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Tuesday, May 13, 2025 |
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Thaddaeus Ropac opens an exhibition featuring 14 photographs by Irving Penn |
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Irving Penn, Protractor Face (Jaime Rishar), New York, 1994, print made in 1996 platinum palladium print mounted aluminum. 49.7 x 49.5 cm (19,57 x 19,49 in). © Irving Penn Foundation.
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PARIS.- Thaddaeus Ropac gallery and Pace Gallery present a collaborative exhibition featuring 14 photographs by Irving Penn, showcasing both his iconic and lesser-known beauty images. Curated by Tom Pecheux, the Global Beauty Director for YSL Beauty, this exhibition coincides with Paris Fashion Week Menswear, and celebrates Penns enduring influence on the history of photography.
Renowned for the elegance and aesthetic simplicity of his style across fashion imagery, portraiture and experimental personal work, Irving Penn produced beauty photographs that are distinctive for their understated humour and technical concision. These photographs many made for Vogue during his 65-year tenure there illustrate concepts loosely related to the cosmetics featured in the magazine, often employing the same formal qualities established by Surrealism to hybridise editorial imagery with fine art.
Bee on Lips (1995), included in the presentation, is an extreme close-up of a bee crawling across a vividly rouged mouth. Emblematic of Penns use of visual puns, it refers to the expression bee-stung lips, used to refer to the fashion for plumped lips. In Mascara Wars (2001), a bloodshot eye starkly contrasts with the models powdered snow-white face, with two mascara wands poised at the base and tip of her eyelashes, suggesting a pause in the action. While Penn is known for his extraordinary ability to capture beauty, his works simultaneously render a latent darkness. Juxtaposed with the inexorability of decay, his works endure precisely because they compel viewers to return again and again in an attempt to comprehend their hidden meaning, drawing parallels with artists such as Man Ray.
Penns photographs are consistently characterised by their formal beauty. His sparse compositions and juxtaposition of sharp line with soft flesh create images that are visually arresting, even or especially when they verge on the grotesque or painful. In his beauty photographs, it is the unexpected that engages the viewer, prompting Alexander Liberman, editor of Vogue from 1943, to call them stoppers images that make time stand still amid the magazines pages.
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