Diane Kendal - Makeup Artist | Page 6 | the Fashion Spot

Diane Kendal - Makeup Artist

September 5, 2012

New York Fashion Week | Skin Deep
Two for the Runway by BEE-SHYUAN CHANG


Guido Palau, a hairstylist, and Diane Kendal, a makeup artist, are longtime friends from England who often work together.
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Emily Berl for The New York Times



DURING New York Fashion Week, editors will seek standout microtrends like the long, tousled side braid of Alexander Wang’s spring 2010 collection or the glowing sun-kissed complexion and feathery full brow that went with it.

Those looks, and countless before and since, were created by Guido Palau, a hair stylist, and Diane Kendal, a makeup artist: friends for three decades and major forces in the beauty world since the grunge aesthetic of the mid-1990s (bare skin, smudged eyes, bed-head locks).

“They have risen together,” said Sarah Brown, the beauty director of Vogue, adding that some of her favorite recent shoots for the magazine have featured their work, often shot by the photographer David Sims.

Despite their reputations in the fashion industry, the pair went unrecognized on a recent sunny weekday afternoon at Cookshop in Chelsea.

“If there’s a party, we never go,” said Mr. Palau, trim and boyishly dashing at 50 (he once made Out magazine’s 100 most eligible bachelors list).

Over green tea and granola, the two tended to complete each other’s sentences.

“Some people say that if you get to know us, we’re quite similar,” Mr. Palau said.

“Like our intonation and the way we move our hands,” said Ms. Kendal, 52, who has long blond hair and a warm manner. (Mr. Wang described her in an e-mail as “serene, sweet, artistic, strong.”)

She was just back from vacation in Rajasthan, India; Mr. Palau had been in Ibiza, Spain, hanging out with Peter Copping, the Nina Ricci designer, and other friends at a converted farmhouse.

In addition to Mr. Wang’s show, the team is preparing for those of Victoria Beckham and Reed Krakoff. Despite their frequent collaboration, Ms. Kendal and Mr. Palau are represented separately by Art and Commerce, a division of IMG specializing in photography. (Somewhat confusingly, they are also on the roster at the Julian Watson Agency in London, which was founded by Ms. Kendal’s youngest brother. “It was really just to help him get started with the agency,” she said.)

The two friends, both English, met in East London in the early ’80s when it was routine for makeup artists and hair stylists to do repeated test shoots for jobs at edgy magazines like The Face and i-D.

“We were always rolling around our trolleys; it was always raining,” Mr. Palau said.

Mr. Palau, one of four boys, is from Bournemouth, a seaside town in Dorset; Ms. Kendal, from Wokingham in Berkshire (besides Mr. Watson, she has another brother and a sister). Ms. Kendal attended the London College of Fashion, where she studied theatrical makeup. They lived a block apart in Notting Hill, pitching themselves as a package. At night, they hit the clubs, whose characters like Boy George still inspire their work.

“There were young men dressed head-to-toe in black dresses in full-on makeup,” Ms. Kendal said. “People really created themselves. They were like art pieces.”

Mr. Palau added: “You had the New Romantics, the New Wave and subdivisions of that. So if you were around it, that immediately became your library of information.”

But it took a while to build their careers. Ms. Kendal’s breakthrough came in 1988, when she landed an Italian Vogue shoot with the photographer Albert Watson.

“I was nowhere near that,” Mr. Palau said. “I thought, ‘God, how do I do that?’ It wasn’t competitive, but I didn’t want to be left behind.”

Ms. Kendal moved to Milan, then Paris. Mr. Palau stayed in London and enrolled in the Vidal Sassoon hair academy. He was kicked out after 18 months.

“I was probably intimidated,” Mr. Palau said. “It was a very strong structure. I suppose I wanted to run more rather than be held back.”

Not long after, he landed the gig of a lifetime: the George Michael “Freedom ’90,” video, which featured Cindy Crawford, Linda Evangelista and other supermodels in their prime.

“I have no idea how I got that,” he said, laughing. “George Michael was a huge star then. The models were huge stars.”

He began working with Mr. Sims and those in the early grunge movement, including Kate Moss, the photographer Corinne Day and the stylist Melanie Ward. Calvin Klein picked up on the look, giving it a mass audience.

“Hair was coming undone,” Mr. Palau said. “It was when I really started to develop my own style.”

Before long he and Ms. Kendal had both moved to the Chelsea neighborhood of Manhattan, their apartments overlooking Clement Clarke Moore Park.

Ms. Kendal has since had a daughter and moved to Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn. She cut back on her travel schedule, though she is still responsible for striking beauty moments, like the bright matte coral lip at Jason Wu’s spring 2012 show.

Mr. Palau has worked with the photographer Steven Meisel, consulted for Redken and created headpieces for the Alexander McQueen “Savage Beauty” exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. He has occasionally strayed from his partnership with Ms. Kendal, teaming with Pat McGrath instead for shows like Prada and Louis Vuitton in Europe. And Ms. Kendal has partnered with the hairdresser Odile Gilbert.

For fashion week in Paris, starting later this month, though, the two friends will work backstage together at Sonia Rykiel. But first they have to get through the pressure cooker of Mr. Wang’s show, taking place on Saturday in New York. Were they planning perhaps pallid complexions? Velvety lips? Renaissance ringlets?

“Me and Di, we never talk about work,” Mr. Palau said, before leaving for a pottery class. “We just gossip about nothing and chat about our old age.”



