| A Tribute To The Greats In Fashion Art |
| Written by Dja Horry | |||
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posted by Dja Horry The Line of Fashion: Curated by Robert Richards April 1, 2009 - May 2, 2009 Tuesdays; 10 AM–8 PM | Wednesdays - Fridays; 10 AM–5 PM | Saturdays; 12 noon–4 PM Admission: FREE! Society of Illustrators 128 East 63rd Street (between Park and Lexington Avenues) 212-838-2560 Gallery Hours: 10 A.M.– 8 P.M. Tuesday 10 A.M.– 5 P.M. Wednesday - Friday 12 noon– 4 P.M. Saturday Closed most holidays. societyillustrators.org ![]() Illustration by Antonio Lopez Quoting Rene Gruau - whose iconic drawings from the forties to the eighties for Flair, Vogue and Harper’s Bazaar remain fresh and surprising to this day - “Beginning in 1963 photography increasingly took the place of fashion illustration. If you have an acceptable photograph and an acceptable illustration, then a good illustration will always outweigh a good photograph. The alternation of illustrations and photographs really enlivens a magazine. The traits of the illustrations and photographs really enlivens a magazine. The traits of the illustrator and the stylization of the illustration confer an unmistakable graphic identity today, on the other hand, the magazine covers on the newsstands display only the beautiful, exquisite, made-up faces of wonderful women who are completely interchangeable. For the most part, the essential individuality of the fashion magazines exists only in their titles.” There will always be some fashion illustration in the fashion schools and college departments just as it must always be a practical and incidental function of design studios and fashion houses. But the designer’s graphic preoccupations - to draw attention to himself or his product or to explain the technicalities necessary to getting things made are not the same as those of the artist whose character and value have always been to see things for himself and to make his own critical evaluation. As Baudelaire said, “the fashion draughtsman distills the eternal from the transitory.” With the exhibition “The Line of Fashion”, opening on April 1 and running through May 2, the Society of Illustrators in association with The Leslie-Lohman Gay Art Foundation pays tribute to Kenneth Paul Block, René Bouché, Antonio, Eric, Joe Eula, JC Leyendecker, Mel Odom, George Stavrinos, Michael Vollbracht and many other great fashion artists who wait patiently for the world’s great museums to open their doors and welcome them. Intro: This exhibit pays tribute to the world's most highly regarded fashion illustrators featuring works by Antonio Lopez, Kenneth Paul Block and Joe Eula to name a few.
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