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LOT 42

Richard Avedon Dovima with elephants, Evening dress by Dior, Cirque d'Hiver, Paris, August 1955

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Richard Avedon
1923 - 2004
Dovima with elephants, Evening dress by Dior, Cirque d'Hiver, Paris, August 1955

gelatin silver print, signed and editioned '15/100' in pencil and with the photographer's title, edition, and copyright stamps on the reverse, framed, 1955, printed later
image: 25.4 by 20 cm (10 by 7⅞ in.)
frame: 54.5 by 49.8 cm (21½ by 19⅝ in.)

Condition Report:
Please note the colours and shades in the online catalogue illustration may vary depending on screen settings.

This print, on Agfa paper, is in generally excellent condition. When examined closely in raking light, a thin one-inch crease is visible near the lower edge of the image. The margin is very faintly darkened in a thin band at the periphery of the image. The right margin edge is gently rippled, not impacting the image.

The reverse is lightly soiled, and the upper left and right edges are hinged to an overmat so that the corresponding margins could not be fully examined. There are two linear yellow adhesive residues near the left edge of the reverse.

Catalogue Note:
Richard Avedon’s Dovima with elephants, Evening dress by Dior, Cirque d'Hiver, Paris, is a monument in the history of fashion and advertising photography. No other fashion photograph of the 20th century is as widely-recognized and no other image illustrates as fully Richard Avedon’s profound gifts as a photographer of couture and of women. In 1955, 32-year-old Richard Avedon was sent by Carmel Snow, the Editor-in-Chief of Harper’s Bazaar, to Paris to photograph the fall couture collections. A series of 15 photographs by the young photographer were selected to illustrate ‘Carmel Snow’s Paris Report,’ published in the magazine’s September 1955 issue (pp. 204-17). The most famous photograph from this series is Dovima with Elephants, which received a full page illustration.

Of the 1955 couture collection, Snow wrote, ‘Dior’s Sinuous Evening Line is marked high, like an Empire silhouette, then flows supplely against the figure, narrowing as it goes . . . Dior puts long, tight sleeves on his grand décolleté dresses. Here, sleeved to the wrists: his black velvet sheath, sashed high under the bosom with a great streamer of white satin’ (Harper’s Bazaar, September 1955, p. 214). The dress Snow described – modelled in the present photograph by Dovima – was the first to be designed by Christian Dior’s 19-year-old protégé and eventual successor, Yves Saint Laurent.

Hailed by Richard Avedon as ‘the most remarkable and unconventional beauty of her time,’ Dovima was the quintessential model of the 1950s, representing the rarefied elegance of the period with her lithe figure, long limbs, wide-set eyes, and clever Mona Lisa smile. Born Dorothy Virginia Margaret Juba in Queens, New York, Dovima was discovered on the streets of Manhattan in 1949. She quickly became one of the highest paid models of her period, later nicknamed ‘The Dollar a Minute Girl’ by commanding $60 an hour. Although she posed for many notable photographers, including Irving Penn, Horst P. Horst, and Erwin Blumenfeld, it was her relationship with Avedon that was strongest and it was his portraiture that solidified her reputation for eternity. Of Avedon, Dovima said ‘We became like mental Siamese twins, with me knowing what he wanted before he explained it. He asked me to do extraordinary things, but I always knew I was going to be part of a great picture.’

The brilliant juxtaposition of the classically elegant Dovima with the towering rough forms of elephants is as revolutionary today as when it was first published in 1955. With this photograph, Avedon set a standard for inventiveness in fashion photography that has not been surpassed in the intervening years.

Provenance:
Acquired circa 2000

By descent to the present owner

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13 Jun 2023
UK, London
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[ translate ]

Richard Avedon
1923 - 2004
Dovima with elephants, Evening dress by Dior, Cirque d'Hiver, Paris, August 1955

gelatin silver print, signed and editioned '15/100' in pencil and with the photographer's title, edition, and copyright stamps on the reverse, framed, 1955, printed later
image: 25.4 by 20 cm (10 by 7⅞ in.)
frame: 54.5 by 49.8 cm (21½ by 19⅝ in.)

Condition Report:
Please note the colours and shades in the online catalogue illustration may vary depending on screen settings.

This print, on Agfa paper, is in generally excellent condition. When examined closely in raking light, a thin one-inch crease is visible near the lower edge of the image. The margin is very faintly darkened in a thin band at the periphery of the image. The right margin edge is gently rippled, not impacting the image.

The reverse is lightly soiled, and the upper left and right edges are hinged to an overmat so that the corresponding margins could not be fully examined. There are two linear yellow adhesive residues near the left edge of the reverse.

Catalogue Note:
Richard Avedon’s Dovima with elephants, Evening dress by Dior, Cirque d'Hiver, Paris, is a monument in the history of fashion and advertising photography. No other fashion photograph of the 20th century is as widely-recognized and no other image illustrates as fully Richard Avedon’s profound gifts as a photographer of couture and of women. In 1955, 32-year-old Richard Avedon was sent by Carmel Snow, the Editor-in-Chief of Harper’s Bazaar, to Paris to photograph the fall couture collections. A series of 15 photographs by the young photographer were selected to illustrate ‘Carmel Snow’s Paris Report,’ published in the magazine’s September 1955 issue (pp. 204-17). The most famous photograph from this series is Dovima with Elephants, which received a full page illustration.

Of the 1955 couture collection, Snow wrote, ‘Dior’s Sinuous Evening Line is marked high, like an Empire silhouette, then flows supplely against the figure, narrowing as it goes . . . Dior puts long, tight sleeves on his grand décolleté dresses. Here, sleeved to the wrists: his black velvet sheath, sashed high under the bosom with a great streamer of white satin’ (Harper’s Bazaar, September 1955, p. 214). The dress Snow described – modelled in the present photograph by Dovima – was the first to be designed by Christian Dior’s 19-year-old protégé and eventual successor, Yves Saint Laurent.

Hailed by Richard Avedon as ‘the most remarkable and unconventional beauty of her time,’ Dovima was the quintessential model of the 1950s, representing the rarefied elegance of the period with her lithe figure, long limbs, wide-set eyes, and clever Mona Lisa smile. Born Dorothy Virginia Margaret Juba in Queens, New York, Dovima was discovered on the streets of Manhattan in 1949. She quickly became one of the highest paid models of her period, later nicknamed ‘The Dollar a Minute Girl’ by commanding $60 an hour. Although she posed for many notable photographers, including Irving Penn, Horst P. Horst, and Erwin Blumenfeld, it was her relationship with Avedon that was strongest and it was his portraiture that solidified her reputation for eternity. Of Avedon, Dovima said ‘We became like mental Siamese twins, with me knowing what he wanted before he explained it. He asked me to do extraordinary things, but I always knew I was going to be part of a great picture.’

The brilliant juxtaposition of the classically elegant Dovima with the towering rough forms of elephants is as revolutionary today as when it was first published in 1955. With this photograph, Avedon set a standard for inventiveness in fashion photography that has not been surpassed in the intervening years.

Provenance:
Acquired circa 2000

By descent to the present owner

[ translate ]
Sale price
Unlock
Estimate
Unlock
Time, Location
13 Jun 2023
UK, London
Auction House
Unlock