{"id":2424742,"date":"2026-05-20T13:24:32","date_gmt":"2026-05-20T13:24:32","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/?p=2424742"},"modified":"2026-05-20T13:24:32","modified_gmt":"2026-05-20T13:24:32","slug":"richard-avedon-documentary-review-how-ron-howard-explores-fashion-fame-and-identity","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/richard-avedon-documentary-review-how-ron-howard-explores-fashion-fame-and-identity\/","title":{"rendered":"Richard Avedon Documentary Review: How Ron Howard Explores Fashion, Fame, and Identity"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><\/p>\n<div data-journey-body=\"longform-article\">\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"0\" class=\"body-dropcap css-1y7tupd emevuu60\">Authenticity has become an aesthetic. At this point, we all understand the cues and signifiers of human-coded realness\u2014for how to appear intentional but effortless, intimate but iconic, vulnerable but firmly in control. Of course, social media didn\u2019t suddenly make people performative, but it did help industrialize a new kind of self-consciousness around images and the way we read them, and not just for influencers. We\u2019ve all now been anointed chief communications officers for our very own emotional brands.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"1\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">Social media also didn\u2019t suddenly make people calculating. But in the pre-internet era, the calculus was different. Twiddling the knobs on your personality, desirability, and relatability was primarily a pastime of the famous and the notorious. Everyone else just did it quietly in their own lives, trying to be seen the way they wanted to be seen and recognized for who they are, two objectives that were not always aligned.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"2\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">That tenuous relationship between performance and personhood is one running theme in Avedon, Ron Howard\u2019s new documentary on the groundbreaking photographer Richard Avedon\u2014who got his start shooting for Harper\u2019s Bazaar\u2014which premiered on Sunday at the Cannes Film Festival. Built largely around archival images, footage, and recordings and interviews with people like Hilton Als, Tina Brown, Larry Gagosian, Calvin Klein, Lauren Hutton, Tyler Mitchell, and Bazaar editor in chief Samira Nasr, the film traces Avedon\u2019s rise from fashion wunderkind to one of the defining image-makers of the late 20th and very early 21st centuries.<\/p>\n<div size=\"medium\" data-embed=\"body-image\" class=\"align-center size-medium embed css-y6m8k e1fodxfw4\">\n<div class=\"css-1k29q50 e1fodxfw3\"><img draggable=\"true\" alt=\"Model posing dramatically with elephants in a studio setting\" title=\"Model posing dramatically with elephants in a studio setting\" loading=\"lazy\" width=\"2599\" height=\"3300\" decoding=\"async\" data-nimg=\"1\" style=\"color:transparent;width:100%;height:auto;\" sizes=\"auto, 100vw\" srcset=\"https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/9ec2e888-a0d2-4cb2-aa11-9987ab60fd0b.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=640:* 640w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/9ec2e888-a0d2-4cb2-aa11-9987ab60fd0b.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=768:* 980w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/9ec2e888-a0d2-4cb2-aa11-9987ab60fd0b.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 1120w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/9ec2e888-a0d2-4cb2-aa11-9987ab60fd0b.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 1400w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/9ec2e888-a0d2-4cb2-aa11-9987ab60fd0b.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 1800w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/9ec2e888-a0d2-4cb2-aa11-9987ab60fd0b.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 2000w\" src=\"https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/9ec2e888-a0d2-4cb2-aa11-9987ab60fd0b.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:*\" class=\"css-0 e1g79fud0\"\/><\/p>\n<div class=\"css-swqnqv e1fodxfw2\"><span data-theme-key=\"photo-credit-creditor\" class=\"css-1qhixxc e1geg53v2\">Photograph by Richard Avedon \u00a9 The Richard Avedon Foundation<\/span><\/p>\n<p>Dovima with elephants, evening dress by Dior, Cirque d\u2019Hiver, Paris, August 1955<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"5\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">But Avedon also arrives at a moment when people are once again thinking about the power (and implications) of images, especially in the age of deepfakes and AI: what they do to our senses of self and reality; the way they can flatten our identities and manufacture aspiration; how they sometimes reveal truths despite themselves.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"6\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">Avedon\u2019s own voice is used to narrate much of the film; given the length and scope of his career, which stretched from the mid-1940s until his death at the age of 81 in 2004, Howard had a deep reservoir of interviews to draw from in which he speaks with literary precision about his passions, projects, insecurities, and compulsions. He was known enough that he served as the inspiration for the Fred Astaire character, Dick Avery, in the Stanley Donen musical Funny Face (1957). (Avedon was an advisor on the film.) He was also extraordinarily prolific, with a corpus that stretched beyond fashion into portraiture, journalism, art, and advertising, all connected by a curiosity, restlessness, and fascination with the theater of identity.