04/02/2011

Bill Cunningham Is A Dirty Paparazzo

.

Bill Cunningham Is A Dirty Paparazzo

As the release of Richard Press’ documentary “Bill Cunningham New York” nears, the fickle fashion world is abuzz. “His work is pure art!” they cry. “He is a seminal genius!” they proclaim. And as part of the fickle fashion world ourselves, we too are waiting like nervous teenage girls for its release. But while we neither dispute the niceness of his work nor his extraordinary work ethic, it must be said that Cunningham is a dirty paparazzo.

And everyone knows what we think about the paparazzi. They killed Princess Diana! They won’t leave let poor Lindsay Lohan be! And we eat their images voraciously, without so much as a grain of salt. But if, say, Anna Wintour was to stumble into a manhole to her untimely death while desperately posing for Mr. C (or Scott Schumann for that matter), would the world collectively blame the photographer? Probably not. They’d deride poor Anna’s clumsiness.

Yet, from Marcello Gepetti’s gorgeous immortalization of the likes of Liz Taylor and Brigitte Bardot to the dolce vita imagery of Elio Sorci to the risk-taking Ron Gallela’s hard-to-get photos, the great paparazzi languish in obscurity. It would be cultural heresy to consider their images art, reduced, as they always are, to voyeuristic violations relegated to trashy websites and disposable publications. It seems that Cunningham, has managed to subvert praxis to function as a paparazzo, photographing fleeting moments in the lives of celebrated people, all while being something altogether different to the wider world. And therein lies his seminal genius, it would seem. There would be no The Sartorialist without Bill Cunningham.

Now, this critique is not a cheap shot at Cunningham himself. For his almost complete lack of pretence, compellingly modest lifestyle and genuine journalistic interest in the capricious world of street fashion, he’s a bang-up kind of professional. And nothing can be said about him if not that he’s an extraordinarily dedicated, hard worker with a particularly charming personality (like most great photographers whose principal subject is people). His photos themselves are almost beside the point, however, as he occupies the enviable position of paparazzo-nobody-would-dream-of-calling-paparazzo, comfortably inside the bounds of the velvet rope. After all, his lengthy career was unknown outside New York fashion circles until personalities like the aforementioned Schumann burst onto the e-scene…

True, a great deal of the people he shoots are actually street-level hoi polloi with penchants for style. But as the majority of his work was mostly before the era of hourly blog fixes and the cocaine-like collective addiction to self-promotion, his crescendo of fame has mostly been a function of who (and that’s who’s who, for lack of a better term) he’s been able to photograph. Consider that the same people who might run away from the flashes out of exasperation flock to Cunningham because they’re dying to be validified by his lens.

Bill Cunningham New York Trailer from Gavin McWait on Vimeo.

And this in turn makes it abundantly clear that genuine celebrity has become an anachronism. Even today’s most famous face becomes lost in the crowd without constant reminders of its importance, both because fame is now more democratic and because our attention spans have crashed and burned. The flame of celebrity thus requires constant stoking to (transitorily) cement its tenuous existence. And as many an art critic might muse, instead of the paparazzo’s camera-as-assault rifle, Cunningham wields his camera-as-Midas’ phallus. His subjects are just begging to have a go at it. His fame and that of his celebrity subjects are mutually beneficial, much like the beautiful friendship your stomach has with lactobacillus. Susan Sontag would have had a field day with this one.

Tag Christof

Share: Facebook,  Twitter  
01/02/2011

Backstage At Men’s Fashion Week

.

Backstage At Men’s Fashion Week

Photographer Luca Ascari, a friend of 2DM, was a busy bee at the men’s shows a few weeks ago. His up close and personal behind-the-scenes shots of the frenetic preparations and post-show relief just hit our screens. He shares a few here, for the viewing pleasure of our lovely readers. Enjoy!

Giorgio Armani


Gucci


DSquared

Etro

Tag Christof – all images by Luca Ascari

Share: Facebook,  Twitter  
26/01/2011

Hixsept: Problèmes et Crépuscules

.

Hixsept: Problèmes et Crépscules

What if problems could be solved by colours? Could this be a new proposal by the already acclaimed Hixsept? At the very least, it’s something its masterminds Aurélien Arbet and Jérémie Egry think should be pondered. Among other metaphysical notions… Hello!

Hixsept’s S/S 2011 collection is straight up classic forms with a twist, and a graphic designer’s sense of shades, stripes and forms. From dense to intense, this collection is as they say, an ode to colours!

And as if they weren’t already awash in talent, this collection counts to its advantage additionally the collaboration of young artist Paul Cowan, whose particular point of view on contemporary painting puts the final dot on the i – or we should say, the spot on the prints of this fine collection. We want it!




Hixsept Problème et Crépuscule

Juan Alvarado – photos by Jeremy Liebman, painted backgrounds by Paul Cowan and courtesy Hixsept

Share: Facebook,  Twitter  
24/01/2011

Hello, Tung Walsh!

.

Hello, Tung Walsh!

And a warm, warm welcome to 2DM’s newest addition, making his official debut with the agency this month. A London boy from the get go, Tung is a globetrotter with a very particular vision of beauty.

His trajectory as a photographer began when he shot his favourite bands as a teenager, and toted his camera around from then on, going on to win a 2001 photo competition judged by Martin Parr, Elaine Constantine, Dennis Morris and Paul Smith (the photographer, not the designer). He was Jurgen Teller’s assistant for nearly a half-decade, leaving his mark on his monographs, exhibition and campaigns for YSL, Helmut Lang, Marc Jacobs and Puma.

