Houston Chronicle Sunday

ZEST Fashion icons in a flash

MFAH show presents 200 iconic images plus costumes that are inclusive and diverse

- By Molly Glentzer | STAFF WRITER

Museum of Fine Arts, Houston’s photograph­y show presents 200 iconic images.

No one doubts the power of fashion as a cultural force today, and in the age of Instagram, our sense of it is formed by fashion photograph­y that’s wildly democratic.

But museums are only slowly acknowledg­ing the genre as something more meaningful than commercial or popular art, worthy of scholarly study. This is somewhat ironic, given that photograph­ers focused on fashion have always shown far greater sensitivit­y to art movements and experiment­ation than those who’ve concentrat­ed on, say, documentar­y narratives or landscapes.

“Icons of Style,” opening Sunday at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, makes a case for fashion photograph­y as a valid art form. “You can’t look at these and think that the photograph­ers weren’t considerin­g themselves artists,” MFAH pho

tography curator Malcolm Daniel says. “They’re so self-consciousl­y artistic.”

Organized by the J. Paul Getty Museum but significan­tly reimagined, the Houston presentati­on contains about 200 images accessoriz­ed with displays of a dozen or so couture outfits from the MFAH’s costume collection, including hats, shoes and purses. Wall-sized graphics, large projection­s and videos also help build a more dynamic environmen­t for visitors who may not find huge walls of relatively small, blackand-white images all that magnetic from a distance. But breezing through the opening galleries would be a mistake: Each frame holds something wonderful.

Daniel and associate curator Lisa Volpe replaced about half of the Getty’s photograph­s with works from the MFAH’s own massive photograph­y collection­s and other sources, including the Houston Public Library, to better reflect Houston’s diversity and to incorporat­e our celebrity- and street-scene-saturated times. The farther in one goes, the more colorful the walls get.

Organizing the show thematical­ly, the curators also had a guiding principal: They insisted that each image qualify as more than documentat­ion. “Nobody sets out to make an oil painting who’s not trying to make art. But photograph­y plays all these different roles in society — photojourn­alism, fashion, advertisin­g, science,” Daniel says. “There are certain things we look for in art: a kind of beauty, mastery of technique, something that reveals a broader sense of the culture or context in which it was made, the ability to move us spirituall­y.”

From 1911 to now

Virtually all of the photograph­s in “Icons of Style” have transcende­d their original purpose as ads or editorial spreads in the glossy pages of fashion magazines. Paul Outerbridg­e’s famous “Advertisem­ent for George P. Ide & Company” is a standout example. Made in 1922, the graphicall­y strong image juxtaposin­g a white shirt collar against a checkerboa­rd background has become an icon of Modernism “to the point where a lot of people don’t even realize it was made as an advertisem­ent,” Daniel says.

The images date from 1911 to the present, a sweeping arc that captures the spirit of more than a century of human culture, dreams and desires. With their aspiration­al intent, these images collective­ly illustrate how people perceive beauty. To Daniel and Volpe’s credit, the diversity doesn’t just begin with Kwame Brathwaite and the Black is Beautiful movement of the 1960s. In the early 20th century, photograph­ers such as James Van Der Zee and Charles “Teenie” Harris conveyed the glamorous aspects of life in early-20th-century Harlem and Pittsburgh, respective­ly.

The show starts in 1911 because that’s when a Parisian journal hired Edward Steichen to make “artistic photograph­s” of new styles by designer Paul Poiret. A copy of the journal rests under glass in the first gallery, although the eyes go first to an actual Poiret coat on display, a flapper’s dream wrap of gradated beads and velvet from 1922.

Other garment standouts from the MFAH’s costume vault of more than 1,300 pieces include a strapless, silk taffeta Charles James ballgown from 1947 and Issey Miyake’s accordianl­ike “Flying Saucer” gown from 1994.

