The new Vogue documentary raises five burning questions

A behind-the-scenes look at the ultra exclusive Met Gala.

 First Monday in May Trailer-- First Monday in May Trailer- First Monday in May Trailer

 


Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “The new Vogue documentary raises five burning questions” was written by Imogen Fox, for theguardian.com on Tuesday 23rd February 2016 14.06 UTC

‘Fashion … it’s a kind of theatre.” You betcha, Anna Wintour. Which is why the trailer for the new behind-the-scenes Vogue film The First Monday in May is tantalisingly good. The documentary follows the team at Vogue and the Metropolitan Museum of Art as they prepare for the launch party of last year’s exhibition, China: Through the Looking Glass. The Met Ball – as it is affectionately known – is fashion’s most glamorous party, although insiders have sometimes whispered that, once inside, it’s well, um, boring. But it is, as Vogue alumnus André Leon Talley says, the “Super Bowl of social fashion events”, and the cash, the gossip and the general over-the-topness makes for compelling viewing.

Naturally, the trailer raises more questions than it answers. Here are our five:

The first trailer for The First Monday in May, a new documentary about Vogue magazine.

Who is always on his mobile phone ?

While Anna looks at the seating plan for the dinner with a glossy-haired courtier (sorry assistant), she dryly says: “Oh, he’s coming now, is he? Well, he’d better not be on his cellphone all night.” But who is being chided rather publicly? Is it Kanye? Is it Derek Blasberg? Or someone else?

Have we been pronouncing ‘Rihanna’ in a really unfashionable way for ages?

Because everyone at US Vogue says “Ree-Yanna”. It’s a little disconcerting. Alas, in the trailer no one discusses how to describe the singer’s omelette dress.

What sort of Chinese restaurants does Anna Wintour frequent?

In one scene, the editor-in-chief says: “It’s going to look like a Chinese restaurant.” Her tone suggests that’s a criticism. We’d be sceptical that Wintour knows anything about any eatery that doesn’t sell blooded steak if it weren’t for the fact that: a) cult label Vetements showed their catwalk collection in a Chinese restaurant recently; b) she was spotted eating fish and chips in the Refinery (a cocktail bar-cum-restaurant under an office block in SE1) during London fashion week; and c) she’s seen shifting the tables herself, which could hint at a pre-fashion life as a waitress?

Anna Wintour on the front row for the Topshop Unique AW16 show
Anna Wintour on the front row for the Topshop Unique AW16 show. Photograph: Richard Young/Rex/Shutterstock

Was curator Andrew Bolton the only one who considered that the exhibition theme could be interpreted as racist?

If so, why didn’t he mention it to Sarah Jessica Parker before she wore that questionable (was it appropriation or appreciation?) headpiece? Either way, the British curator is clearly one of fashion’s biggest brains. He is filmed striding the Met’s famous staircase in a tux and mankles, as the voiceover says: “I’m not afraid of controversy” and “this isn’t Disneyland”. Presumably, it was Bolton who put the kibosh on the exhibition’s original title, Chinese Whispers: Tales of the East in Art, Film and Fashion.

What exactly is the size of Rihanna’s budget?

The camera lingers on the subject bar of an email to Anna Wintour, which says: “Do you have a second to talk about Rihanna’s budget?” Oh yes, we have literally hours. Tickets famously cost $25,000 a pop, a couture dress costs up to $70,000, hair and makeup isn’t cheap; you would need a really, really big limo to get that dress in. Assistants are on pretty much minimum wage, but Rihanna would need at least seven. Thank goodness she seems content to swig a beer from a plastic cup.

The First Monday in May opens the Tribeca film festival in New York on 13 April.

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Grace Coddington: the woman who made fashion art

Over 30 years she created some of US Vogue’s most exciting and influential photo spreads, but now Grace Coddington has stepped aside. Is this a turning point for the industry?

French Vogue: what we’ve learned from its 95 years on fashion’s frontline

The seminal style magazine is celebrating its 95th anniversary with a special edition featuring all the requisite Vogue themes: cigarettes, nudity and the odd flash of nipple

Vogue centenary exhibition styles fashion bible as cultural record

vogue100exhibition vogue100- vogue100


Powered by Guardian.co.ukThis article titled “Vogue centenary exhibition styles fashion bible as cultural record” was written by Hannah Marriott, for The Guardian on Monday 7th September 2015 16.19 UTC

At first glance, it’s all chiffon and glamour: Kate Moss in a huge hooped skirt, photographed by Mario Testino in 2008; David Hockney posing with a sequin-clad Maudie James in 1968, as captured by Cecil Beaton; Anne Gunning, swathed in pink in Jaipur in the 50s, looking away from Norman Parkinson’s lens.

