Chadwick Tyler - Photographer | Page 2 | the Fashion Spot

Chadwick Tyler - Photographer

Oh, sorry and thank you ... I thought that "supreme" was the modeling agency of these girls.

Or, maybe it is and you got the picutres directly from the angency's site? I didn't find a site called supreme.com or anything like that. Just a bit confused here ... can you clarify what web site these are from, please?
 
Last edited by a moderator:
I love Chadwick.. :heart:
So talented & subtle he is...

From V magazine...

26097721.jpg 26097812.jpg

26097912.jpg 26097953.jpg

26097963.jpg 26097973.jpg

source: mariemaud.blogspot
 
i found a short clip directed by him called "We Scream"
We Scream

starring all of the Supreme models of course , if anyones interested in taking a look.
i really enjoy the style of it! really eerie and beautiful.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
First of all, amazing video - freaky though because I was listening to a totally different song (skinny puppy - pro-test) and the video was perfectly cut and in rythm!! FREA. KY!

Second, I adoooore Chadwick Tyler, very unique style. He has a new set up; raise/walk:

raise%20to%20walk_MG_5322.jpg

{chadwicktyler.com}

Check out his site for the whole set
 

chadmuller.com and theimagist.com
Look at this the one on the left was taken by Chad Muller two years before the one on the right by Chadwick- almost too similar? interesting.....
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Good eye! The wardrobe is very, very similar ... but I'd say the pose, the lighting, the color and the background make them very different to my eyes. All fashion images are inspired by something else ... and many times two shooters or two stylists seem to get the same idea from the same place ... and not actually from each other. Happens all the time with the people I work with. So it's hard to tell if one copied the other or they both just love furs and bold fishnets.
 
Yes i know what you mean but this isnt the only image that chadwick has done which is similar to Chad Muller.....
 
Thanks, I love that shot of Sarah Stephens !

More from Tiberius :heart:








Honey Space Gallery is pleased to announce Tiberius, a solo exhibition of new photography by Chadwick Tyler. And we are pleased to relay the information here as you may have noticed already, we are in love with Chadwick's work. Nothing compares to his way to capture a model's essence and to push the limits ahead, still being in adequation with the character, even when he breaks the rules, which open doors to new perspectives. Proposing another way to look at the character through a powerful vision in which both the scene and the character interact and question the evocative meaning of everything depicted.

For his first gallery exhibition, the artist has created a series of original black & white photographic portraits depicting an array of expressive & sullenly beautiful female characters.

In Tiberius,Tyler juxtaposes the mystery and obscurity of the antiquated image with the clarity of deep emotion: transcendence, rage, ecstasy, hysteria, confusion, lethargy, exhaustion, lament, abjection, resignation, etc. The series is a sort of lexicon of unexplained broken beauty.​
An intense sense of solitude underscores Tiberius. Mortality, evoked by the cinematic overhead lighting used throughout the series, seems always at the periphery; the subjects’ eyes are often turned upward, as if quite aware of their own vulnerability. The meticulous styling is suggestive of a broad range of historical social classes, but this is complicated by the disheveled appearance of even the most glamorous figures. Odd bodily contortions and nudity seem to indicate a loss of self-consciousness that further unsettles the work’s visual allusion to a more formal past.

Tiberius
displays a looseness of interpretation and informality that allows for a scope of emotional representation extending beyond the work’s historical references. Raw emotional vulnerability, perhaps once seen as something to hide, here isthe ultimate strength.​
ARTIST'S STATEMENT
Every project I do revolves around the model, “the girl.”
For me, to work with a model is to find a connection, to develop a mode of communication & to create a relationship, in order to draw what is within her out to the surface.
My job is to enable a model to feel comfortable being vulnerable in a way that shows up on camera.
Documenting the range of a girl’s personality that emerges is everything to me; especially when it’s something she didn’t know was there.
The idea to do a gallery show was not originally mine. I didn’t begin it with a grand theme in mind, or even a specific objective.
The work as a whole is the result of a number of disparate decisions and processes that can be interpreted together, or not. Here are some:
SPACE: a 12x10 foot outdoor wall with about 6 feet of depth. We built the set in about 30 minutes with the intention of allowing the elements and the debris from the previous shoot to stay in the set for the next model.
LIGHT: always overhead, a mixture of florescent and ambient light.
MODELS: 52 of them. It was important to me to have a broad range of talent, from the most established of girls to girls to those for whom this is a first show. Most I have worked with before, others I have wanted to work with for some time. I’m privileged to have had this opportunity to bring together such a wide range of personalities.
AN INSPIRATION: My dad was a farmer. I was a farm kid. I love dirt, & imperfection.
HISTORICAL REFERENCES: Gilded Age America, Dust Bowl, the juxtaposition of the meticulous and the disheveled.
BEHIND THE SCENES: Three additional collaborators were instrumental in creating this work. Shinichi Arima did the intricate hair styling. Chiho Omae did the engaging make up. Both were heavily based on styles from the 1880’s to the 1940’s, but always with a modern aesthetic in mind. Their formal training and professional excellence allow me to maintain my informal approach. NicoleVitagliano did the immaculate styling.
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION . The images that comprise the Tiberius series range in size from 3’’ x 5’’ to 6’ x 4’. Each individual image has a three-print limit, though each print is of a different size. The images are printed with UltraChrome HDR pigment based ink, on
photo rag satin 310gsm. All prints are mounted in antique frames, hand-painted by the artist.
TITLE: Tiberius. Could be a place, a clan, a harem, a community, a gloomy Roman emperor. I can’t say. I like the word.​
The exhibition will take place from february 10, 2009 till march 12, 2009.
Huge thanks to Jon Banthorpe and Shane Lyons for the press release and pictures.
Keep updated with news of Chadwick Tyler's project and what's [behind] Tiberius.
mariemaud.canalblog.com
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Yes i know what you mean but this isnt the only image that chadwick has done which is similar to Chad Muller.....
So, is it your opinion that Chadwick Tyler copies and/or just finds inspiration in Chad Muller's work? That it's not a coincidence?
 
Last edited by a moderator:
chadmuller.com and theimagist.com
Look at this the one on the left was taken by Chad Muller two years before the one on the right by Chadwick- almost too similar? interesting.....

You seem to be confused... styling has little to nothing to do with the photographer

**please do not quote images**
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Well, I would not say that ... exactly. But that was sort of my point, too ... everything except the styling looks different to me ... each image is quite a bit different to my eyes.

Styling can be decided by either the shooter, the stylist, both or neither... depending on the circumstances. If it's a collaboration or creative work, it's usually something that both of them worked out together. If it's an ad, then the client or the art director usually calls the shots on styling and advises the stylist. And if it's a magazine editorial ... it can be anyone who calls the shots about styling ... depends on the magazine and what they want.

In this case ... check out the Chad Muller thread ... he spoke for himself about the styling in the image on the left.
 
For arguments sake ignore what anyone says about the styling relationship, stylist photographer relationships differ greatly.
I for one think they both may be working in the same (massive) ballpark, but Muller seems to have a much more masculine input - less sensitivity than Tyler... but that's my opinion.
I see very little comparison between the shots you compared Love Cat - let's look really close now c'mon. Looking at the forum stats I reckon Tyler may be a little bit more ahead of Muller but that's not everything I guess. But then Love Cat, you seem to be Muller's biggest fan judging from his thread - and not a bad choice, he has some good shots.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

New Posts

Forum Statistics

Threads
215,554
Messages
15,307,194
Members
89,567
Latest member
Vala Holmes
Back
Top