Andreja Pejić

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He’s Got the Look

The boy from Broady Andrej Pejic knows it’s all just marketing but is happy to be used to promote tolerance along the way.

IT HAS been two crazy, momentous years since Bosnian-born Broadmeadows teen Andrej Pejic left his mother and set off to try his luck as a fashion model. Now he’s all of 20, and a bona fide global sensation.

Pejic is fashion’s most famous ”femiman”, its girly boy, an intriguing, at times enraging, controversy on two long, lovely legs.

Yesterday, the snake-hipped beauty with the ratty mass of pale girly curls, interrupted a rare visit home to pose in the grungy cool of Richmond’s Mexicali Rose restaurant for local swimsuit brand Nathan Paul.

”I’ve grown up a lot in these two years,” he confided. ”I’ve become more independent. I’ve expanded my horizons.” Between shots of boardshorts for boys and maillots cut high over the hip and skimpy for girls (he nonchalantly swapped from one to another and back again), he talked about his strange and fabulous life.

”I think I’m a reflection of a cultural phenomenon,” he said carefully. ”It’s marketing, but there’s a plus: people use me to send a message of tolerance and to explore different types of beauty and self-expression.”

Pejic’s beautiful face is a confusing ingredient in campaigns by some of fashion’s most powerful global brands: Marc Jacobs, Raf Simons, Vogue magazines, even a global perfume campaign he shot recently for a launch in August.

His infamous appearance as a bride in a sheer, rippling goddess gown for Jean Paul Gaultier in Paris last year whipped up controversy.

But the Boy from Broady confused the masses even more cruelly when he appeared ”topless” on the cover of New York’s Dossier magazine. Stockists in the US demanded the magazine be sold in an opaque plastic sleeve, making Pejic possibly the first man in history to have his nipples censored.

”I wasn’t complaining, that got me a lot of press,” he says. ”But, an artistic image, even of a woman’s body, I don’t think should be censored.”

His mum, Jadranka, a former lawyer, now relief teacher, sits quietly nearby. She sees him so little these days, it’s enough just to be close while he’s working: ”I miss my baby,” she says.

Her insights into the remarkable young man now twisting and pouting for a photographer, his flat creamy belly exposed in a knotted Nathan Paul T-shirt and tight swim briefs, are refreshingly simple. ”Andrej was such a good kid, what every parent wants: quiet, a good student, homework on time …”

The Pejics migrated to Australia from a Bosnian Serb refugee camp when Andrej was eight, and his brother Igor, 10. While he learned English and acclimatised to life at Broadmeadows West primary, his mother remembers Andrej was shy and kept his predilection for dolls and girly things to himself.

”I did try to be more boyish,” he remembers. ”I tried to play sport, talk less.” There was little or no bullying at school. ”I was happy. I was in a loving home, allowed to do all the girly things I wanted.”

His mother remembers a kind of epiphany when her son shifted from Broadmeadows to University High School. There his feminine side was not only tolerated but celebrated.

”All of a sudden, Andrej exploded!” Mrs Pejic hoots at the memory. ”Andrej wanted pink hair, Andrej wanted makeup, Andrej wanted to go out …” Pejic remembers it, too: ”I said ‘f—- it’, and started expressing the way I felt. I got more friends if anything, became more popular. I think people are more attracted to you when you’re confident, more yourself. You shine more and people want to touch the light.”

Pejic says his loneliness and homesickness is subsiding. ”In this industry it’s easy to meet people,” he says. ”Now I have a lot of friends: models, make-up artists, designers.”

