Peter Lindbergh

Peter Lindbergh
Born Peter Brodbeck
(1944-11-23)November 23, 1944
Lissa, Reichsgau Wartheland, Germany (Leszno, Poland)
Residence Paris, New York and Arles
Nationality German
Occupation Photographer
Spouse(s) Petra Sedlaczek (m. 2002)
Children Benjamin Brodbeck
Jeremy Brodbeck
Simon Brodbeck
Joseph Brodbeck
Website www.peterlindbergh.com

Peter Lindbergh (born Peter Brodbeck on November 23, 1944)[1] is a German photographer and film director. Lindbergh is known for his cinematic images.

Early life

Lindbergh in 2015

Lindbergh was born on November 23, 1944 in Lissa, Reichsgau Wartheland, Germany (Leszno, Poland). He spent his childhood in Duisburg.[2]

As a teenager, he worked as window dresser for the Karstadt and Horten department stores in Duisburg. Coming from a part of Germany close to the Dutch border, North Rhine-Westphalia, he spent summer holidays with his family in the Netherlands on the coast near Noordwijk. The vast beaches and the industrial settings of his hometown Duisburg, have influenced his work strongly over the years. In the early 1960s, he moved to Lucerne and months later to Berlin where he enrolled in the Berlin Academy of Fine Arts. He hitchhiked to Arles in the footsteps of his idol, Vincent van Gogh. Lindbergh remembers these years: "I preferred actively seeking out van Gogh’s inspirations, my idol, rather than painting the mandatory portraits and landscapes taught in art schools". After several months in Arles, he continued through to Spain and Morocco, a journey that took him two years.[3]

Returning to Germany, he studied Abstract Art at the College of Art in Krefeld (North Rhine-Westphalia). Influenced by Joseph Kosuth and the Conceptual art movement, he was invited in 1969, before graduating, to present his work at the avant-garde Galerie Denise René. These works were exhibited in the Objets ludiques exhibition at the Tinguely Museum in Basel in 2014. After moving to Düsseldorf in 1971, he turned his attention to photography and worked for two years assisting German photographer Hans Lux, before opening his own studio in 1973. Becoming well known in his native country, he joined the Stern magazine family along with photographers Helmut Newton, Guy Bourdin and Hans Feurer.[4][5]

Photography

Lindbergh introduced a form of new realism by redefining the standards of beauty, influenced by documentary photographers, street photographers and photojournalists like Dorothea Lange, Henri Cartier-Bresson and Garry Winogrand. He has a humanist approach. He changed the standards of fashion photography in times of excessive retouching, in considering there to be something else that makes a person interesting, beyond their age. In 2014 he said that "This should be the responsibility of photographers today to free women, and finally everyone, from the terror of youth and perfection."[6] In 2016, Lindbergh declared that "A fashion photographer should contribute to defining the image of the contemporary woman or man in their time, to reflect a certain social or human reality. How surrealistic is today’s commercial agenda to retouch all signs of life and of experience, to retouch the very personal truth of the face itself?"[7]

He photographs his subjects in their natural state, with hardly any make-up. The journalist Suzy Menkes wrote that "Refusing to bow to glossy perfection is Peter Lindbergh's trademark – the essence of the images that look into each person's unvarnished soul, however familiar or famous the sitter".[8]

In 1988, Lindbergh gained international acclaim by showing a new generation of models all dressed in white shirts that he had recently discovered and launched their careers. A year later, Linda Evangelista, Naomi Campbell, Tatjana Patitz, Cindy Crawford, and Christy Turlington,[9][10] young models then, were photographed together for the first time by him for the January 1990 British Vogue cover. Credited as the one who officially started the era[11] of supermodels, his cover inspired singer George Michael to cast those models in the video for his song "Freedom '90",[12] and around the same time Italian fashion designer Gianni Versace for his Fall–Winter 1991 fashion show featuring the new supermodels featured two years earlier in Lindbergh's photographs.[13] In a 2008 interview with art historian Charlotte Cotton, he explained that:

Using black-and-white photography was really important to creating the supermodel. Every time I tried to shoot them in colour, because their beauty was close to perfection, it ended up looking like a bad cosmetics advert. With black and white, you can really see who they are. It toned down the commercial interpretation that colour gives. What’s so striking about black and white is how it really helps a sense of reality to come through.[14]

Lindbergh's first book, 10 Women (1996), sold more than 100,000 copies as of 2008.[5]

He twice photographed the Pirelli calendar, in 1996 and 2002. The latter, which used actresses instead of models for the first time, was shot on the back lot of Paramount Studios,[15] and was described by art critic Germaine Greer as "Pirelli's most challenging calendar yet."[16] Lindbergh is the first photographer in the fifty-year history of the Pirelli calendar to be invited to photograph it for a third time (for the 2017 edition).[17]

Lindbergh collaborated on two complete issues of Vogue photographed by him, one celebrating Vogue Germany 30th anniversary in October 2009,[18] and the other for Vogue Spain in December 2010.[19]

Films and music

Directors' Cuts: The Reunion with Cindy Crawford and Lindbergh

Lindbergh has directed a number of films and documentaries: Models, The Film (1991); Inner Voices (1999), which won the Best Documentary Award at the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) in 2000; Pina Bausch, Der Fensterputzer (2001) and Everywhere at Once (2008), narrated by Jeanne Moreau was presented at the Cannes Film Festival and Tribeca Film Festival in 2008.

