'In High Fashion' features the research of the artist in fashion and glamour photography, and the work he did for Conde Nast's influential magazines.
Curated by: William A. Ewing
Edward Steichen (1879-1973) was already a famous painter and photographer on both sides of the Atlantic when, in early 1923, he was offered one of the most prestigious and certainly the most lucrative position in photography’s commercial domain – that of chief photographer for Condé Nast’s influential and highly regarded magazines Vogue and Vanity Fair. Summoning up his exceptional talents, and fired with prodigious enthusiasm, Steichen spent the next fifteen years showcasing the culture of that era and its most prominent exponents from the realms of literature, journalism, dance, sport, politics, theatre and film. It was for his images of haute couture, though, that Steichen remains best known.
Compared with his predecessors, Steichen accomplished a stylistic leap in fashion photography equal in magnitude to the transition from silent pictures to sound. He abandoned his artistic beginnings in photographic Impressionism, Art Nouveau and Symbolism to become – for those fifteen years, at least – the greatest photographer of Art Déco and the originator – no less – of glamour photography. In addition to stunning fashion photographs, from Worth and Poiret to Chanel and Schiaparelli, the Steichen archive at Condé Nast, New York, contains magnificent portraits – of Greta Garbo, Cecil B. DeMille, Winston Churchill, Marlene Dietrich, George Gershwin, Frank Lloyd Wright, Amelia Earhart, Walt Disney and hundreds of other celebrities.
Since the 1930s, however, no more than a handful of these prints have been exhibited or published. The period represents the high point in Edward Steichen’s photographic career, and the work he did for Condé Nast’s influential magazines are among the most striking creations of twentieth-century photography.
An exhibition by the Foundation for the Exhibition of Photography Minneapolis/New York City/Paris/Lausanne, in cooperation with WestLicht. Schauplatz für Fotografie
Image: Caroline Heider, 4 Models (Vogue 1928, Edward Steichen p. 32), 2005 © Caroline Heider / Bildrecht, Vienna
Press contact
Stefan Musil, musil@westlicht.com
Opening: 17 February 2015, 7 pm
WestLicht Museum for Photography
Westbahnstraße 40, 1070 Vienna
Opening Hours:
Tue, Wed, Fri 2 - 7 pm
Thu 2 - 9 pm
Sat, Sun 11 am - 7 pm
Mon closed