<\/p>\n<p><span aria-hidden=\"true\" data-theme-key=\"title-design-element-before\" class=\"css-0 e68yk9k0\"\/>\u201cThe CAMERA gets in the WAY more than it HELPS,\u201d Avedon said. \u201cIf I could do it with my EYES alone, I\u2019d be a lot HAPPIER.\u201d<span aria-hidden=\"true\" data-theme-key=\"title-design-element-after\" class=\"css-0 e68yk9k1\"\/><\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"8\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">Avedon was a presence, and when you\u2019re that way as a photographer, it can alter the molecular structure of a moment, a vivaciousness Howard wanted to capture in the film. \u201cI never met Richard Avedon, though I would\u2019ve loved to be photographed by him back in the day for the status of it,\u201d Howard says. \u201cAfter making this film about him, I now wish I\u2019d somehow gotten to know him not to be his subject, but to be his friend. I know I would have really enjoyed his company and been inspired by his creative energy and life spark,\u201d he explains. \u201cThat remarkable quality is certainly one of the things I most want to share with audiences through our documentary.\u201d<\/p>\n<div size=\"medium\" data-embed=\"body-image\" class=\"align-center size-medium embed css-y6m8k e1fodxfw4\">\n<div class=\"css-1k29q50 e1fodxfw3\"><img draggable=\"true\" alt=\"richard avedon for harpers bazaar 1965\" title=\"richard avedon for harpers bazaar 1965\" loading=\"lazy\" width=\"2023\" height=\"2500\" decoding=\"async\" data-nimg=\"1\" style=\"color:transparent;width:100%;height:auto;\" sizes=\"auto, 100vw\" srcset=\"https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/hbz040125archive-002-1-67dadaeb2fb9d.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=640:* 640w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/hbz040125archive-002-1-67dadaeb2fb9d.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=768:* 980w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/hbz040125archive-002-1-67dadaeb2fb9d.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 1120w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/hbz040125archive-002-1-67dadaeb2fb9d.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 1400w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/hbz040125archive-002-1-67dadaeb2fb9d.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 1800w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/hbz040125archive-002-1-67dadaeb2fb9d.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 2000w\" src=\"https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/hbz040125archive-002-1-67dadaeb2fb9d.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:*\" class=\"css-0 e1g79fud0\"\/><\/p>\n<div class=\"css-swqnqv e1fodxfw2\"><span data-theme-key=\"photo-credit-creditor\" class=\"css-1qhixxc e1geg53v2\">COVER PHOTOGRAPH \u00a9 THE RICHARD AVEDON FOUNDATION<\/span><\/p>\n<p>Jean Shrimpton, photographed by Richard Avedon, on the cover of the April 1965 issue of Harper\u2019s Bazaar, which Avedon guest edited.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"10\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">Avedon came along at a moment when people were beginning to understand the world differently through fixed images. Photographs were no longer conceived to simply document reality; images were beginning to shape aspiration, perception, and public life itself. Avedon changed the way we think about photography. But he also seemed to intuit something essential about the twisted mechanics of visibility\u2014about how we see and feel seen, about the way we see each other.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"11\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">Early on in Avedon, he describes his process this way: \u201cI think for me the most interesting part of photography is that it\u2019s almost as if I\u2019m writing my own autobiography with the faces of the people I photograph,\u201d he says. \u201cI relate to them. And I feel connected to them and there is an exchange of energy between myself and the sitter and it\u2019s when those two energies meet that the photograph is taken. But the camera gets in the way more than it helps. If I could do it with my eyes alone, I\u2019d be a lot happier.\u201d<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"12\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">Howard charts Avedon\u2019s early life growing up on Manhattan\u2019s Upper West Side. His father was in the garment business. His mother was creative and introduced him to the arts. He had a younger sister, Louise, whose struggles with mental illness would haunt him his entire life. He attended DeWitt Clinton High School, where Dick, as he was known, <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.harpersbazaar.com\/culture\/art-books-music\/a43544203\/0001-0051-when-dick-met-jimmy-may-2023\/\" target=\"_self\" data-vars-ga-outbound-link=\"https:\/\/www.harpersbazaar.com\/culture\/art-books-music\/a43544203\/0001-0051-when-dick-met-jimmy-may-2023\/\" data-vars-ga-ux-element=\"Hyperlink\" data-vars-ga-call-to-action=\"co-edited the high school literary journal with a classmate, James Baldwin\" data-node-id=\"12.1\" class=\"body-link css-1a58m3o emevuu60\">co-edited the high school literary journal with a classmate, James Baldwin<\/a>. The Avedons had owned a department store on Fifth Avenue but lost it during the Depression. Nevertheless, his mother strove to keep up appearances, borrowing dogs and cars for family photos, which Avedon recalls her ruthlessly editing and re-editing.