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Fashionista.com (Free subscription) | 11/07/2008
Ok, clearly we don't actually think that. Anyway... One for all you photo freaks out there: Does the shot of Marion Cotillard on the Eiffel Tower shot by Peter Lindbergh ( thanks, WWD ) remind anyone else of the divine Lisa Fonssagrives-Penn on the Eiffel Tower shot by Erwin Blumenfeld in 1939? Even though Lisa makes it look like a ferris wheel and Marion like a death trap, we think so. Class discussion,...
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ticklebooth (Free subscription) | 08/05/2008
Erwin Blumenfeld, considered one of the most influential photographers of the twentieth century. An experimenter and innovator, he produced an extensive body of work throughout his thirty-five year career including black and white nudes, celebrity portraiture, advertising campaigns and his renowned fashion photography. SHOWstudio featured Experiments in Advertising: The films of Erwin Blumenfeld. A...
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acediscovery (Free subscription) | 07/20/2008
Looking through a scrapbook today, I was reminded of this fantastic photograph. Erwin Blumenfeld , a Vogue photographer, took this gravity-defying shot of his model hanging from the Eiffel Tower. It's amazing.
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Women's Wear Daily (Free subscription) | 02/02/2008
The work of German photographer Erwin Blumenfeld. Ana Beatriz, LerarioBeatriz
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SHOWstudio (Free subscription) | 09/06/2007
For those of you who can't make the screening and talks at the BFI tonight, here's the running order so you can play along at home: i) Experimental Film Making and the Mundane: Sittings (Simon Foxton) Sleep (Nick Knight) I Feel (Jean-Francois Carly) Diamonds (Kate Moss, Sarah Morris, Nick Knight) Untitled (Guy Bourdin) ii) Celebrity and... more
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gmtPlus9 (-15) (Free subscription) | 07/09/2007
Experiments in Advertising: The films of Erwin Blumenfeld . "...In an in-depth examination of Erwin Blumenfeld's film archive featuring the full index of the photographer’s unedited film clips, Penny Martin considers the photographer’s six years of film-making in relation to his stellar photographic career and argues that what began as a commercial experiment came to represent an important process...