fyandrogyny:

Marion Cotillard

fyandrogyny:

Marion Cotillard

Berenice Abbott

Berenice Abbott

fyandrogyny:

Milla Jovovich

fyandrogyny:

Milla Jovovich

(Source: waur)

8eyedspy:

14 year old Jean Rayner surrounded by young aspiring Teddy Boys on a bombsite, January 1955

8eyedspy:

14 year old Jean Rayner surrounded by young aspiring Teddy Boys on a bombsite, January 1955

(via fyandrogyny)

kvetchlandia:

Robert Mapplethorpe     Patti Smith     1978

kvetchlandia:

Robert Mapplethorpe     Patti Smith     1978

(via backtoforth)

on Helmut Newton.

‘Although his oeuvre is rife with luridly splayed legs and buoyant naked breasts, his subjects are not merely objectified fodder for the male gaze, but women in control of their own sensuality. His camera refracts the complexity of a post-sexual revolution identity, toying with ideas of power and perversion, dominance, gender roles and androgyny. Towing the line between vulgar schmaltz and luscious carnality, Newton’s appeal is timeless’.

Jaqueline Marcus for Hamiltons Gallery, London.

Helmut Newton, Saddle I, Paris, 1976

Helmut Newton, Saddle I, Paris, 1976

martha hunt for GQ magazine. photographed by Chad Pitman.

martha hunt for GQ magazine. photographed by Chad Pitman.

Touched by Youth by Collier Schorr for Dazed & Confused June 2010

Touched by Youth by Collier Schorr for Dazed & Confused June 2010

Collier Schorr. ‘Both Sides Now’.

Finding her place in the New York art world, she’d learnt early on that “there was no way

to photograph a woman that wasn’t compromising on some level;” men, on the other

hand, were “open season”, and one could do with them what you wanted…. Fashion

work has also enabled Schorr to put to rest the idea that she only photographs boys,

and that is another liberation for her. “There’s something about shooting a model,” she

says “where I no longer see it as a female or male body; I see it as a fashion body.

There’s a freedom when you shoot someone in a fashion shoot because it’s all agreed

to. They go into it with an understanding that they’re about to be consumed. I know

fashion is a way to consume, to adore, to objectify a female body. I’m still completely

conflicted about it, but now i’m allowing myself just to acknowledge the gaze as a

vulnerable mode of description, the way the artist is consumed by the privilege of

description.”

vince aletti for aperture mag. spring 2011.