<\/p>\n<div size=\"medium\" data-embed=\"body-image\" class=\"align-center size-medium embed css-y6m8k e1fodxfw4\">\n<div class=\"css-1k29q50 e1fodxfw3\"><img draggable=\"true\" alt=\"A stylish figure holding a cigarette and gesturing.\" title=\"A stylish figure holding a cigarette and gesturing.\" loading=\"lazy\" width=\"2413\" height=\"3300\" decoding=\"async\" data-nimg=\"1\" style=\"color:transparent;width:100%;height:auto;\" sizes=\"auto, 100vw\" srcset=\"https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/72a7eab3-a687-499b-ac42-29a9aea3f8a7.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=640:* 640w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/72a7eab3-a687-499b-ac42-29a9aea3f8a7.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=768:* 980w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/72a7eab3-a687-499b-ac42-29a9aea3f8a7.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 1120w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/72a7eab3-a687-499b-ac42-29a9aea3f8a7.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 1400w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/72a7eab3-a687-499b-ac42-29a9aea3f8a7.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 1800w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/72a7eab3-a687-499b-ac42-29a9aea3f8a7.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 2000w\" src=\"https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/72a7eab3-a687-499b-ac42-29a9aea3f8a7.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:*\" class=\"css-0 e1g79fud0\"\/><\/p>\n<div class=\"css-swqnqv e1fodxfw2\"><span data-theme-key=\"photo-credit-creditor\" class=\"css-1qhixxc e1geg53v2\">Photograph by Richard Avedon \u00a9 The Richard Avedon Foundation<\/span><\/p>\n<p>China Machado, suit by Ben Zuckerman, hair by Kenneth, New York, November 1958<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"14\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">Avedon arrived at Bazaar in 1944. He was 21 and fresh out of the Merchant Marine, where he\u2019d been photographing people for ID cards and taking pictures of shipwrecks. Bazaar\u2019s <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.harpersbazaar.com\/culture\/features\/a9554252\/richard-avedon-photographs-1950s\/\" target=\"_self\" data-vars-ga-outbound-link=\"https:\/\/www.harpersbazaar.com\/culture\/features\/a9554252\/richard-avedon-photographs-1950s\/\" data-vars-ga-ux-element=\"Hyperlink\" data-vars-ga-call-to-action=\"famously imperious art director, Alexey Brodovitch\" data-node-id=\"14.5\" class=\"body-link css-1a58m3o emevuu60\">famously imperious art director, Alexey Brodovitch<\/a>, a Russian \u00e9migr\u00e9 immersed in the various strains of European modernism and a stickler for newness, became an early mentor. He encouraged Avedon to not \u201cbecome\u201d a fashion photographer but explore what fashion photography itself might become.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"15\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">Avedon\u2019s first assignment for Bazaar was a story on dresses for the teen-zine supplement Junior Bazaar; one of his final projects involved <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.harpersbazaar.com\/culture\/art-books-music\/a64230711\/richard-avedon-april-1965-issue\/\" target=\"_self\" data-vars-ga-outbound-link=\"https:\/\/www.harpersbazaar.com\/culture\/art-books-music\/a64230711\/richard-avedon-april-1965-issue\/\" data-vars-ga-ux-element=\"Hyperlink\" data-vars-ga-call-to-action=\"guest-editing and photographing the entire April 1965 issue\" data-node-id=\"15.5\" class=\"body-link css-1a58m3o emevuu60\">guest-editing and photographing the entire April 1965 issue<\/a>, a rummaging survey of youth and pop culture with an image of model Jean Shrimpton, her face surrounded by a circular pink cutout, on the cover. In the intervening decades, he developed an approach and visual language that transformed the way we understand the world through images.<\/p>\n<p><span aria-hidden=\"true\" data-theme-key=\"title-design-element-before\" class=\"css-0 e68yk9k0\"\/>\u201cThe SCENES he created to show off the CLOTHES made magazine READERS want to be those CHARACTERS in those scenes,\u201d says Howard.<span aria-hidden=\"true\" data-theme-key=\"title-design-element-after\" class=\"css-0 e68yk9k1\"\/><\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"17\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">In the 1940s, fashion magazines still treated the concept of elegance like a kind of deadening preservative: beautiful women posed beautifully in beautiful clothes alongside beautiful things, all of it suffocatingly refined. But once the war ended, America began to imagine itself differently. Europe was rebuilding. Consumer culture was accelerating. The collective notion of glamour was changing.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"18\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">The women in Avedon\u2019s pictures pulsed with life. They looked joyful, knowing, distracted, flirty, dangerous\u2014like they\u2019d arrived from somewhere and were headed someplace much better and much more fabulous. There was movement, narrative, drama, and soul in his images, which evoked entire worlds.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"19\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">\u201cAvedon\u2019s work in fashion was a game changer due to that cinematic quality,\u201d Howard says of that early work for Bazaar. \u201cThe scenes he created to show off the clothes made magazine readers want to be those characters in those scenes.\u201d<\/p>\n<div size=\"medium\" data-embed=\"body-image\" class=\"align-center size-medium embed css-y6m8k e1fodxfw4\">\n<div class=\"css-1k29q50 e1fodxfw3\"><img draggable=\"true\" alt=\"Contact sheet displaying multiple black-and-white portraits of a woman.