A Single Man has earned strong
reviews — it opens widely across North America on Christmas Day — and last week received Golden Globe nominations
for its score and the performances of Julianne Moore and Colin Firth.
Firth won the best-actor prize at the Venice Film Festival for his performance as George Falconer,
a gay Englishman in Los Angeles mourning the death of his longtime lover in a car accident.
Ford — who directed, co-wrote and co-produced the film — has been praised for his
subtle adaptation of Christopher Isherwood's novel, which recounts a day in George's life through seemingly unfilmable interior
monologue.
Prada Ads by Steven Meisel
Photography by Steven Meisel
Photoshoot: Prada Spring/Summer 2006 Catalog
Steven Meisel
(born 1954) is an Americanphotographer, who obtained popular acclaim with his work in US and Italian Vogue
and his photographs of friend Madonna in her 1992 book Sex. He is now considered one of the most successful
fashion photographers in the industry, shooting regularly for both US and Italian Vogue, and lately W (also
published by Condé Nast).
His fascination for
beauty and models started at a young age. At that time Meisel would not play with toys, but would instead draw women all the
time. He used to turn to magazines like Vogue and Harper's Bazaar as sources of inspiration for his drawings.
Meisel dreamt of women from the high society like Gloria
Guinness and Babe Paley, who personified to his
eyes the ideas of beauty and high society. Other icons were his mother and his sister.
As he became obsessed with models such as Twiggy, Veruschka, and Jean
Shrimpton, at 12 years old he asked some girlfriends to
call model agencies and, by pretending to be secretaries of Richard Avedon, to get pictures of the models. To meet famous
model Twiggy, the 12-year-old Meisel stood outside waiting for her at Melvin
Sokolsky's studio.
He studied at the High School
of Art and Design and Parsons The New School for Design
where he attended different courses but, as affirmed in an interview with Ingrid
Sischy for Vogue France, he finally majored in
fashion illustration.
One of Meisel's first jobs was
to work for fashion designer Halston as an illustrator. He also taught illustration part-time at Parsons. Meisel never thought
he could become a photographer. He admired photographers like Jerry
Schatzberg, Irving Penn, Richard Avedon and Bert Stern.
He felt that illustration was a thing of the past and found photography as a lasting medium. Later on, while working at Women's
Wear Daily as an illustrator, he went to Elite Model
Management where two girls working there allowed him take
pictures of some of their models. He would photograph them in his apartment in Gramercy Park or on the street: on
weekdays he would work at Women's Wear Daily and on weekends with the models. One of them was Phoebe Cates.
Some of these models took their pictures to Seventeen magazine to show their model books and the people at Seventeen
subsequently called Meisel and asked if he wanted to work with them.
Meisel
currently works for many different fashion magazines, including US and Italian Vogue, in which he has photographed
every cover for two decades. His studio is located in New York City at 64 Wooster
Street but he often rents the studios at Pier59 in
New York and Smashbox Studios in Los Angeles.
Meisel
has contributed photos for the covers of several popular albums and singles, including two RIAA Diamond-certified albums,
Madonna's
1984 album "Like a Virgin" and Mariah Carey's 1995 album Daydream. His work also can be seen on the cover of
Madonna's single "Bad Girl" (a nude), the limited picture disc for Madonna's UK single release of "Fever"
(a partial nude), and Mariah Carey's single "Fantasy" (simply a different crop of the photo on the cover of the Daydream
album). He shot photos of Madonna for her greatest hits album GHV2.
Fashion campaigns
Amongst others, Meisel has shot campaigns for Versace, Valentino, Dolce &
Gabbana and Calvin Klein (for whom his campaigns
were very controversial). Meisel also shoots Prada campaigns each season — having done so since 2004. In April 2008 he
shot friend Madonna for Vanity Fair, and later in the year he shot her for the 2009 spring campaign by Louis Vuitton
at Splashlight's Skylight Studio.
He is a close friend
of designer Anna Sui for whom he also shot several campaigns, even though Sui rarely uses advertising to promote
her clothing. He also works closely with digital artist Pascal
Dangin.
