A World Apart: In Paris, the Palais Galliera Honors Paolo Roversi


In the pantheon of fashion photography, Paolo Roversi occupies a place all his own. This weekend, the Palais Galliera will inaugurate the largest monograph ever dedicated to the Italian-born, Paris-based photographer, a compilation of 140 images—many of which are exhibited here for the first time—culled from a half-century’s worth of archives in Roversi’s famed Studio Luce in the 14th arrondissement.

Headlined by a 2015 portrait of Molly Bair wearing a Chanel dress, hat, and flamboyant red wig, the show explores Roversi’s pioneering work and, particularly, felicitous accidents with the then-revolutionary Polaroid; his decades-long Nudi series—starting with a young Inès de la Fressange in 1983, through to Stella Tennant, Amber Valletta, Kate Moss, and others, an endeavor that would likely be impossible to pull off today; and how the photographer helped to define the visual identity of houses like Dior, Yohji Yamamoto, Cerruti, and Comme des Garçons. Echoing Roversi’s studio, the scenography moves from shadow to light in a non-linear staging with notable cameos by now-fashion royalty like Naomi Campbell, Natalia Vodianova, and Rihanna.

“What’s always interesting about great artists in fashion is that Paolo is at the heart of the industry, and at the same time he doesn’t follow the trends of fashion,” offered Miren Arzalluz, director of the Musée Galliera. “He’s a man of music, art, and profound culture, and he treats fashion that way, as culture.” It was only after choosing the photo of Bair, she added, that the Galliera staff realized that the dress was also already in the archives. “Basically the museum has become his studio,” she offered. “ looks like she is inviting you into his world.”

Autoportrait of Paolo Roversi, 2020



Source link