and has a strong sense of circular, dance-like motion, a theme alluded

to in the text. The profile of the model on the left forms a dark, chevron-like shape,

pointing to the right - (the line of the back and rear of the dress forms a perfect arrow

shape). The model is leaning back, looking up and laughing, whilst standing still,

meanwhile the model further away is leaning forward, looking down whilst moving.

The background model is looking down at the same angle as the foreground model is

looking up. To balance the composition on the page, two leaf-shaped areas of dark 

colour have been added, again fitting in with the text. All in all, it is an attractive,

vibrant image, which, at least in the case of the foreground model, shows off the

clothes very well.

His style is described succinctly by Cecil Beaton and Gail Buckland:

'His pictures showed young ladies enjoying life to the full as they preened and jumped

with joy in their Paris confections. Avedon's photographs did not perhaps have

technical perfection, and they were all the better for this, for they created the

statement that he wished to make-of movement caught forever by his lens.'

The Magic Image, page 252

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Dovima with Elephants (Fig. 14) is one of his most celebrated pictures. The image is

well-crafted, but its main appeal seems to be that it was the first time anyone had

taken a high fashion model together with elephants. It had a certain shock value.

Richard Avedon's modernism, had sweeping effect on photography, and there was a

consequent rejection of the earlier, more "classical" style:

'By 1945, Hoynignen-Huene's stiff, formal poses, perfectly attuned to the Neo-

classicism of the 1930's, suddenly seemed anachronistic...The most devastating

critique of Hoyningen-Huene's photography was delivered in 1944 by Dr Agha

(formerly Hoyningen-Huene's art director at Vogue) who described it as "a cross

between stagecraft, interior decoration, ballet and society portrait painting done by

camera.'

Perhaps there is a parallel with the Post War Modernism in other areas of creativity,

such as architecture, where older styles were thrown out, to be replaced by bold, but

in hindsight unsuccessful creations. I personally have a very high regard for the

'classical style' of the 1930's but I also like the exuberance of the post war period.

Each style has its place. No successful artist or photographer should be rejected

because of the dictates of fashion. In a Post Modern age, all styles of the past are

available in the present to be drawn on.

Erwin Blumenfeld (1897-1969) was an experimenter in photography, who madecreative use of colour and lighting. This picture (Fig. 15) shows a remarkable use of 

texture and colour. A finished print appears to have been rephotographed with a series

of coloured transparent bars placed on top of it. The effect is to play tricks on the eye,

forcing us to look more closely in order to try and make sense of what we are seeing.

As if to confuse matters further, curled strips of cellophane have been added. The

incorrect, but very attractive colour balance, typical of early Kodachrome, adds to the

image's appeal. Though the model's face is cut into a series of distorted vertical strips,

she still manages to look beautiful, at least, our eyes are able to reconstruct her beauty

by applying our innate knowledge - maybe if this image was presented to a computerfacial recognition system, it mightn't be able to recognise a face there at all!

The combination of a familiar subject viewed in a jarring and unfamiliar way is, for

me, like being a child again, discovering new textures and lighting effects for the first

time - I remember being especially fascinated with coloured transparent materials, as

well are metallic reflective surfaces.