Your Instagram Habits Are âStupid,â According to One Famous Fashion Photog
For those outside the fashion world, photographer Peter Lindbergh is not an immediately recognizable face. And why would he be? The charismatic 72-year-old is like most of his peers, in that his workâs recognition eclipses his own.
But finding someone who wouldnât recognize Lindberghâs 1990 British Vogue cover is another story. Capturing Naomi Campbell, Christy Turlington, and Linda Evangelista in all their glory, Lindbergh was among the first to document the era of the original supermodels and inspired George Michaelâs âFreedomâ music video.
A post shared by Peter Lindbergh (@therealpeterlindbergh) on Feb 20, 2017 at 3:23pm PST
Of course, Lindberghâs accomplishments are too numerous to list here. Heâs shot for most major fashion magazines, as well as produced his own photography book. Heâs encapsulated Kate Mossâs essence in myriad black-and-white images, and heâs made the strongest actresses appear vulnerable in the famous Pirelli Calendar.
And speaking of Pirelli, Lindbergh is the only photographer to have shot the annual spread three times, most recently for the 2017 calendar, which cast, among others, Jessica Chastain, Nicole Kidman, and Julianne Moore in their most honest light. The makeup-free, unretouched photos in the calendar prompted Helen Mirren to cry how âawfulâ she looked in it before acknowledging the purpose behind the shoot: to capture real beauty.
During New York Fashion Week, Pirelli hosted a panel that Lindbergh sat on, along with Chastain, photographer Steve McCurry (most famous for his 1985 National Geographic âAfghan Girlâ cover), and outspoken cultural critic Fran Lebowitz.
The short version of the panel discussion, which was to focus on the state of beauty in popular culture: Lebowitz thinks Trump is an abomination; Chastain prefers to play characters whose beauty lies beneath the surface, untouched by makeup; and McCurry thinks the picture of the Afghan girl reveals an honesty not easily captured in photography today.
Before the panel, Lindbergh sat down with Yahoo Style to give his take on fashion photography, Photoshop, and Instagram. Below is an edited excerpt of the conversation.
Yahoo Style: How did you bring your perspective to the Pirelli Calendar?
Peter Lindbergh: You know, I wanted to make a big break with Photoshopped beauty. Itâs a disastrous thing happening in photography. I care more about what everyone has that isnât the same, their differences.
That would explain the concept behind the 2017 Calendar, then.
We should show beauty that has truth, and tell women that women are to be at peace with themselves. They shouldnât try to be this and this and that. From all this, the message is, take your sensibility and donât try to run around in high heels and makeup and try to be something you can never be. No one looks like those photographs. Besides, most of them look terrible.
Whose work in fashion today do you admire?
I look at the fashion world today, and Iâm not inspired by photography, by fashion photography. Itâs really screwed up. There are maybe three, four photographers Iâm really interested in; the rest is really rubbish. There are very few who are interesting, but thatâs it. Itâs a pity. Nobody thinks they have the responsibility; they just say, âHey baby, turn around! Nice ass!â
Whose responsibility is it, then, to capture realness?
Thatâs a very interesting, a very tough question. For example, many companies need [to Photoshop]. They canât show women who have pimples everywhere and say âWe have a great cream for you.â They have a reason, they want to sell, and thatâs fine. But thatâs not the problem on its own. But the whole idea of photographing women has become that. Thatâs Photoshopped because they want to sell the cream, and you know it. Fine. But everyone does it today.
Whatâs your take on Instagram?
Instagram has so many interesting photographs. Professional photographers should learn, or relearn that. Itâs really inspiring, Instagram. But at first, I thought it was really stupid, Instagram, because if you use it to show everybody you met yesterday a big actor and you put your arm around him for a selfie, thatâs just a reason to blow up a diminished ego, thatâs stupid. But thatâs what most people do.
So, what makes someoneâs Instagram worth looking at?
Youâre not a photographer if you do, like, five nice pictures and put them on Instagram. The photographer ⌠it has to mean something, what you do. You have to have a point of view; then you can photograph. But people donât know that â most of them have no point of view. They donât stand for [anything]. They say, âOh, thatâs great, and thatâs great, too!â Thatâs boring.
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