\" title=\"Contact sheet displaying multiple black-and-white portraits of a woman.\" loading=\"lazy\" width=\"2579\" height=\"3300\" decoding=\"async\" data-nimg=\"1\" style=\"color:transparent;width:100%;height:auto;\" sizes=\"auto, 100vw\" srcset=\"https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/38809a23-4113-4b02-b02f-b9ad5ecaac46.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=640:* 640w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/38809a23-4113-4b02-b02f-b9ad5ecaac46.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=768:* 980w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/38809a23-4113-4b02-b02f-b9ad5ecaac46.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 1120w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/38809a23-4113-4b02-b02f-b9ad5ecaac46.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 1400w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/38809a23-4113-4b02-b02f-b9ad5ecaac46.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 1800w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/38809a23-4113-4b02-b02f-b9ad5ecaac46.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 2000w\" src=\"https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/38809a23-4113-4b02-b02f-b9ad5ecaac46.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:*\" class=\"css-0 e1g79fud0\"\/><\/p>\n<div class=\"css-swqnqv e1fodxfw2\"><span data-theme-key=\"photo-credit-creditor\" class=\"css-1qhixxc e1geg53v2\">Photograph by Richard Avedon \u00a9 The Richard Avedon Foundation<\/span><\/p>\n<p>Marian Anderson, singer, in the role of Ulrica in An Ballo in Maxhera, New York, June 30, 1955(contacts)<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"21\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">So many of those images have been so thoroughly absorbed into the bloodstream of visual culture at this point that it\u2019s often easy to overlook just how singular and even strange some of them are.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"22\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">Perhaps the most famous of them all is Avedon\u2019s portrait of the model Dovima, photographed with a pair of elephants at the Cirque d\u2019Hiver in Paris, often considered to be one of the most iconic fashion images of all time. But the image itself is almost shockingly surreal. The pachyderms are shackled and look heavy and melancholic. Dovima is impossibly glamorous in a sashed Dior gown but also appears somehow trapped inside of a fantasy that she\u2019s projecting.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"23\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">Avedon understood just how much of fashion was about identity. He also understood how much of life involved performing different versions of yourself for public consumption. These weren\u2019t fake selves but performed selves\u2014and he understood that there was a difference.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"24\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">It\u2019s a quality that Howard draws out even more in recounting the details behind some of Avedon\u2019s most indelible portraits: his 1957 image for Life of a spent Marilyn Monroe, exhausted from having to inhabit a persona she created; his soaring picture of contralto Marian Anderson, renowned for singing on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial after the Daughters of the American Revolution barred her from performing at Constitution Hall. (As the film notes, Avedon later photographed the Daughters of the American Revolution as a way of capturing what institutional racism looks like.)<\/p>\n<div size=\"medium\" data-embed=\"body-image\" class=\"align-center size-medium embed css-y6m8k e1fodxfw4\">\n<div class=\"css-1k29q50 e1fodxfw3\"><img draggable=\"true\" alt=\"Female figure in a sequined halter top against a neutral background.\" title=\"Female figure in a sequined halter top against a neutral background.\" loading=\"lazy\" width=\"3226\" height=\"3750\" decoding=\"async\" data-nimg=\"1\" style=\"color:transparent;width:100%;height:auto;\" sizes=\"auto, 100vw\" srcset=\"https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/0814fe87-4211-466b-90cb-fc52d5d0c00a.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=640:* 640w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/0814fe87-4211-466b-90cb-fc52d5d0c00a.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=768:* 980w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/0814fe87-4211-466b-90cb-fc52d5d0c00a.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 1120w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/0814fe87-4211-466b-90cb-fc52d5d0c00a.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 1400w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/0814fe87-4211-466b-90cb-fc52d5d0c00a.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 1800w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/0814fe87-4211-466b-90cb-fc52d5d0c00a.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 2000w\" src=\"https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/0814fe87-4211-466b-90cb-fc52d5d0c00a.