But the National Portrait Gallery’s major spring exhibition, celebrating 100 years of British Vogue, will argue that it is much more than a style magazine.

“As well as the fashion bible it has now become, it is a cultural record of the times,” said current editor Alexandra Shulman at a launch event for Vogue 100, A Century of Style, on Monday. The exhibition, opening on 11 February next year, will launch the magazine’s centenary celebrations, which also include a behind-the-scenes BBC2 documentary.

A preview of the exhibition

British Vogue first hit newsstands in 1916 and – as with many desirable fashion brands – the ability to leverage this illustrious heritage has been key to the magazine’s success.

The exhibition will highlight British Vogue’s work with “the greatest photographers in modern history”, said curator Robin Muir, including Edward Steichen, Helmut Newton, Man Ray and Irving Penn, and will include portraits of Marlene Dietrich, Henri Matisse, Francis Bacon and Fred Astaire.

The show will also incorporate moments of recent fashion history, such as the 1990 Peter Lindbergh cover – featuring Naomi Campbell, Linda Evangelista, Tatjana Patitz, Christy Turlington and Cindy Crawford – widely regarded as defining the supermodel era, and the notorious 1993 Corinne Day shoot that helped introduce Kate Moss, and so-called “heroin chic”.

Photograph by Cecil Beaton titled The Second Age of Beauty.
Photograph by Cecil Beaton titled The Second Age of Beauty is Glamour. Photograph: Cecil Beaton/Conde Nast Publications

Tellingly, as printed magazines fight to underline their relevance in the digital age, Vogue 100 will begin in the present day, with a room devoted to digital fashion film. Visitors will then “travel back in time to the 90s, with Herb Ritts and Corinne Day; to the 80s with Bruce Weber and Peter Lindbergh; to the 70s with Helmut Newton and Guy Bourdin,” said Muir.

Finally, they will reach “the year zero and the quieter, beautiful, more meditative vintage masterworks of photographers such as Steichen and Man Ray,” he said.

Dr Nicholas Cullinan, director of the National Portrait Gallery, said that the show would represent “a panoramic image of the last century”.

That view is, however, undeniably well-heeled and overwhelmingly white. Questioned about a lack of racial diversity, Shulman said: “[British Vogue] has been a reflection of our culture for 100 years and it has been predominantly white culture. I think we just have to accept that. Though there certainly are a number of non-white people in the exhibition.”

As Britain became a more multicultural society, that shift was reflected in the photography, Cullinan said.

“Something we should be very proud of, and which I have included in the exhibition, is that British Vogue was the first mainstream magazine to have a black cover model, Donyale Luna, shot by David Bailey in 1966,” said Muir.

David Hockney, Peter Schlesinger and Maudie James appear in the major exhibition celebrating 100 years of British Vogue.
David Hockney, Peter Schlesinger and Maudie James appear in the major exhibition celebrating 100 years of British Vogue. Photograph: Conde Nast Publications

“It’s not all rarefied clouds of pink chiffon,” said Muir, adding that unexpected exhibits would include “extraordinarily graphic depiction of war” taken during the 1940s by Lee Miller.

“Those are not the sort of images anyone ever expected to be commissioned by a magazine like Vogue – but Vogue did have its own war photographer,” he said. “Real life intrudes – particularly at the magazine’s start, during the first world war, and during the second world war and the 1960s, when you can see class barriers being broken down in its pages.”

Muir added that Vogue was as much about creating magic and fantasy as it was about reflecting reality. “Cecil Beaton once said, ‘when I die I want to go to Vogue’ – and without wishing to dismiss the competition, saying ‘when I die I want to go to Marie Claire’ does not have the same kind of resonance.”

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Jourdan Dunn is a catwalk star – can she become a cover star too?

She is the first British black woman on the Forbes models rich list. Now there are signs her commercial clout is breaking down old barriers

Jourdan Dunn first black British model to enter Forbes rich list

Londoner, 24, who has criticised racism in fashion industry earned enough to rank alongside Cara Delevingne and Kate Moss