A section called “Material Elegance” illustrate­s the seductive power of light and shadow on luminous silks, absorbent velvets, lace (Steichen’s “Gloria Swanson”!) and human curves. Walls devoted to Art Deco, Surrealism and Op and Pop influences make the case quickly for fashion photograph­y as a specialize­d art genre. Man Ray made fashion photos, you know.

Getty curator Paul Martineau notes in his catalog that in the 1930s, Louise Dahl-Wolfe commented that there were no fashion photograph­ers, only artists who did fashion pictures. She would herself become one of the greats, taking models to the bombed-out streets of Paris in 1946 (though she was not the first to show that willful fortitude in the face of war; Cecil Beaton shot models in front of ruined buildings in 1941 in London).

Hashtag Instagram moment

A very large print of Richard Avedon’s “Dovima With Elephants,” which may be the most famous fashion photograph of all time, hangs in an alcove Daniel only half-jokingly calls the “a little chapel to the god Avedon.”

Shot with an 8-by-10 camera for Harper’s Bazaar in 1955, Avedon’s image juxtaposes the extreme beauty of a statuesque

model with the perceived clumsiness of a couple of elephants. The subject, actually, is the first evening gown Yves Saint Laurent designed as the creative director for Dior, but the curve of Dovina’s thin frame and the gown’s graceful bow mimic the lines of the elephants. Not until about 23 years later, as art collectors began acquiring his work, did Avedon start mining his archives and making editioned prints of images such as this.

As the show unfolds, the styles of other artists in the fashion pantheon reveal themselves: Irving Penn’s elegant minimalism; the hyper-sexualized realm of Helmut Newton; the Greekinflu­enced eye of Herb Ritts; and the provocativ­e style of Bruce Weber, who became a sensation with his men’s underwear ads for Calvin Klein.

Yes, the show contains rooms of serious eye candy, and they are not too taxing on the brain. But there’s also substance from multiple angles. Progressin­g from end to end, visitors will see evolutions in fashion and popular culture as well as developmen­ts in the medium of photograph­ic techniques, including experiment­s with solarizati­on, negative printing, stop motion and color.

“There are some ways in which couture filters down to the street, and also in which the vernacular bubbles up to couture,” Daniel says. As the world changed with civil rights, the youth movement and women’s liberation, fashion photograph­y was right there with it.

And art history begins repeating itself, validating the whole premise. Visitors who are paying attention will see images by younger talents that pay homage to predecesso­rs in galleries of contempora­ry work. Just one example: Ram Shergill’s blackand-white

“Queen of the Jungle,” from 2014, places a regal model in Indian-inspired finery between two elephants, riffing on Avedon’s great image.

The last gallery is likely to be the most crowded, full of terrific and splashy celebrity portraits. It feels up to the minute globally with prints of dandies from Badouin Mouanda’s “Sapeurs de Bacongo” series but also has a glam Houston quotient — Beyoncé, Solange, James Harden, Simone Biles.

Projection­s at this end feature galleries of images by famous New York Times photograph­er Bill Cunningham and Langston Hues, known for his “Modest Street Fashion” project showing mostly Muslim women. (Hues will visit Houston in September to speak.) The show’s newest work, which appears just outside the gift shop, is a flashing, frenetic and super-fun video made for the MFAH by French photograph­er Jean-Paul Goude, who also created the well-known portrait of Grace Jones.

Instagramm­ers can watch it as they pose in a pop-up set that mimics John Dyer’s portrait of Selena in biker mode for Texas Monthly. With a hashtag, their images show up on the museum wall — making the whole experience truly democratic: Everyone may not be an artist, but anyone can be a fashionist­a.

“There are certain things we look for in art … something that reveals a broader sense of the culture or context in which it was made.”

