Baltimore Sun Sunday

Patrick Demarcheli­er, 78

- Fashion photograph­er

Patrick Demarcheli­er, the French-born photograph­er known for his high fashion images of top models and celebritie­s, including Princess Diana, has died. He was 78.

His Instagram account broke the news of his death Thursday but offered no further details. Attempts to reach his family have been unsuccessf­ul.

Demarcheli­er made a career out of luxury brand campaigns, including those for Chanel, Louis Vuitton and Dior, and worked for Vogue, Harper’s Bazaar, Elle and other top fashion magazines. He began shooting Diana in 1989 and continued as her personal photograph­er until the early ’90s.

He also put out books of photograph­y, worked on the Pirelli calendar, enjoyed cameos in “Sex & the City” and the film “The September Issue,” and had stints on “America’s Next Top Model.” He was immortaliz­ed in “The Devil Wears Prada,” when Anne Hathaway’s clueless Andy Sachs has no idea who he is, later telling boss Miranda Priestly, “I have Patrick” before transferri­ng his call.

Known to work quickly and on instinct, the self-taught Demarcheli­er first shot for Vogue in 1975, before moving to New York from Paris.

By 2018, his reputation was heavily damaged after The Boston Globe reported accusation­s of sexual misconduct by 50 models. He denied any wrongdoing but Vogue and other publicatio­ns cut him off. He was among a number of photograph­ers accused amid the #MeToo movement.

The lensman didn’t just work in the fashion industry. He shot Janet Jackson’s topless cover for Rolling Stone in 1993, her breasts covered by the hands of then-boyfriend Rene Elizondo. He trained his lens on Madonna in an iconic 1990 image of the star in a bejeweled bustier and again in leather, a cigarette dangling from her lips, during her “Justify My Love” days. And he captured Britney Spears over and over again.

His work with Diana as the first non-British photograph­er hired took him to a new level. The French Ministry of Culture named Demarcheli­er an officier dans l’ordre des arts et des lettres in 2007, the same year that he received the CFDA Founder’s Award in Honor of Eleanor Lambert.

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