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Uploaded 19/05/03
Fashion photography as art - from
the beginning
'Guy Bourdin at the V&A' is at the Victoria and Albert Museum
until 17 August 2003.
In the 1970s, fashion seemed to be at its
lowest ebb. The 60s, when London was the style capital of the world,
had passed; yet to come were the 80s and 90s when fashion would
replace radical politics and rock & roll as the prime manifestations
of youth culture.
Yet even if clothes were less interesting, their depiction was
undergoing a blazing revolution - and the man behind the change
was Guy Bourdin, whose photography changed the face of fashion advertising.
Perhaps in response to many seventies designs, Bourdin rejected
the 'tyranny of the product'. He was the first photographer to create
a complex narrative, then snatch a moment - sensual, provocative,
shocking, exotic, surrealistic, sinister - and simply associate
it with a fashion item. The object was no longer the sole focus
of the image, the image had an independent existence in which the
product appeared merely incidental. The narratives were strange
and mysterious: two semi-naked women, leaning over a sink full of
shoes, help each other on with bikinis; the detached lower legs
of a mannequin (wearing the 'featured' shoes) climb stairs; a woman
in an overcoat is obscured behind a concrete post, her legs and
shoes appearing on either side; a woman in a skin-tight bathing
suit is draped over a table, back toward the viewer, staring at
herself in a mirror. A rare, rejected (by French Vogue), photograph
featured a model's head (wearing a hat) alongside a row of gutted
rabbits.
It is not just the subject matter that surprises in Bourdins
work. Before him, models were (mostly) demure and colours were 'tasteful'.
Bourdins palette is filled with glaring, raw, clashing, saturated
colours - startling, even today. His work may have been influenced
directly by William Eggleston, the American photographer credited
with elevating colour photography into an 'art'. Eggleston's images
too, although captured from reality (he never posed his subjects
and usually hid that he was taking photographs), froze strange incidents
in saturated, primary colours, and the objects of his images were
often mysterious.
Like Eggleston, Bourdin was fond of bright blood-red, super-green
grasses, blinding oranges and blue-blue swimming pools reminiscent
of Hockney.
Although we don't know if Eggleston was a formative influence,
Bourdin was certainly in the grip of surrealism from an early age.
His early mentor was Man Ray and he greatly admired Edward Weston,
a formalist photographer fascinated by texture, whose work, in which
different fabrics and surfaces are juxtaposed, is echoed in many
of Bourdin's images - stockinged legs surmounted by bare buttocks,
surrounded by silk bed sheets with a pink, fuzzy, stuffed elephant
toy on top of everything.
Painters also attracted him: Magritte's influence can be seen in
Bourdin's image of a naked woman, standing to attention, wearing
a gasmask; the mysterious narratives and geometric compositions
contrived by Balthus provided inspiration for Bourdin's groundbreaking
set-ups. Bunuel's films were also important in establishing his
surrealistic, nonconformist tastes and his desire to shock. Bourdin
was born in Paris in 1928 and was almost immediately abandoned by
his mother. A personal tragedy, perhaps, but he grew up at a time
and in circumstances in which it was possible for a young person
to explore revolutions in art and philosophy and experience revolutions
in politics directly with the movers and shakers of the various
movements.
Unfortunately, Bourdin was not a natural self-promoter - unlike,
say Helmut Newton. Bourdin thought little of his 'gift to posterity';
he did not collect his works or make any attempt to preserve them.
As a result, Bourdin's influence on subsequent generations of photographers
(even beyond the world of fashion) has been greatly underestimated.
Although he worked for French Vogue for 30 years, there was no popular
book of his images.
Remarkably, this exhibition at the V&A is the first large,
museum-based display of his work and has only been possible as a
result of a long and dedicated reassembly by his son, Samuel Bourdin.
Guy himself wanted his work destroyed after his death (which came
in 1991), but fortunately, the fact that he had not collected it
all together actually saved it from destruction. This exhibition
also includes Bourdin's non-fashion work, personal Polaroids, landscapes
and informal experiments - so a detailed understanding of his artistic
development and thought processes are possible.
This exhibition removes the mystique surrounding much fashion advertising.
Why does a photograph of a woman disappearing behind a mirror -
her dress a blur - require a list of the products she is wearing:
dress, necklace, scarf, shoes, make-up - even though you can't actually
see any of them? Bourdin himself was not interested in the commercial
process. He loved to create interesting tableaux, mysterious vignettes;
the products, the 'fashion' was simply there to make his ideas possible.
With Bourdin, as the exhibition reveals, fashion photography became
art.
Robert Johnston
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