DREW
BABBY
MORE!
PLAYBOY
DOES TRON
This is a real clever photo shoot for Playboy. It's a dedication for the cult 80’s film Tron. I heard the sequel sucked. I never saw it, but this is definitely a sexy look for cyberspace battle.
Via: Spaceinvaders.com
LACHAPELLE
David LaChapelle keeps advancing his craft and fusing high fashion, art and luxury in a way that is truly his own finger print in photo art. Here is an older shoot from 99. He does a dedication to the empowered working woman. She is working but she is destroying the status quo. LaChapelle champions the narrative and blends fashion photography and art where they indefinitely become one.
SECRETARY'S DAY from 1999
Via: TouchPuppet.com
FLASH BACK...
Portrait of street artist
Aholsniffsglue (2010)
Visit Simone's FLICKR
VF Daily: Picasso had long-term relationships with, among others, a Russian ballerina, a Surrealist artist, and a naïve teenager. Is it safe to say he didn’t have any particular type?
John Richardson: Not entirely: he preferred his mistress to be submissive and no taller than him. Picasso’s mistress from 1935 to 1944, Dora Maar, had a theory about the changes of the women in Picasso’s life. According to Dora, when the woman changed, everything else changed: the all-important poet laureate, the circle of friends, the house, the pets, the nature of his work changed. In Marie-Thérèse’s case, his work would become more overtly sexual.
What distinguished Picasso’s relationship with Marie-Thérèse from his other affairs?
Marie-Thérèse was totally unlike the other women in that she was happy to remain hidden in the background, and for eight years or so remained unknown to all but a few of Picasso’s closest friends. People knew he had a mistress, but nobody knew her name, what she looked like, or where she lived. Since Picasso was trying to divorce his Russian ballerina wife, Olga, his lawyers forbade him to appear in public with Marie-Thérèse. She was the most secret of all his relationships, but she didn’t seem to mind. She was very active insofar as she loved kayaking, swimming, bicycling, skating, but very passive in that she loved to read and sleep, as we know from Picasso’s paintings. She had no social aspirations whatsoever.
In his article “Picasso’s Erotic Code,” in the May 2011 issue of V.F., John Richardson examines Picasso’s 14-year relationship with his mistress Marie-Thérèse Walter, which is the subject of a major exhibition at the Gagosian Gallery on West 21st Street, in New York, opening on April 14 (the exhibition is curated by Richardson and Diana Widmaier-Picasso, Marie-Thérèse’s granddaughter). VF Daily called Richardson—currently writing the fourth volume of his magisterial biography, A Life of Picasso—to ask about the artist’s romantic prowess and proclivities. Highlights from the chat:
PICASSO + SEX
"Picasso was trying to divorce his Russian ballerina wife, Olga, his lawyers forbade him to appear in public with Marie-Thérèse. She was the most secret of all his relationships, but she didn’t seem to mind."
And no professional aspirations?
Her entire life was devoted to being the artist’s great love and muse.
Why was Picasso so irresistible to women? Obviously his reputation as one of the world’s greatest artists helped, but was there more to it than that?
Although he was quite short, he had amazing charisma. Above all, he had what Spaniards call the mirada fuerte, the strong gaze, which, as Picasso said, enables a man to have a girl with his eyes. Picasso had fantastic eyes: enormous eyes that could indicate interest, rage, love, desire, impatience—whatever. I used to watch Picasso working a room. At dinner in the studio, he would get each person—male or female, old or young, friend or acquaintance—with those hypnotic eyes.
When you say he would “get” someone, what does that mean?
He was a bit of a vampire. You’d have a great time with him—you’d go to the beach or eat waffles on the promenade at Cannes—but at the end of the day you’d wonder why you felt utterly, utterly exhausted! What Picasso did was to take each person’s energy and love for him and fascination with him, and then he’d go off and work all night on the energy of his guests and his second wife, Jacqueline.
Via: Vanity Fair
Brigitte Bardot at Picasso's studio in 1956. Athough I added these pics into this post, she was never his muse. She tried to be, for public attention. Picasso was never that interested. LOL
Photography by Nadya Wasylko / Styling by Kathryn Typaldos / Make-up by Misuzu Miyake / Hair by DJ Quintero / Models: Outi & Valeria at New York Models, Katya & Timoxa at Women, Nana & Laura at Muse.
Via: Nadya Wasylko
NADYA WASYLKO
NADYA WASYLKO
Via: FromUpNorth.com
Born in England and raised in Canada, Jody currently lives and works in Brooklyn, NY. She has been shooting professionally since obtaining her BFA in photography from the Emily Carr University of Art and Design in 2006, and was selected as one of PDN's 30 Emerging Photographers to Watch in 2011. Focusing on portraiture, editorial and fashion photography with an unintrusive and unassuming approach, she explores the subtleties in human nature, representing people as they are.
Jody Rogac
Via: Jody Rogac
DID YOU KNOW?
Celebrity aesthetician Kate Somerville's revealed both Marilyn Monroe and Elizabeth Taylor would shave their face to exfoliate.
According to Style.com:
"On good authority (that being Elizabeth Taylor’s personal cosmetic dermatologist, whom Somerville used to assist), the greats (those being Elizabeth Taylor and Marilyn Monroe) shaved their faces for completely bare skin and an added dose of exfoliation."
TAYLOR + MONROE SHAVED THEIR FACES.
Source: CocoPerez.com