Fashion is also notorious for sycophants and fakes. He has ways of weeding these out of his peer group. ”There are a lot of inflated egos,” he laughs. ”But, if you become like that then that’s the sort of people you attract. I’m still very approachable. I want to have all kinds of people in my life, not just the cool fashion crowd.”

smh.com.au
 
Andrej is today in the german TV-Show (Das perfekte Model) with KK - he had a shooting with KK-girls - he looks perfect in that show and very prof :woot::clap:
 
Andrej Pejic Got a Beauty Contract With Jean Paul Gaultier

Andrej Pejic has gotten his first major beauty contract as the face of Jean Paul Gaultier's new men’s fragrance, Kokorico, according to WWD. This is a big deal for any model, but particularly for Pejic, who is known for his androgyny (in addition to his normal model qualities, of course — cheekbones, long legs, pretty hair). Pejic remains steadfast in his refusal to define his sexual identity, but he's modeled in both menswear and womenswear shows, including Gaultier's. Hopefully this campaign, shot last week in Paris by Matthew Stone, further proves his global appeal regardless of gender categorization. Gaultier first released Kokorico last July with black-and-white TV commercials starring the decidedly manly Spanish model Jon Kortajarena, so bringing on Pejic marks a shift in the fragrance's marketing.

nymag

How Much Will Andrej Pejic Earn for His Jean Paul Gaultier Fragrance Campaign?

Last week in Paris, the androgynous male model Andrej Pejic starred in a solo print campaign for Jean Paul Gaultier's new men's fragrance, Kokorico. The ads were photographed by DJ Matthew Stone.

Getting a fragrance campaign with a major fashion house is a sure sign a model's "made it," but even though Pejic will surely continue to land more high-profile editorial and ad jobs in the near future, the jury's still out on what "making it" will look like for him.

Pejic's spent a good part of his still-young career modeling womenswear. Fashion is drawn to provocative and atypical representations of sexuality, and Pejic's long hair, peculiar features, and lithe body made him appear almost uncannily like a female model. In fact, when Pejic posed topless on the cover of Dossier, Barnes & Noble censored the image because the young male model appeared too much like a chest-bearing woman.

Modeling is the one occupation where standard wage inequality is reversed: women earn far more than their male counterparts all across the board. In Pricing Beauty, Ashley Mears notes that while a woman might earn between $100K and $1.5 million for a fragrance campaign, a male model's rate ranges from $30K to $150K.

In an interview with New York Magazine last August, Pejic joked that even though he was modeling for a more lucrative segment of the fashion industry, womenswear, his salary sure wasn't breaking any gender barriers: “I don’t get out of bed for less than $50 a day. I want to make that clear to America. This is a new age of androgynous supermodels. We don’t get out of bed for less than $50 a day.”

thefashionspot
 
That's a pretty quick switch. Jon's ad hasn't been a year since it first released.
 
All I can say about the recent #Kokorico buzz is that Jon and @Andrej_Pejic are now very good friends... Can't wait for you to see it!

@JPGaultier / twitter

does this mean that they're both in the campaign? :buzz:
 
It's the only possibility ^_^
Can't wait to see what Gaultier have in mind for them! :bounce:
 
Andrej Pejic is considering a lead role in a French feature film

Abbey Lee Kershaw isn’t the only Australian überblonde who may be considering a move into movie territory. Frockwriter always thought that the perfect movie role for Andrej Pejic might be Pygar the angel in a remake of Roger Vadim’s 1968 sci fi classic Barbarella. While the latest Barbarella remake attempt may be stuck in development hiatus, we were very interested to hear that Pejic is currently seriously considering another movie role. Also with a French director as it happens.

Arnaud Vanbleus, Pejic's Paris agent at the New Madison model agency, tells frockwriter that Pejic has been approached by - and has subsequently met with - French director Florence Dewavrin, who is developing a feature based on French writer Honoré de Balzac's novel Séraphita.

Pejic is earmarked for the lead role.

Published in 1834 - and recently adapted for the Paris stage by Ouriel Zohar - Balzac's classic is set in Norway and tells the story of an androgynous youth of great physical beauty, who goes by the names of both Séraphitus and Séraphita. Perfect casting in other words.

Nothing is yet set in stone but yes, Pejic is interested reports Vanbleus, who is currently fielding "tonnes" of requests in France for his star model.

"He's a phenomenon, that’s for sure - and he's unique, there is only one" says Vanbleus. "Everyone wants to have him. But the thing usually is, they either don’t have the budget or we’re not interested in the project".

frockwriter.com
 
:D yay great news!! can't wait to see the results of the Beauty Contract
 
Before John Galliano Show (Out Vibes)

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nowfashion
 

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