by Marina Rybak
Most likely only few visitors to the exhibit knew much about the artist behind the portrait. And some will be surprised to find out the he was the founding father of fashion photography, whose ethereal body of work and the first-ever editorial spreads revolutionized the pages of Vogue at the turn of the last century.
Baron Adolf de Meyer’s (1868-1946) was an international man of mystery and a posh trendsetter thanks to his polished French-German upbringing. As a budding amateur photographer he sparkled on both sides of the Atlantic, capturing sensuous, yet thoughtful images of socialites and celebrities of Belle Époque and Edwardian age. A virtuoso of soft lens, he was noted by Cecil Beaton as “the Debussy of photography”.
At the dawn of the Jazz Age in 1913 he became the first official photographer at Vogue, Vanity Fair and later at Harper’s Bazaar, recognized as the best in the field. He discarded the magazine pages, filled with mundane, impersonal illustrations and replaced them with sweeping fashion photography of the “in crowd”. His meteoric rise to stardom followed by a drawn-out fadeout into obscurity. Not able to catch up with thundering, sharp focused Modernism, he spent the remains of the day in Hollywood, almost forgotten. Today, few of his prints survive, most having been destroyed during World War II.
But looking back at his work I find it irresistible and romantic. Suspended in time, the fluid softness of the stylized photographs is fragile and voluptuous, rivaling the delicate underpinnings. Masterfully backlit subjects are glowing with gauzy shimmer. Black and white idle starkness is dispersed into the infinite shades of gray, expanding the spectrum into a seductive color palette. Ornate floral props frame this “moodboard”, accentuating the background with stenciled, almost lacy surface design allover.