Malcolm Daniel, photograph­y curator

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 ?? Museum of Fine Arts, Houston ??
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
 ?? Molly Glentzer / Staff ?? John Dyer’s “Selena,” above, captured the hip fashion attitude of a music icon in 1992 for
Texas Monthly. Left, one of the galleries of “Icons of Style: A Century of Fashion Photograph­y” at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.
Molly Glentzer / Staff John Dyer’s “Selena,” above, captured the hip fashion attitude of a music icon in 1992 for Texas Monthly. Left, one of the galleries of “Icons of Style: A Century of Fashion Photograph­y” at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.
 ?? Karen Warren / Staff photograph­er ?? MFAH photograph­y curator Malcolm Daniel stands in the first gallery of “Icons of Style,” near an entry wall filled with cover images from decades of Vogue.
Karen Warren / Staff photograph­er MFAH photograph­y curator Malcolm Daniel stands in the first gallery of “Icons of Style,” near an entry wall filled with cover images from decades of Vogue.
 ?? Karen Warren / Staff photograph­er ?? A gallery of contempora­ry photograph­y celebrates global influences, celebrity culture and the emergence of fashion art history. This wall includes, from left, Ram Shergill’s “Queen of the Jungle,” a portrait from Hassan Hajjaj's “Unity” series with Cardi B and his “Eyes on Me.”
Karen Warren / Staff photograph­er A gallery of contempora­ry photograph­y celebrates global influences, celebrity culture and the emergence of fashion art history. This wall includes, from left, Ram Shergill’s “Queen of the Jungle,” a portrait from Hassan Hajjaj's “Unity” series with Cardi B and his “Eyes on Me.”
 ?? Karen Warren / Staff photograph­er ?? A Charles James ballgown reflects the glamorous nature of early-20th-century fashion and fashion photograph­y.
Karen Warren / Staff photograph­er A Charles James ballgown reflects the glamorous nature of early-20th-century fashion and fashion photograph­y.
 ?? Museum of Fine Arts, Houston ?? George Hoyningen-Huene’s “Bathing Suits by Izod, Paris,” 1930.
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston George Hoyningen-Huene’s “Bathing Suits by Izod, Paris,” 1930.
 ?? Museum of Fine Arts, Houston ?? Ebony published its “Fashions in Orbit” cover in October 1965.
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston Ebony published its “Fashions in Orbit” cover in October 1965.
 ?? Karen Warren / Staff photograph­er ?? A promotiona­l poster for Grandassa Models, one of the first agencies that specialize­d in natural black fashion models, fills a wall. Photograph­er Kwame Brathwaite featured his wife and daughter in the “K.”
Karen Warren / Staff photograph­er A promotiona­l poster for Grandassa Models, one of the first agencies that specialize­d in natural black fashion models, fills a wall. Photograph­er Kwame Brathwaite featured his wife and daughter in the “K.”
 ?? Museum of Fine Arts, Houston ?? Richard Avedon’s “Dovima with Elephants, Evening Dress by Dior, Cirque d’Hiver, Paris, August 1955” is among the most iconic fashion photograph­s of all time.
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston Richard Avedon’s “Dovima with Elephants, Evening Dress by Dior, Cirque d’Hiver, Paris, August 1955” is among the most iconic fashion photograph­s of all time.
 ?? Karen Warren / Staff photograph­er ?? The show’s “Remix” gallery features an image from Oliviero Toscani ’s ad series for Benetton, which broke ground by showing diverse models together. The company eventually fired Toscani for work it deemed too political but rehired him in 2017.
Karen Warren / Staff photograph­er The show’s “Remix” gallery features an image from Oliviero Toscani ’s ad series for Benetton, which broke ground by showing diverse models together. The company eventually fired Toscani for work it deemed too political but rehired him in 2017.
 ?? Karen Warren / Staff photograph­er ?? “Beau Brownie” cameras designed by Walter Dorwin Teague and manufactur­ed by Eastman Kodak in the 1930s were as beautiful as the era’s Art Deco clothes.
Karen Warren / Staff photograph­er “Beau Brownie” cameras designed by Walter Dorwin Teague and manufactur­ed by Eastman Kodak in the 1930s were as beautiful as the era’s Art Deco clothes.

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