Review by New York Times Review
IF THERE IS one group of the creative class that deftly inhabits the clichés built around them, it is fashion photographers. They are drama queens, they are ultracompetitive, they are serial womanizers; they constantly redefine the term "debauched." Michael Gross's new book, "Focus: The Secret, Sexy, Sometimes Sordid World of Fashion Photographers," does not skimp on the gossipy goods. There are descents into madness, prolific drug use, orgies, blackmail photos and suicide attempts, successful and otherwise. There is so much womanizing that the theme of infidelity is basically a subplot, and pretty much boils down to the following: A stunning model walks into a photographer's studio; a marriage dies. But this book, which concerns itself with the years 1947-97 - what the author views as fashion photography's golden age - is also smart, well researched and written with an insider's eye. This is not a comprehensive history, and Gross - whose books include "Model: The Ugly Business of Beautiful Women" - states from the outset that it isn't meant to be. It focuses, he writes, on those photographers "who were unavoidable, who changed the conversation, who lived the life of fashion photography to its fullest." Of all the characters here from the decades the book covers - Irving Penn, Bert Stern, Steven Meisel, Bruce Weber - Richard Avedon looms largest. Both as a talent and as a personality: Before Avedon, models were simply faces, hangers for beautiful clothing. He encouraged them to inhabit their personalities. After researching and planning his shoots, Avedon "would work just as hard with his models, demonstrating how he wanted them to pose, leaping about if that was called for, chattering at them, joking with them, ... encouraging them to express themselves." He also felt threatened by any photographer he perceived as even approaching him in stature. His rivalry with Irving Penn spanned decades and existed on planes both artistic and petty. As did his rivalry with Bert Stern: Stern once dismissed his taste in music by saying, "Avedon was playing Sinatra." With glamour and debauchery came the inevitable casualties: Some passages from the book read like an especially affecting episode of VH1's "Behind the Music." There was Stern, who in 1965 at the age of 35 was billing advertising and magazine clients $500,000 a year and in 1962 photographed the memorable "Last Sitting" with Marilyn Monroe. Stern went on to become a speed freak who lost everything and spent a good portion of his last years all but homeless. And there was Bill King, who exercised an unheard-of control over his studio - assistants were not allowed to speak during shoots and were required to wear white lab coats - but lost control in his off-hours, exploring New York's darkest underground gay sex scene, indulging in quaaludes and cocaine, and eventually dying of AIDS at 48. The time Gross spends here dissecting the magazine business's various characters and mores is engaging and on point. We meet the legendary Diana Vreeland, with her outsize vision and embrace of the jolie laide or "Vogue ugly" model; Condé Nast's Alexander Liberman, considered a genius by some, a phony by others, but all-powerful by all; and Hearst's similarly influential Alexey Brodovitch, who ran the important Design Laboratory. The book is canny about the industry's move to a business model more concerned with pleasing advertisers than producing compelling editorial. This, weirdly, led to photographers getting to do their more creative work for advertisers. Gross's focus is stunningly light on female photographers, but then again, so has been the profession. But just because the giants of the field have all been men doesn't mean that women haven't made an impact, and a few - Corinne Day, Deborah Turbeville - do get their (brief) moment in the limelight here. Still, one can't help wishing for more, and wondering if their absence has more to do with their stories being less dishy than those of their louche male counterparts. KIM FRANCE writes the blog Girls of a Certain Age. She is the founding editor of Lucky magazine.
Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [August 14, 2016]
Review by Booklist Review
Gross (House of Outrageous Fortune, 2014) delivers a juicy history of the scandalous lives of fashion photographers. He is nearly encyclopedic in his approach, covering a dizzying number of photographers, including the pioneering Richard Avedon, top dog at Harper's Bazaar; Bert Stern, who shot a steamy session with Marilyn Monroe for Vogue; and Terry Richardson, whose over-exposed, edgy style made him famous, but whose sordid relationship with models made him unsavory. Gross travels more or less chronologically through the industry's transformations, from fashion trends like the emergence of androgyny and cross-dressing to the shift of creative control from the photographer to the designer, employing quotes from his own interviews to dish on the enormous egos, volatile relationships with models and editors, and emotional turbulence that seem to be nearly ubiquitous among the industry's professionals. Gross' focus on minutiae and he said, she said tales detract at times from a larger perspective, but anyone interested in fashion and/or photography will find Gross' full immersion fascinating.--Grant, Sarah Copyright 2016 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Gross (Model: The Ugly Business of Beautiful Women) opens this paradoxically unfocused book with an interesting exegesis on the grandfathers of fashion photography, Richard Avedon and Irving Penn. These men practically invented the oeuvre, with technical and stylistic innovations, including seamless backdrops and candid snapshots, "in direct contrast to what was being done" by others in the industry. Their segue from portraiture and penury into successful careers as fashion photographers is a study in upward mobility in America. But after a strong start, the text devolves into an endless litany of photographers, models, photo shoots, and magazine layouts. Far too much attention is given to magazine publishers and the various editors at Vogue and Harper's Bazaar, including Edna Chase, Carmel Snow, Diana Vreeland, and finally Anna Wintour. The parts involving art directors Alexei Brodovitch and Alexander Liberman are fascinating in their own right, but they dim the book's already faltering emphasis on fashion photography. (July) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
Since the 1940s, fashion photographers have competed for the prestigious covers of such magazines as Vogue and Harper's Bazaar. At the top of their game, these notoriously ambitious players include "game changer" Richard Avedon-as well as Terry and Bob Richardson, Bert Stern, Irving Penn, Bruce Weber, Steven Meisel, and Mario Testino. The -selection of artists is based on Departures contributing editor Gross's (House of -Outrageous Fortune) own criteria: those "who were unavoidable, who changed the conversation...but also ones who I am drawn to and whose stories were somehow accessible." Along with tales of famous shoots and industry backstories during the "glory days" of the genre, Gross writes of the sexual promiscuity and recreational drug use of these (mostly male) photographers in this exposé. Although the subtitle is a bit on the nose, the subject matter will be historically significant to those who are concerned with the photo artist's role in the golden age of modern fashion photography. -VERDICT Recommended for enthusiasts of fashion and fashion photography.-Shauna -Frischkorn, Millersville Univ., PA © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
The reality of fashion photography "can be murky, often decadent, and sometimes downright ugly."In a gossipy expos focused less on aesthetic vision than biographical dirt, journalist Gross (House of Outrageous Fortune: Fifteen Central Park West, the World's Most Powerful Address, 2014, etc.) follows the careers of the talented, arrogant, philandering, combative, self-aggrandizing photographers whose work appeared in, and defined, such iconic fashion magazines as Harper's Bazaar, Vogue, Glamour, and Elle from 1947 to 1997. Richard Avedon (1923-2004) gets major attention, since he was the darling of Harper's Bazaar before Diana Vreeland lured him to Vogue in 1962. Avedon, writes Gross, created "a hybrid of street photography that sought to capture reality and the elegant remove of past fashion photography." As successful as he was, the overbearing, egotistical Avedon saw all other photographersmost notably Irving Penn ("the abiding genius of Vogue")as rivals. When he chose a model, no one else could use her. "He was one of the great contributors to fashion," said photographer Melvin Sokolsky, "but he had no space for anybody but himself. If anybody else took a picture, he couldn't give it credit." Gross portrays Penn and Avedon as divas, but they were not alone. Gilles Bensimon, "chief shutterbug" of French Elle, was another: he liked to twirl his penis in public. "The biggest dick in the business," commented a fellow photographer. Sex, consensual or not, permeated the business. Bert Stern, who took a notorious series of photos of Marilyn Monroe, nude, shortly before she died, used "those images of Monroe at the end of her rope" to sustain himself for the rest of life, as his career tanked, his marriage to long-suffering ballerina Allegra Kent ended, and drug addiction landed him in hospitals. Interviews, some conducted for Model, Gross' previous foray into the fashion industry, reveal piles of sometimes-tangy, often scurrilous gossip. Not a pretty picture of sex, drugs, beautiful women, and raw ambition. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.