Today he’s certainly making the rounds, working with big names from POP magazine and i-D to Elle and W, from Fred Perry to Dolce & Gabbana, and from Tilda Swinton to Cristiano Ronaldo. It seems that everyone adores Tung and his conceptual, well articulated, sometimes naughty and always sophisticated work.

Inspired by trips to the jungles (where he finds himself in the next few weeks), as well as life and general and its various perks, Tung is sure to be a fantastic new fratello in the 2DM family.

Group hug!

From the Bureau

Share: Facebook,  Twitter  
21/01/2011

LURVE Magazine Official Launch

.

Lurve Magazine Official Launch

For the occasion the new Lurve‘s official launch celebration in Paris, salivate over the tasty entrée of 2DM’s Vicky Trombetta‘s short film 2 Boys. Through the trenches and over the bridges of the Big Apple, the short was shot during Trombetta’s trek there for the issue’s editorial by the same name and styled by the relentlessly cool Matthew Josephs.

Hot stuff.

2 boys by Vicky Trombetta

From the Bureau

Share: Facebook,  Twitter  
19/01/2011

Hixsept

.

Hixsept

Hard to imagine that Hixsept is a dozen years old this year. The French brand founded by two accomplished graffiti mongers pioneered the introduction of graffiti elements into fashion, and has grown to become an “environment” in which mediums mix freely. They even fancy themselves “graphical activists through urban art” – something which is born out in their jarring and bold patterns, not to mention their mascot Oiseau Gris, which all of us crazy urbanites know terribly well.

And like their rampant spiritual mascot, “the rude witness of the greyness and daily rhythm of our cities,” they have managed to assert themselves extraordinarily well. They’ve made big waves in the worlds of fashion and art, having even become capable art directors and overlords of their very own magazine. Which is all perfectly logical considering their background in capably and quickly art directing large slabs of concrete into radical works of art, probably under excruciatingly strict and only slightly sub-legal deadlines. (Wink.)

Their current collection, Lost Equilibrium, is a cheeky and subversive work in pattern and images. Very cool stuff. We’re looking forward to see where they go next – keep it up guys!


Tag Christof – Images courtesy Hixsept

Share: Facebook,  Twitter  
19/01/2011

Marco Klefisch for Z Zegna

Marco Klefisch for Z Zegna

We’re fresh from Z Zegna 2011‘s A/W runway show yesterday, imaginatively billed Artisan Alchemy, and are pretty happy with what we saw. The rather innovative, structural silhouettes and strong textures, all rendered in sober greys, greens and taupes, went over well. And since every single look had its very own model, we got to enjoy everything in the collection twice. Come to think of it, we’d really, really love one of their chunky new “Futuristic” jackets in all their hooded spaceman glory for our trudge through this thick January fog…

The line’s new fragrance this season, a dapper, effervescent scent in a gem of a rubber and glass bottle, has been freshly illustrated for Z Zegna by 2DM‘s boy genius Marco Klefisch. It really is too bad scratch-and-sniff monitors were never invented.

By Tag Christof – Illustration by 2DM / Marco Klefisch for Z Zegna 

Share: Facebook,  Twitter  
18/01/2011

Elena Xausa for GAS / Bread & Butter 2011

.

Elena Xausa for GAS / Bread & Butter 2011

Bread & Butter 2011 opens tomorrow! And for this liveliest of trade fairs, Gas is pulling out all the stops and staging a 3D runway show of their A/W collection. Invitees will be treated to their own pair of tri-dimensional specs, which will also give them the key to experience a large scale piece by 2DM’s multitalented Elena Xausa, which will be the multi-eyed centrepiece of their flagship Munzstraße store’s vitrine. Don your x-ray specs here to see it pop to life – and see it big in Berlin!

Catch the cocktail party at Munzstraße 21 in Berlin from 7pm to 10 this Thursday 20 January.

Tag Christof – Image Elena Xausa, courtesy of 2DM/Management

Share: Facebook,  Twitter  
18/01/2011

Xevi Muntané for VMAN

.

Xevi Muntané for VMAN

Hot damn. 2DM‘s Xevi Muntanè just shot this firecracker in Barcelona for VMAN. Styled by Alberto Murtra, and apparently no small feat to have pulled off, the the group could be easily mistaken for an exceptionally attractive sports team. Smack dab in the centre is the unmissable Jon Kortajarena (who happened to be fashionably late for the shooting after missing his plane), with other notables including Pablo Otero, Joan Pedrola, Michael Gstoettner, Altor Matero, and Adrian Cardoso. They and the rest of this muscly smorgasbord are represented entirely by SIGHT.

Cool down!

From the Bureau – Image Xevi Muntané at 2DM, Making Of by Florentino Vázquez

Share:
Facebook,  Twitter  
17/01/2011

Diego Soprana + Sergio Rossi for Please

.

Diego Soprana + Sergio Rossi

Handsculpted, rather extreme shoes rendered in brass and other highly textural materials are front and centre on Sergio Rossi’s menu this season. The brand’s creative director Francesco Russi called the fresh and imaginative collection a “return to extreme linearity, and a balancing act between experimentation and tradition.” The line is also a skilful balancing act of colour, with the cheeky use of neons alongside normally prosaic earth tones, and the effect is uncanny and counterintuitively quite handsome. 2DM/’s square-deal surreal illustrator Diego Soprana brought the collection to life for Please in an entirely new dimension.


These shoes were positively made to be illustrated by Diego… and we couldn’t be more pleased! (Ha!)

Tag Christof, illustrations courtesy of Diego Soprana, represented by 2DM/Management

Share: Facebook,  Twitter