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:*\" class=\"css-0 e1g79fud0\"\/><\/p>\n<div class=\"css-swqnqv e1fodxfw2\"><span data-theme-key=\"photo-credit-creditor\" class=\"css-1qhixxc e1geg53v2\">Photograph by Richard Avedon \u00a9 The Richard Avedon Foundation<\/span><\/p>\n<p>Marilyn Monroe, New York, May 6, 1957<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"26\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">Avedon photographed many of these cultural figures against increasingly spare backdrops to better highlight the topography of their faces, postures, and motions. His favorite subjects\u2014Dovima, <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.harpersbazaar.com\/fashion\/photography\/a1349\/audrey-hepburn-richard-avedon-0213\/\" target=\"_self\" data-vars-ga-outbound-link=\"https:\/\/www.harpersbazaar.com\/fashion\/photography\/a1349\/audrey-hepburn-richard-avedon-0213\/\" data-vars-ga-ux-element=\"Hyperlink\" data-vars-ga-call-to-action=\"Audrey Hepburn\" data-node-id=\"26.1\" class=\"body-link css-1a58m3o emevuu60\">Audrey Hepburn<\/a>, and model sisters Dorian Leigh and Suzy Parker among them\u2014became part of his repertory company, appearing in different narratives and scenarios. He also fought for models of color like <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.harpersbazaar.com\/celebrity\/latest\/news\/a19472\/model-china-machado-dies\/\" target=\"_self\" data-vars-ga-outbound-link=\"https:\/\/www.harpersbazaar.com\/celebrity\/latest\/news\/a19472\/model-china-machado-dies\/\" data-vars-ga-ux-element=\"Hyperlink\" data-vars-ga-call-to-action=\"China Machado\" data-node-id=\"26.3\" class=\"body-link css-1a58m3o emevuu60\">China Machado<\/a> and <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\" href=\"https:\/\/time.com\/archive\/6634719\/fashion-the-luna-year\/\" target=\"_blank\" data-vars-ga-outbound-link=\"https:\/\/time.com\/archive\/6634719\/fashion-the-luna-year\/\" data-vars-ga-ux-element=\"Hyperlink\" data-vars-ga-call-to-action=\"Donyale Luna\" data-node-id=\"26.5\" class=\"body-link css-1a58m3o emevuu60\">Donyale Luna<\/a> to play those kinds of starring roles in his stories at a time when representation was rarely a priority in fashion. (Resistance was more common.)<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"27\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">The social dimension of Avedon\u2019s work expanded toward the end of his time at Bazaar. In 1963, <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.harpersbazaar.com\/culture\/art-books-music\/a43544203\/0001-0051-when-dick-met-jimmy-may-2023\/\" target=\"_self\" data-vars-ga-outbound-link=\"https:\/\/www.harpersbazaar.com\/culture\/art-books-music\/a43544203\/0001-0051-when-dick-met-jimmy-may-2023\/\" data-vars-ga-ux-element=\"Hyperlink\" data-vars-ga-call-to-action=\"he reconnected with his old high school friend James Baldwin\" data-node-id=\"27.3\" class=\"body-link css-1a58m3o emevuu60\">he reconnected with his old high school friend James Baldwin<\/a> on a shoot for the magazine. <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\" href=\"https:\/\/www.avedonfoundation.org\/nothing-personal-1964-essay-by-james-baldwin\" target=\"_blank\" data-vars-ga-outbound-link=\"https:\/\/www.avedonfoundation.org\/nothing-personal-1964-essay-by-james-baldwin\" data-vars-ga-ux-element=\"Hyperlink\" data-vars-ga-call-to-action=\"They would go on to collaborate on Nothing Personal\" data-node-id=\"27.5\" class=\"body-link css-1a58m3o emevuu60\">They would go on to collaborate on Nothing Personal<\/a>, a book that paired Avedon\u2019s images of artists, activists, outsiders, and politicians with Baldwin\u2019s writing, a meditation on race, freedom, and the mythology of American innocence and prosperity, an unsentimental journey through a fragmented country.<\/p>\n<p><span aria-hidden=\"true\" data-theme-key=\"title-design-element-before\" class=\"css-0 e68yk9k0\"\/>\u201cAvedon\u2019s artistic SENSIBILITY and consistent AESTHETIC was his own whether his work was COMMERCIAL or SOCIOLOGICAL,\u201d Howard offers.<span aria-hidden=\"true\" data-theme-key=\"title-design-element-after\" class=\"css-0 e68yk9k1\"\/><\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"29\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">It was during this period that Avedon honed what would become his signature portrait style. His backdrops became even more stark\u2014an \u201cexistential white,\u201d as Avedon described them\u2014and the images were framed by a narrow black border. The effect is at once clarifying and destabilizing, the subjects unmoored from any context, set in some atemporal space.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"30\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">Even now, with the arsenal of filters and AI-assisted photo-editing apps we have at our disposal, we still tend to fetishize the supposedly \u201ccandid\u201d image\u2014the raw moment, the accidental truth, the \u201cauthentic\u201d self. Avedon operated under no such illusions.<\/p>\n<div size=\"medium\" data-embed=\"body-image\" class=\"align-center size-medium embed css-y6m8k e1fodxfw4\">\n<div class=\"css-1k29q50 e1fodxfw3\"><img draggable=\"true\" alt=\"Photograph of a film crew shooting outdoors on a farm.\" title=\"Photograph of a film crew shooting outdoors on a farm.\" loading=\"lazy\" width=\"5618\" height=\"3783\" decoding=\"async\" data-nimg=\"1\" style=\"color:transparent;width:100%;height:auto;\" sizes=\"auto, 100vw\" srcset=\"https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/ad84fc0b-35e4-42d0-b48a-a1b20dfd57f5.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=640:* 640w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/ad84fc0b-35e4-42d0-b48a-a1b20dfd57f5.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=768:* 980w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/ad84fc0b-35e4-42d0-b48a-a1b20dfd57f5.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 1120w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/ad84fc0b-35e4-42d0-b48a-a1b20dfd57f5.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 1400w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/ad84fc0b-35e4-42d0-b48a-a1b20dfd57f5.