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Fashion PhotographyOctober 7, 2006 9:47 am

Editorial for Vogue IT March2004

Model: Gemma Ward

 

Born September 25, 1947 in Ravenna, Italy, Paolo Roversi’s debut in photography was as a reporter at the age of 20, concentrating mostly on portraiture. It was only several years later that he became interested in fashion photography in Paris, where he has lived and worked since 1973.

   

   

 

The elegant, atmospheric selective depth blurring (which appears to differ from the typical DOF) is one of Paolo Roversi’s hallmark aesthetic elements.

 

 

Paolo Roversi portfolio, managed by Vincent Simonet Paris

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Fashion 9:00 am

Unexpected and unique, Alexander McQueen PUMA defines a new provocative horizon in Sport Fashion. Founded on the union of tradition and technology, the collection juxtaposes contrasting influences, delivering a contemporary line that is both conceptually sophisticated and intricately crafted. The first collection’s focus on human anatomy – specifically the foot – has developed into the current season’s exploration of manipulation, modification and tribal decoration. The ManCat tooth, a feline fang morphed with a human root, is the visual logo that represents the Alexander McQueen PUMA brand. McQueen and Nick Knight have extended this into the ManCat icon of the Alexander McQueen and PUMA collaboration, a dynamic visual depicting the fusion of the man – Alexander McQueen – and the animal, PUMA.

Visit ManCat Website

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Fashion Photography 8:41 am

Editorial for Numero

Model: Eugenia Volodia

   

   

Tom Munro website

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Design, Imagination, FashionOctober 1, 2006 3:51 pm

Fashion designers don’t just make clothes anymore - from Bulgari and Armani hotels to Gucci cafés, design houses are extending their aesthetic reach. And the clever concept sees different artists and designers commissioned to fit out each room, or in the case of the Madrid hotel, entire floors. The idea is to give guests a completely different experience to the guest next door.

Iconic French designer Christian Lacroix is the latest couturier to lend his unique sense of aesthetics to the non-fashion realm. In this case, Lacroix was chosen by the French Railways to renovate the interiors of their high-speed trains. Over the next 5 years, all high-speed trains on the Atlantic route and the new route to Eastern France will be made over by Lacroix and his design team, promising to transform their drab interiors into ultra modern, stylish, boutique-hotel-like environments.  It’s actually the second time Lacroix has delved into the world of interiors. He transformed the Hotel du Petit Moulin in Paris into a stunning art hotel, creating different themes for each room.

 

Also, Funky Italian denim label Miss Sixty is the latest to get in on the act with the recent opening of its first hotel in the northern Italian seaside town of Riccione. Much like the market for its clothes, the Miss Sixty Hotel is pitching itself to young, clubby scenesters. The hotel’s rooms were fitted out by 30 individual artists and the result feels like a trendy 70s inspired vintage boutique.

And some other artistic hotels;

The latest is Berlin’s Hotel Küenstlerheim Luise.  Described as the kind of place where you can get  “a good night’s rest inside a work of art”, the hotel features 50 rooms designed by well known local artists, who, it appears, have a reoccurring interest in fairy tales (think butterflies and oversized beds).

Berlin’s Propeller Island City Lodge is another offering in the art room hotel genre. Unlike many other art hotels, PICL is very reasonably priced whilst maintaining a very high room standard. The 30 rooms vary dramatically in their style. From the Forest room, where your mattress floats on a series of logs surrounded by red walls through to the Gruft room, where your two separate beds are white coffins. The variety within the hotel is what makes it so appealing. Where other hotels focus more on the work of individual artists by way of reproducing their two dimensional art, PICL’s direction is very much more based on art installations. The result is a wonderfully unique hotel, in a league of it’s own.

Taking the trend one step further is the Daddy longlegs (pictured below)art hotel in South Africa. A stay at the thirteen-room boutique hotel is like being in an interactive art exhibition. Each room has been designed by an artist, designer, musician, poet or photographer who has drawn inspiration from the local culture of Cape Town. The result is a collection of rooms that feel more like art installations than places to lay your head – though the spacious areas and comfy looking beds promise a restful stay.

Another example of contemporary art in Leipzig is  Hotel Everland. When Swiss artists Sabina Lang and Daniel Baumann brain stormed to devise an art project that looked at the juxtapositioning of the public space and exclusivity they came up with this concept for design expo in 2002. Today, situated on the rooftop of the museum for contemporary art in Leipzig, this one room self contained mini hotel caters for its guests in all the usual fashion. In house cable, wi-fi, deluxe bathroom, lavish breakfasts and even a mini cooper on loan with parking. It’s portability means that when it leaves Liepzig it can land itself in Paris.

And lastly there’s an example for the children; Atomium aka Kids Sphere Hotel in Belgium. It’s the ultimate experience for kids – a night in an alternative universe at the Kids Sphere Hotel. The complex has been renovated and updated to include overnight accommodation for children – dubbed the Kid Sphere hotel - set amongst the fascinating sci-fi exhibitions and original spheres. Kids are entertained by a packed calendar of events including films and there’s a restaurant at the top of the structure boasting panoramic view of the city of Brussels.

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Design, Imagination 3:14 pm

Animator Eric Lerner, from Jerusalem, has developed a series of characters and short films which accompany them. His Mr CityMen are wonderfully animated using CGI and seamlessly integrated into live action environments.

The juxtaposition of these drab and bleak city landscapes with these cute and colorful characters is striking.  Coupled with a avant garde soundtrack, these animations work on a variety of levels and evoke various responses from the viewer.

In a sense, it’s like a therapy session, only animated. The players, Mr DejaVu , Mr Fortune, Mr Afraid, Mr Dreamer and the oddly named Mr Sunken, are very simply constructed and radiate a slick design as they move across the screen. Cute, clever, clean.

Here are:  Mr. Fortune, Mr. Sunken, Mr. Scared of Anything But Heights, Mr. DeJaVu and Mr. Dreamer

 

 

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Fashion Photography 3:00 pm

Editorial for Vogue Supplement IT Sept2001

Model: Amber Valetta

  

  

  

Steven Meisel via art+commerce

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