As one of the most powerful photographers in the fashion industry, Meisel is credited with "discovering"
or promoting the careers of many successful models, including top models Linda
Evangelista, Naomi Campbell, Christy Turlington,
Kristen McMenamy, Amber Valletta, Iris Strubegger, Lara Stone, Coco Rocha, Caroline
Trentini, Liya
Kebede, Karen
Elson, Kara
Young and Raquel
Zimmerman, propelling them to fame by regularly featuring
them in Vogue and various campaigns, notably Prada, considered one of the most desired campaigns in the business. Meisel's influence
and training seems to also extend past models. He used his influence among the fashion elite to create an issue of Vogue
that would show only black models. The issue was released in July 2008 with the purpose of addressing the racism seen lately
in fashion magazines, runways, and advertising campaigns. He also (with Linda Morand) launched the career of Ross Van Der
Heide, a young fashion designer, by showing Ross's artwork to Anna Sui.
Patty Wilson- Fashion stylist of today
PATTI WILSON_Fashion Stylist
Born and raised in NY, Patti Wilson has been working in fashion for as long as she can remember.
Through out her career she has worked the most important fashion photographers in the industry, Steven Klein, Steven Miesel
, Peter Lindeberg, Terry Richardson, and David LaChapelle are only of few of the many she collaborates with. Shooting
covers for Italian Vogue, I-D, Numero, and L'Uomo Vogue all of which have had an important impact on the fashion world over
the past decade. Patti continues to collaborate with the most influential designers and is recognized world wide for
her eclectic taste and and continuous capacity to provide her clients such as Giorgio Armani, Dolce & Gabbana, Moschino
,Christian Lacroix, Valentino, and the industry with a window of which to observe fashion from a different perspective.
LaChapelle's work has been described
as surrealist, grotesque, shocking and ironic. His use of celebrities exaggerates aspects of their personalities and their
personal lives.
The work of David LaChapelle
David LaChapelle
David LaChapelle (born March 11, 1963 in Fairfield, Connecticut) is a photographer
and video/commercial/film director who works in the fields of fashion, advertising,
and fine art photography, and is noted for his surreal, unique and often humorous style.LaChapelle attended the North
Carolina School of the Arts and School of Visual Arts in New York City. His first photograph was of his mother, Helga LaChapelle,
on a family vacation in Puerto Rico.Andy Warhol offered him his first professional job as a photographer for Interview
after meeting him at Studio 54 where LaChapelle was working at the time. He has also worked for Rolling Stone, Vogue,
GQ, Photo and Vanity Fair throughout the years.
LaChapelle has four published books of his photographs, including LaChapelle
Land, Hotel LaChapelle, Heaven to Hell, and Artists and Prostitutes. All four books contain
vivid and surreal portraits of celebrities such as Whitney Houston, Marilyn Manson, Naomi Campbell, Gisele Bündchen,
David Beckham, Björk, Shakira, Drew Barrymore, Shirley Manson, Courtney Love, Lil' Kim, Lance Armstrong, Angelina Jolie,
Pamela Anderson, Britney Spears, Cameron Diaz, Uma Thurman, Brook Shields, Leonardo Dicaprio, Amanda Lepore, Christina Aguilera,
Mariah Carey, Madonna, P!nk, Rihanna, Kylie Minogue and recently Lady GaGa
LaChapelle
directed singer Elton John's show, The Red Piano at Las Vegas' Caesars Palace, which premiered in 2004. The show
features extensive use of video technology on an LED screen backing the show that, when built, was promoted as the largest
and brightest of all time. Several of John's songs during the performance are accompanied by short films by LaChapelle.
Rize, LaChapelle's documentary on the krumping style of dance
in South Central Los Angeles, premiered at Sundance in 2005 and was released theatrically that summer.
He has directed advertisements for major brands such
as Tommy Hilfiger, Lavazza Nokia, L'Oréal, Diesel and Burger King. In 2006 he directed Romeo and Juliet, a
five-minute commercial for H&M's new denim brand, and Tis the Season to be Gorgeous, a humorous Christmas commercial
for UK retailer Boots Group showing glamorous-looking women doing relatively mundane Christmas tasks. Also in the UK, he directed
the surreal Lost trailers for Channel 4, show the cast dancing in 1920s costume among the burning wreckage on the
beach; whilst the cast voice-over such phrases as "one of us is a murderer"; "one of us is a junkie" etc.
In addition to this, he directed Channel 4's promotion of Desperate Housewives season one.