Avedon’s ’Moving Image’:Visionaire eschews portraiture for film with a new survey

Iconic seems too cursory a word to describe American photographer Richard Avedon, whose prolific visual output played a formative role in shaping America’s zeitgeist from the late 20th century onward. Less known than his indomitable portraits is the photographer’s body of film and video work, which he compiled throughout a remarkable six-decade career.
'I had always felt that there was a key component of Dick that was yet to be truly appreciated,' says preeminent makeup artist James Kaliardos – Avedon collaborator, Visionaire co-founder and the curator of the new exhibition 'Richard Avedon, Moving Image'. 'I feel like Avedon’s film work offers an insight into his process: he always wanted to really know his subjects and that was really my training as well. It was about revealing and igniting a person, not projecting onto them.'
The multisensory exhibition – on view at New York's Cadillac House – features 12 large digital screens, which play never before seen casting interviews, short films and the groundbreaking television commercials the photographer shot for clients such as Chanel and Calvin Klein. Proving that insouciance is far more powerful than hypersexuality, Avedon conveyed sensuality with a knowing wink. Certainly the most famous of his commercial work is the outrage-inducing 1980 advertisements for Calvin Klein Jeans, which featured a then 15-year-old Brooke Shields professing: 'What gets between me and my Calvins? Nothing.'
A Broadway aficionado, Avedon could deliver theatricality with his eyes closed – he portrays a pantomime of himself in the campy advertisements he shot with Lauren Hutton for Japanese brand Jun Ropé – but much of the footage is surprisingly affecting. In one Biba-esque video from 1973, Anjelica Huston laments her mother’s recent death; in an advertisement for Calvin Klein’s 'CK Be' fragrance – visually reminiscent of Avedon’s highly collectible In The American West series – model James Kind discusses a friend’s suicide.
Taken together, the films serve to underscore Avedon’s raison d’être as well as his enduring influence on today’s image-makers. 'Dick wasn’t interested in beauty for beauty’s sake,' says Kaliardos, a fashion authority in his own right who regularly worked with the photographer for the last ten years of his career. 'While he invented much of the vernacular of fashion photography as we now know it, he was emotionally invested in his subjects – famous or otherwise – and would spend a lot of time with them searching for a sense of their inner selves.'
A new multisensory exhibition – on view at New York's Cadillac House – features 12 large digital screens, which play never before seen casting interviews, short films and the groundbreaking television commercials the photographer shot for clients such as Chanel and Calvin Klein. Pictured: installation view.Courtesy Richard Avedon Foundation
'I had always felt that there was a key component of Dick that was yet to be truly appreciated,' says preeminent makeup artist James Kaliardos – Avedon collaborator, Visionaire co-founder and the curator of the new exhibition.
Taken together, the films serve to underscore Avedon’s raison d’être as well as his enduring influence on today’s image-makers.
INFORMATION
’Richard Avedon, Moving Image’ is on view at New York’s Cadillac House until 30 September. For more information, visit the Visionaire website
ADDRESS
Cadillac House
330 Hudson Street
New York, NY 10013
Receive our daily digest of inspiration, escapism and design stories from around the world direct to your inbox.
-
This Canadian house is a precise domestic composition perched on the Nova Scotian coast
Bishop McDowell completed a new Canadian house overlooking the Atlantic, using minimal details and traditional forms to create a refined family home
-
‘With a small gesture of buying a postcard, we all become copyists’: the Louvre’s celebration of copying speaks to human nature
Contemporary artists are invited to copy works from the Louvre in a celebration of the copyist’s art, a collaboration with Centre Pompidou-Metz
-
Serious cyclists now have serious options, courtesy of two new models from Canyon
With two new bikes, the Endurace: ONfly e-bike and Endurance: AllRoad, Canyon is innovating with both price and performance
-
‘Her pictures looked like pictures everybody knew were the truth’: Diane Arbus at the Armory
Matthieu Humery curates more than 400 of Arbus’ photographs at New York’s Park Avenue Armory – every picture she was known to have printed
-
Mystic, feminine and erotic: the power of Penny Slinger’s bodies as landscape
Artist Penny Slinger continues her exploration of the sacred, surreal feminine in a Santa Monica exhibition, ‘Meeting at the Horizon’
-
Out of office: the Wallpaper* editors’ picks of the week
It was a jam-packed week for the Wallpaper* staff, entailing furniture, tech and music launches and lots of good food – from afternoon tea to omakase
-
Out of office: what the Wallpaper* editors have been up to this week
This week saw the Wallpaper* team jet-setting to Jordan and New York; those of us left in London had to make do with being transported via the power of music at rooftop bars, live sets and hologram performances
-
Photographer Geordie Wood takes a leap of faith with first film, Divers
Geordie Wood delved into the world of professional diving in Fort Lauderdale for his first film
-
New book celebrates 100 years of New York City landmarks where LGBTQ+ history took place
Marc Zinaman’s ‘Queer Happened Here: 100 Years of NYC’s Landmark LGBTQ+ Places’ is a vital tribute to queer culture
-
A major Takashi Murakami exhibition sees the world in kaleidoscopic colour
The Cleveland Art Museum presents 'Takashi Murakami 'Stepping on the Tail of a Rainbow', exploring outrage and escapist fantasy
-
Ai Weiwei’s new public installation is coming soon to Four Freedoms State Park
‘Camouflage’ by Ai Weiwei will launch the inaugural Art X Freedom project in September 2025, a new programme to investigate social justice and freedom