Details
WILLIAM KLEIN (b. 1928)
Smoke + Veil, Paris ('Vogue'), 1958
gelatin silver print
signed, titled, dated in pencil and stamped 'copyright The Photographs Gallery' (on the verso)
image/sheet: 15 3/4 x 10 3/8in. (35 x 27cm.)
Provenance
With Howard Greenberg Gallery, New York, 2011
Literature
William Klein, Centre Georges-Pompidou/Herscher, 1983, p. 83; Klein, In and Out of Focus, Random House, 1994, front cover

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Lot Essay

In search of new talent, Vogue art director, Alexander Liberman hired young William Klein who became known for his grainy, blurry and bold street photography. Liberman said about his photographs, “In the fashion pictures of the Fifties, nothing like Klein had happened before. He went to extremes, which took a combination of great ego and courage. He pioneered the telephoto and wide-angle lenses, giving us a new perspective. He took fashion out of the studio into the streets, trying anything, stopping traffic, photographing models in waxworks, repainting shop fronts, hiring actors and dwarfs. He functioned like a Fellini, sensing the glamorous and the grotesque. ... He was the first to bring into photography what [Fernand] Léger achieved in art - the glorification of the life and rhythms of the street.”

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