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 1800w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/ad84fc0b-35e4-42d0-b48a-a1b20dfd57f5.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 2000w\" src=\"https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/ad84fc0b-35e4-42d0-b48a-a1b20dfd57f5.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:*\" class=\"css-0 e1g79fud0\"\/><\/p>\n<div class=\"css-swqnqv e1fodxfw2\"><span data-theme-key=\"photo-credit-creditor\" class=\"css-1qhixxc e1geg53v2\">Laura Wilson<\/span><\/p>\n<p>Avedon photographing rancher Richard Wheatcroft in Jordan, Montana, for his In the American West series, 1983.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"32\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">From the contact sheets and negatives in Avedon\u2019s archives, Howard gleaned insight into the extraordinary rigor and attention that went into his formal choices. \u201cAs a fine artist would, Avedon kept refining and shaping his images until they reflected the feelings he wanted the picture to express\u2014shading an ear, adding contrast to a cheekbone or a forehead,\u201d Howard says. \u201cThese are not opportunistic snapshots; they are meticulously crafted works of art, rich with intention and a point of view.\u201d<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"33\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">After leaving Bazaar in 1965, Avedon expanded his work outward while retaining the same verve and intelligence that made his fashion images so electric. At Vogue, his pictures grew even more psychologically charged as fashion became increasingly entangled with celebrity in the late 1960s and \u201970s. He also turned more intensely toward his own personal projects. For an exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Avedon positioned <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/www.metmuseum.org\/exhibitions\/richard-avedon-murals\/exhibition-objects\" target=\"_blank\" data-vars-ga-outbound-link=\"https:\/\/www.metmuseum.org\/exhibitions\/richard-avedon-murals\/exhibition-objects\" data-vars-ga-ux-element=\"Hyperlink\" data-vars-ga-call-to-action=\"a wall-sized portrait of the American military and diplomatic leadership overseeing the Vietnam War\" data-vars-ga-product-id=\"a74b7590-8c5c-42e1-82e1-295b8bee9c3f\" data-node-id=\"33.5\" data-href=\"https:\/\/www.metmuseum.org\/exhibitions\/richard-avedon-murals\/exhibition-objects\" data-product-url=\"https:\/\/www.metmuseum.org\/exhibitions\/richard-avedon-murals\/exhibition-objects\" data-affiliate=\"false\" data-affiliate-url=\"\" data-affiliate-network=\"\" data-vars-ga-product-price=\"$0.00\" data-vars-ga-product-retailer-id=\"77e43fc1-31bb-4aca-adef-9d133f65903a\" data-vars-ga-link-treatment=\"(not set) | (not set)\" class=\"body-link product-links noskim noamzn css-1a58m3o e1aq0z090\">a wall-sized portrait of the American military and diplomatic leadership overseeing the Vietnam War<\/a> opposite an equally sprawling <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/www.metmuseum.org\/exhibitions\/richard-avedon-murals\/exhibition-objects\" target=\"_blank\" data-vars-ga-outbound-link=\"https:\/\/www.metmuseum.org\/exhibitions\/richard-avedon-murals\/exhibition-objects\" data-vars-ga-ux-element=\"Hyperlink\" data-vars-ga-call-to-action=\"mural of the denizens of Andy Warhol\u2019s Factory\" data-vars-ga-product-id=\"a74b7590-8c5c-42e1-82e1-295b8bee9c3f\" data-node-id=\"33.7\" data-href=\"https:\/\/www.metmuseum.org\/exhibitions\/richard-avedon-murals\/exhibition-objects\" data-product-url=\"https:\/\/www.metmuseum.org\/exhibitions\/richard-avedon-murals\/exhibition-objects\" data-affiliate=\"false\" data-affiliate-url=\"\" data-affiliate-network=\"\" data-vars-ga-product-price=\"$0.00\" data-vars-ga-product-retailer-id=\"77e43fc1-31bb-4aca-adef-9d133f65903a\" data-vars-ga-link-treatment=\"(not set) | (not set)\" class=\"body-link product-links noskim noamzn css-1a58m3o e1aq0z090\">mural of the denizens of Andy Warhol\u2019s Factory<\/a>, manifesting a literal confrontation between bureaucratic authority and downtown bohemia. Howard\u2019s documentary also examines <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\" href=\"https:\/\/gagosianshop.com\/products\/richard-avedon-in-the-american-west-book\" target=\"_blank\" data-vars-ga-outbound-link=\"https:\/\/gagosianshop.com\/products\/richard-avedon-in-the-american-west-book\" data-vars-ga-ux-element=\"Hyperlink\" data-vars-ga-call-to-action=\"In the American West\" data-node-id=\"33.9\" class=\"body-link css-1a58m3o emevuu60\">In the American West<\/a>, Avedon\u2019s monumental early-1980s portrait series of riggers, miners, laborers, ranch hands, and carnival workers, who he photographed (controversially, for some) with the same kind of formalism that he applied to models and movie stars.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"34\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">At the same time, Avedon continued working in advertising, devising campaigns and directing commercials, often with his frequent collaborator Doon Arbus (daughter of Diane). Among them: their infamous Brooke Shields denim ads for Calvin Klein, which helped usher in the era of the fashion campaign as mass cultural event.