Exhibitions
Christian Lacroix
Guests
From Arles to Maison Lacroix
Photographing clothes
Discovery Award, photographers nominated by
Elisabeth Biondi
Caroline Issa & Masoud Golsorkhi
Nathalie Ours
Carla Sozzani
Luis Venegas
Book Awards
Le Méjan
Institutions
Café de l'Europe
Events
Evening Shows
8 July, Françoise Huguier
9 July, Lookalikes
9 July, European Night
10 July, Paolo Roversi & Peter Lindbergh
11 July, Night of the Year
12 July, Josef Koudelka, Rencontres d'Arles Awards, Christian Lacroix
Afters
Symposium
Debates & lectures
Books signings
Parc des Ateliers
Formation
Photo Workshops
Photo Folio Review
Back to school in images
Youngsters Workshops
Seminar
Useful information
Your visit
Fees
Getting to Arles
Where to sleep
In and around of Arles
Exhibitions tours
MyArles Audioguide
Professional accreditation
Press office
Contacts
Forum
Who we are ?
Presentation
Board of directors
Team
Partners
Public sector partners
Private sector partners
Other partners
Guests
From Arles to Maison Lacroix
Photographing clothes
Face Hunter
Londres 2008
Copyright registration photograph
Still life at Vogue
Fashion publishing
Photographer of fashion shows: Guy Marineau
Clothes in motion
From the street to the blog
Sabine Weiss
From the Street to the Blog
>
to see the blogs
In the early 20th century the Seeberger brothers were in all the fashionable haunts in search of modish women they then photographed with no other artifice than their subjects’ appearance and the momentary setting. At the racetrack or during the interval at the theatre their beauties posed briskly but gracefully; from Paris to Biarritz the chic and the demi-monde lent themselves to the photographic ritual that fed the opening or closing pages of the fashion press. Not yet referred to as the “celeb section”, these images drew easily as much attention as the polished studio material. The women of the smart set were not singled out only for the social standing they embodied in Vogue, Fémina or L’Officiel: they were guides to the latest at a time when the emphasis was exclusively on urbane haute couture worn according to a timetable – morning, afternoon tea, cocktail party, dinner – that made fashion the strictest of duties.
These hallowed sophisticates were to disappear as haute couture gradually lost its influence, especially after the two World Wars. In their place came actresses, mannequins and top models, and they vanished all but definitively from the glossies with the off-the-peg boom of the late 50s to early 60s: all that remained in the press were a few postage-stamp vignettes of fashionable dinners at which couturiers and stage personalities lived on as isolated arbiters of a vanished form of elegance. The mags themselves unanimously offered a fantasy version of fashion, with carefully composed studio or outdoor genre images produced by photographers and art directors working in tandem.
The on-the-spot photography pioneered by the Seebergers simply evaporated, as clothing styles became another aspect of publishing along with a mounting social trend towards fashion in general.
Fashion reporting and documentary fashion photography made a comeback in the mid-1990s. Collected then divided up according to tribes, influences, genres, styles and cities, street fashion from London to Tokyo began getting full-page spreads in a host of new magazines, notably in Japan, an insatiable consumer.
This kind of coverage echoed the nomadic feel of a fashion approach which through over-exposure came to cut itself off from its audience. Close behind came the Internet tsunami and the incalculable quantity of images swamping screens around the world.
In a host of spontaneous blogs and on professionalised websites now looming as large as the print media, full-length laughing photos pour out as endless testimony to the fashions of the moment. Celebrities and unknowns strike poses at openings, trendy evening events, showbiz bashes, clubs and sneak previews from Miami to Helsinki, while their instant archivists – photographer-bloggers – snap everything with style, from T-shirts to designer dresses. In the early 20th century sophisticates posed seriously and solemnly, but today’s fashion networks go for stars-for-a-day, all mouths popping open and big dark glasses. In addition to its clothes, every decade brings a stance and a body language more than ever obvious in the spontaneous photographs that now lay claim to abolishing social distinctions in favour of a unified, global trend.
From the Street to the Night is an exhibition designed and put on by Colette, 213 rue Saint Honoré, in Paris in 2007. It brings together twenty photographer-bloggers, real reporters from different places whose sites are also looked at because they have their own influence on the fashion scene.
Projected and/or shown on computer screes, a host of photographs speak to us of a new information source. Sartorial demands and fantasy in vast catalogues take precedence over interpretation and fiction of the kind still to be found in the mags, where most often the clothes are still hung on professional mannequins.
Olivier Saillard, exhibition curator.
Exhibition proposed to the Rencontres d’Arles by colette.
www.colette.fr
Exhibition realized with the backing
of the Parrot Company.
The exhibition will present the 20 following blogs, plus a selection of the Japanese magazines Fruits and Streets, which began publication ten years ago.
Amsterdam:
http://damstyle.blogspot.com
Beijing:
http://stylites.net
Berlin:
http://stilinberlin.blogspot.com
Buenos Aires:
http://www.onthecorner.com.ar
Copenhaguen:
http://www.copenhagenstreetstyle.dk
Helsinki:
http://www.hel-looks.com
London:
http://stylescout.blogspot.com
London by night:
http://www.dirtydirtydancing.com
Los Angeles by night:
http://thecobrasnake.com
Munich:
http://styleclicker.net
New York
http://thesartorialist.blogspot.com
Oslo:
http://oslostil.com
Paris:
http://garancedore.fr
Reykjavik:
http://www.reykjaviklooks.blogspot.com
San Francisco:
http://fashioni.st
Stockholm:
http://www.thefashionist.se
Tel Aviv:
http://thestreetswalker.blogspot.com
Tokyo:
http://www.style-arena.jp
Worldwide:
http://facehunter.blogspot.com
Worldwide:
http://www.streetpeeper.com
Exhibition presented at the Espace Van Gogh.
[ contact ]
[ crédits ]