ZOOMER Magazine

GLAMOUR SHOTS

Slim Aarons’ photograph­s still tell a story 50 years after he published A Wonderful Time

- —Shinan Govani

It has been nearly two decades since Slim Aarons’ death, and precisely 50 years since his first book of photograph­y, A Wonderful Time, was published. But, in so many ways, it is like he never left us.

As a conjurer of glamour and a packager of enchantmen­t, he remains the ultimate archivist of high society. His body of work is the definitive ode to a bygone jet set and an enduring record of the rich at play – from Mustique, to Gstaad, to Monaco and back – which remains a riff on fashion. The DNA of his images is expressed in brands from Ralph Lauren to Phoebe Philo, and in interior decoration; think, top designers like Ken Fulk.

A Wonderful Time, indeed. His 1974 almanac (pristine copies cost hundreds of dollars on book collectors’ websites), captured a vast array of people and places: the scions of Palm Beach, like the famous Truman Capote swan, C.Z. Guest; storied families such as the Hearsts and Rockefelle­rs; and frozen-in-time figures, à la Audrey Hepburn, Jacqueline Bouvier, Wallis Simpson and Salvador Dali.

A former war photograph­er who reinvented himself as an anthropolo­gist of the good life, Aarons was big on mise

en place, his daughter, Mary Aarons, told me in a 2017 interview, and believed the setting “should tell the story of the place or person.” As Aarons liked to say: “I don’t call myself a photograph­er. I’m a storytelle­r.”

Ironically, when this seminal book was published, it fell flat. Barely sold. Only with time did A

Wonderful Time morph into a cult obsession and forever resource. “I don’t think there’s any American designer who doesn’t have a copy of it,” fashion mogul Michael Kors once said.

 ?? ?? Aarons’ artfully composed picture of socialite C.Z. Guest, with her son at her Palm Beach, Fla., estate in the 1950s, from
Chloë Sevigny plays Guest in Ryan Murphy’s new series about writer Truman Capote’s betrayal of his inner circle,
Aarons’ artfully composed picture of socialite C.Z. Guest, with her son at her Palm Beach, Fla., estate in the 1950s, from Chloë Sevigny plays Guest in Ryan Murphy’s new series about writer Truman Capote’s betrayal of his inner circle,
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