<\/p>\n<div size=\"medium\" data-embed=\"body-image\" class=\"align-center size-medium embed css-y6m8k e1fodxfw4\">\n<div class=\"css-1k29q50 e1fodxfw3\"><img draggable=\"true\" alt=\"An artist working on two large portraits\" title=\"An artist working on two large portraits\" loading=\"lazy\" width=\"11039\" height=\"7200\" decoding=\"async\" data-nimg=\"1\" style=\"color:transparent;width:100%;height:auto;\" sizes=\"auto, 100vw\" srcset=\"https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/8a0722a1-50f1-4fb7-ac0a-5c3854dcabdf.jpeg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=640:* 640w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/8a0722a1-50f1-4fb7-ac0a-5c3854dcabdf.jpeg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=768:* 980w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/8a0722a1-50f1-4fb7-ac0a-5c3854dcabdf.jpeg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 1120w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/8a0722a1-50f1-4fb7-ac0a-5c3854dcabdf.jpeg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 1400w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/8a0722a1-50f1-4fb7-ac0a-5c3854dcabdf.jpeg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 1800w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/8a0722a1-50f1-4fb7-ac0a-5c3854dcabdf.jpeg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 2000w\" src=\"https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/8a0722a1-50f1-4fb7-ac0a-5c3854dcabdf.jpeg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:*\" class=\"css-0 e1g79fud0\"\/><\/p>\n<div class=\"css-swqnqv e1fodxfw2\"><span data-theme-key=\"photo-credit-creditor\" class=\"css-1qhixxc e1geg53v2\">Susan Middleton<\/span><\/p>\n<p>Avedon working on the In the American West series, 1985.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"36\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">Through it all, Avedon\u2019s close associates, former assistants, friends, and family (as well as Avedon himself) return repeatedly to his private anxieties: his obsessiveness (and occasional capriciousness) when it came to work; the looming impact of Louise, whose beauty and psychic pain many connect to the emotional tensions running through his images; the collapse of his marriages; the devastating portraits of his ailing father, Jacob, who Avedon photographed unsparingly as illness overtook him.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"37\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">Over the last decade, Howard has made a string of documentaries\u2014The Beatles: Eight Days a Week (2016), Pavarotti (2019), Jim Henson Idea Man (2024)\u2014that circle subjects that have so thoroughly and profoundly altered the DNA of Western culture that the truly radical nature of their innovations is often forgotten. Avedon also falls squarely in that camp.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"38\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">\u201cAvedon\u2019s artistic sensibility and consistent aesthetic was his own whether his work was commercial or sociological,\u201d Howard says. \u201cThe way he allowed his creative sense of adventure to draw and push him into situations far outside his norm was something I related to and want to continue to emulate.\u201d<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"39\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">Avedon died in 2004 after suffering a cerebral hemorrhage while on assignment for The New Yorker in Texas. At the time, he was working on a project called Democracy, a series focused on the political and cultural atmosphere of the U.S. in the run-up to the 2004 election, as the nation grappled with the aftermath of 9\/11 and the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq\u2014an attempt to take the measure of the country at yet another period of fracture and uncertainty.<\/p>\n<div size=\"medium\" data-embed=\"body-image\" class=\"align-center size-medium embed css-y6m8k e1fodxfw4\">\n<div class=\"css-1k29q50 e1fodxfw3\"><img draggable=\"true\" alt=\"Guest book entries with names and photographs.\" title=\"Guest book entries with names and photographs.\" loading=\"lazy\" width=\"1801\" height=\"1357\" decoding=\"async\" data-nimg=\"1\" style=\"color:transparent;width:100%;height:auto;\" sizes=\"auto, 100vw\" srcset=\"https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/e8e4681a-e355-4e9a-a48d-b4929239c0a1.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=640:* 640w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/e8e4681a-e355-4e9a-a48d-b4929239c0a1.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=768:* 980w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/e8e4681a-e355-4e9a-a48d-b4929239c0a1.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 1120w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/e8e4681a-e355-4e9a-a48d-b4929239c0a1.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 1400w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/e8e4681a-e355-4e9a-a48d-b4929239c0a1.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 1800w, https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/e8e4681a-e355-4e9a-a48d-b4929239c0a1.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:* 2000w\" src=\"https:\/\/hips.hearstapps.com\/hmg-prod\/images\/e8e4681a-e355-4e9a-a48d-b4929239c0a1.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&amp;resize=980:*\" class=\"css-0 e1g79fud0\"\/><\/p>\n<div class=\"css-swqnqv e1fodxfw2\">\n<p>From \u201cThe Editor\u2019s Guest Book\u201d section in the November 1944 issue.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"41\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">Early on in Avedon, the photographer recalls one of his first brushes with image-making. \u201cAs a child, I used to walk along and blink,\u201d he says. \u201cI\u2019d close my eyes, open them, and then close them again. This is before really I knew about photography. I used to like to keep images in my head that way.