He photographed the movie poster for Tony Scott's movie The Hunger (1983) featuring David Bowie, Susan Sarandon and Catherine Deneuve, and the album cover for the soundtrack,[20] Pedro Almodóvar's movie poster for Talk To Her (2002) and also Charlotte Rampling's documentary The Look (2011).

Lindbergh has photographed many music record covers, among them Jane Birkin's single "Quoi"[21] (1985); Tina Turner's singles "The Best" (1989), "I Don't Wanna Lose You" (1989), and "Foreign Affair" (1990), albums Foreign Affair (1989) and Wildest Dreams (1996), and directed the videoclip for Turner's single[22] "Missing You"; Sheryl Crow's The Globe Sessions (1998) and "My Favorite Mistake" (1998); Lionel Ritchie's Time (1998) album; Beyoncé's I am... Sasha Fierce (2008) and I Am... World Tour promotional pictures; Mika's No Place In Heaven (2015) and also directed the videoclip for his single "The Last Party".[23]

Exhibitions

Films

Influences

Lindbergh's work is inspired by early cinema (Fritz Lang's Metropolis, Eisenstein's Potemkin), Dorothea Lange's Depression-era images; also the surroundings of Lindbergh's own 1950s childhood living across the Rhine from the foreboding Krupp steelworks in the industrial Ruhrland city of Duisburg; dance and cabaret, landscapes and outer space.

Awards and nominations

Publications

Major publications

Other publications

References

  1. "Peter Lindbergh". Peterlindbergh.com. Retrieved 2016-01-29.
  2. "Biographical overview", peterlindbergh.net. Accessed 16 November 2011.
  3. Ian Phillips (1997-09-13). "THE IMAGE MAKER | News | Lifestyle". The Independent. Retrieved 2016-01-29.
  4. "Peter Lindbergh", in Photo Box: Bringing the Great Photographers into Focus (London: Thames & Hudson, 2009; ISBN 978-0-500-54384-9), p.414.
  5. 1 2 Peter Lindbergh: Images of Women" (Germany: Snoeck, 2008; ISBN 9783936859898), p.95.
  6. Small, Rachel (November 2014). "A Search of Truth". Condé Nast. Retrieved 2016-01-29.
  7. Lindbergh, Peter. "Peter Lindbergh". artforum.com. Retrieved 2016-05-19.
  8. Menkes, Vogue (September 2015). "Suzy Menkes Vogue". Condé Nast. Retrieved 2016-01-29.
  9. Naomi, Linda, Tatjana, Christy, Cindy by Lindbergh,1990, Los Angeles Times. 1990
  10. "January 1990". Vogue Magazine Archive. Retrieved August 10, 2015.
  11. "Cindy Sees". Vogue UK. Retrieved 2015-10-26.
  12. Rogers, Patrick (August 2015). "Freedom!", Vanity Fair pp 144-147.
  13. Milligan, Lauren (February 12, 2015). "Donatella; Your supermodels need you!". Condé Nast. Retrieved 2015-01-29.
  14. Cotton, Charlotte (Fall 2008). "Peter Lindbergh, The Image Maker". The Observer London. The Observer. Retrieved 2016-01-29.
  15. Pit Lane News, Pirelli Calendar, Fastdates.com
  16. Germaine Greer, "Get your kit on", The Guardian, 13 November 2001
  17. "Peter Lindbergh ›› Books ›› "Vogue Germany"". Peterlindbergh.com. Retrieved 2016-01-29.
  18. "Peter Lindbergh ›› Books ›› "Vogue Spain"". Peterlindbergh.com. Retrieved 2016-01-29.
  19. http://www.discogs.com/Various-The-Hunger-Original-Motion-Picture-Soundtrack/release/1797770
  20. "Jane Birkin - Quoi". Discogs. Retrieved 2015-10-23.
  21. "Tina Turner - Missing You (HD 16:9)". YouTube. 2014-07-03. Retrieved 2016-01-29.
  22. "MIKA - Last Party". YouTube. 2015-04-08. Retrieved 2016-01-29.
  23. "The Model as Muse | The Metropolitan Museum of Art". Metmuseum.org. 2009-08-09. Retrieved 2016-01-29.
  24. "Peter Lindbergh . On Street". C/O Berlin. Retrieved 2016-01-29.
  25. "Exhibition: Peter Lindbergh's Solo Debut in China". Chinadaily.com.cn. Retrieved 2016-01-29.
  26. "Exhibition: Peter Lindbergh Images of Women & The Unknown | Croatian Association of Artists (HDLU)". Hdlu.hr. 2014-04-10. Retrieved 2016-01-29.
  27. "Vogue like a painting - Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza (Madrid)". Museothyssen.org. 2015-10-12. Retrieved 2016-01-29.
  28. "Peter Lindbergh - September 10 - December 20, 2014 - Gagosian Gallery". Gagosian.com. 2014-12-20. Retrieved 2016-01-29.
  29. "Peter Lindbergh. A Different Vision On Fashion Photography". kunsthal.nl.
  30. film presentation on the Tribeca film festival website
  31. "2002 - 1991". Raymond Loewy Foundation. Retrieved 2016-01-29.
  32. "amfAR honors Vanessa Redgrave, Joely Richardson, Peter Lindbergh at annual New York gala". Amfar.org. Retrieved 2016-01-29.
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