\u201d<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"42\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">It\u2019s a small, vivid, telling description of an innocent childhood game that\u2019s both prescient and revealing\u2014and thus, classically Avedonian in every way. But it\u2019s also an acknowledgment of the degree to which images shape our understanding of each other: of who gets recognized as fully human and who becomes an abstraction; of which faces are granted complexity and which become symbols.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"43\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">Today, images circulate faster than we can make sense of them. We live in a culture that processes people instantaneously. Everybody eventually gets algorithmically flattened into type: an aesthetic; a demographic; a code or a core. Complexity gets in the way of consumption. We are no longer afforded the opportunity to blink; if we do, we are told, we will most certainly miss something.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"44\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">Avedon resisted that flattening instinct. In his images, beautiful people can appear longing. Powerful people can appear isolated. The marginalized can appear mythic. Celebrities can crash against the glass in the terrarium of their own fame. People like <a rel=\"nofollow\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2023\/05\/08\/nyregion\/avedon-william-casby-gagosian.html\" target=\"_blank\" data-vars-ga-outbound-link=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2023\/05\/08\/nyregion\/avedon-william-casby-gagosian.html\" data-vars-ga-ux-element=\"Hyperlink\" data-vars-ga-call-to-action=\"William Casby, who was born enslaved\" data-vars-ga-product-id=\"cd6c0d2a-1b0e-469e-8849-267d14856246\" data-node-id=\"44.1\" data-href=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2023\/05\/08\/nyregion\/avedon-william-casby-gagosian.html\" data-product-url=\"https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2023\/05\/08\/nyregion\/avedon-william-casby-gagosian.html\" data-affiliate=\"false\" data-affiliate-url=\"\" data-affiliate-network=\"\" data-vars-ga-product-price=\"$0.00\" data-vars-ga-product-retailer-id=\"edffb725-81c0-4bd8-af9d-31f71205b6c5\" data-vars-ga-link-treatment=\"(not set) | (not set)\" class=\"body-link product-links noskim noamzn css-1a58m3o e1aq0z090\">William Casby, who was born enslaved<\/a>, can fill the frame in all their singularity and enormity. But no one\u2014including Avedon\u2014is ever just one thing.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"45\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">In one snippet of archival audio in Avedon, an unseen interviewer asks him why he chose photography.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"46\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">\u201cI mean, look, I still can\u2019t type. I can\u2019t read my own handwriting. I don\u2019t think consecutively. I am anecdotal. I\u2019m instinctual,\u201d Avedon says.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"47\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">\u201cBut I can see like a son of a bitch.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p><em> \u2018 The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties \u2019 <\/em><\/p>\n<p><em> \u2018 Some details of this article were extracted from the following source www.harpersbazaar.com \u2019 <\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Authenticity has become an aesthetic. At this point, we all understand the cues and signifiers of human-coded realness\u2014for how to appear intentional but effortless, intimate but iconic, vulnerable but firmly in control. Of course, social media didn\u2019t suddenly make people performative, but it did help industrialize a new kind of self-consciousness around images and the [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":2424743,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"om_disable_all_campaigns":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_access":"","_jetpack_dont_email_post_to_subs":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_tier_id":0,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paywalled_content":false,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"jnews-multi-image_gallery":[],"jnews_single_post":[],"jnews_primary_category":[],"jnews_social_meta":[],"footnotes":""},"categories":[25173],"tags":[310910,475292,310911,466866,285684,454417,475291,475293],"class_list":["post-2424742","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-artists","tag-content-type-feature","tag-contentid-d83cd29c-82b2-4fa9-acd2-ec4bdcd9b73c","tag-displaytype-long-form-article","tag-issyndicated-false","tag-locale-us","tag-read_time-12","tag-shorttitle-richard-avedon-saw-it-all","tag-subsection-features"],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/Richard-Avedon-Documentary-Review-How-Ron-Howard-Explores-Fashion-Fame.jpg","jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2424742","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=2424742"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2424742\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":2424744,"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2424742\/revisions\/2424744"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/2424743"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=2424742"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=2424742"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/celebrity.land\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=2424742"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}