Ms. Kendal backstage at a Jason Wu show.
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Stephanie Colgan for The New York Times


Mr. Palau working at an Alexander Wang show.
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imaxtree

source: nytimes.com
 
gorgeous Calvin Klein cosmetics ads which features Ykfe Strum and Diane's handiwork. Calvin handpicked Diane to design, develop the color cosmetics & skin care line. I remember how unconventional yet subtle & wearable the colors were. adored Fabien Baron's minimal packaging and advertising. still very modern yet timeless a decade on!

yfkesturm2sd.jpg

source/credit: Kanna scans @ tfs


tumblr_mbj6zucvTp1qdgbsho1_500.jpg

credit: soulredemption tumblr
 
Diane Kendal backstage @ Thakoon spring 2013:
thakoon-spring-2013-backstage-makeup.jpg

source: allure.com


@j_watsonagency: Stunning #makeup by iconic make up artist Diane Kendal @jw_anderson
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source: showstudio.com
 
another action shot at Thakoon SS '13:
NARS-Thakoon-SS13-artist-in-action-lo-res.jpg

source: beautystat.com
 
US Vogue December 2012
Monsieur Simons: Raf Simons at Dior
Photographer:
David Sims
Stylist: Camilla Nickerson
Model: Caroline Trentini
Make-Up: Diane Kendal
Hair: Guido Palau


vogue.com
 
Vogue Paris November 2004
"Play Couture"
Model: Daria Werbowy
Photographer: Bruce Weber
Stylist: Joe McKenna
Hair: Didier Malige
Makeup: Diane Kendal & Lewis Brann




dariaw.onsugar.com
 
V #36 Fall 2005
"V Loves Daria"
Model: Daria Werbowy
Photographer: Bruce Weber
Stylist: Joe McKenna
Hair: Didier Malige
Makeup: Diane Kendal




dariaw.onsugar.com
 
US Vogue February 2013: Rooney Mara by David Sims


"Power Player"
Model/Star: Rooney Mara
Photographer: David Sims
Stylist: Tonne Goodman
Hair: Paul Hanlon
Makeup: Diane Kendal



vogue.com
 
US Vogue March 1991

The Maestro of Mayhem
Photo Irving Penn & Ellen Von Unwerth Editor André Leon Talley Subject Jean Paul Gaultier Models Susan Holmes & Stephanie Roberts Hair Valentin Makeup Diane Kendal



My scans
 
Elle France April 27th, 1992: Julie Anderson by Marc Hispard


Folk City
Model: Julie Anderson
Ph: Marc Hispard
Stylist: Patricia Boin
Hair: Charlie
Makeup: Diane Kendal



Scanned by kelles
 
Vogue Paris December 1997/January 1998
"Karl Lagerfeld: Met en scene Oskar Schlemmer"
Model: Karen Elson
Photographer: Karl Lagerfeld
Stylist: Marcus von Ackermann
Hair: Serge Normant
Makeup: Diane Kendal




Scanned by Mojopin
 
Victoria Beckham F/W 13.14
Makeup: Diane Kendal
Hair: Guido Palau
Nails: Marian Newman





Backstage at Victoria Beckham this morning, the designer ordered up what’s become something of a signature helping of simple, modern, and sophisticated beauty. Guido Palau’s loose ponytails were slung low, left wispy, and treated to a high-shine texture, accordingly, while Diane Kendal kept makeup on the natural side, tinting lids with MAC Sculpting Cream in Coffee Walnut and contouring the face with its Prep + Prime Transparent Finishing Powder. As for the nails, they were groomed and unassuming—pretty self-explanatory, or so we thought. “I’m using a Nail White Pencil,” Marian Newman explained of the stick she was implementing to clean under the edges of models’ fingertips, lightening the nail in the process. “It looks like eye liner, but it’s thicker,” she continued of the new-to-us tool from Rimmel London that boosts the healthy appearance of nails without trying too hard. Slicked with a top coat of MAC Overlacquer and buffed for a glossy effect, it made for an impressively clean, perfect-looking manicure. You learn something new every day in the backstage trenches.
Source: style.com
 
Tommy Hilfiger F/W 13.14
Makeup: Diane Kendal
Hair: Eugene Souleiman



February 11, 2013
All-American, Preppy Chic Backstage at Tommy Hilfiger
By Julie Naughton

Unsurprisingly, all-American, preppy chic ruled the day at Tommy Hilfiger. Diane Kendal, working with MAC at the show, did “a very beautiful, natural, clean face.” She started by prepping the models’ faces with MAC Complete Comfort Créme, adding Face and Body Foundation and Studio Finish Concealer to create a perfect canvas. Next, she brushed eyebrows up, filling in sparse areas with pencil before adding eye shadow in Onyx to further define the brow. MAC’s Paint Pot in Stormy Pink was applied in the crease of the lid with a brush, following the eye’s contour and shape, and a tiny bit was added under the eye. A very thin line of black eyeliner was applied on the top lash line, and eyelashes were curled. Eye shadow in Exposed was used as a blush on the apple of the cheeks. To finish, Kendal applied foundation to the lips, covering it with Prêt-à-Pretty, a soft pink lipstick.

Eugene Souleiman kept hair even simpler than the makeup. “The only products we used were shampoo and conditioner,” he said, adding that each model’s hair was washed before he began styling. After creating a middle part, he used a blow-dryer, leaving the hair just short of being completely dry for a natural look. “We felt we should do glam in an easy way, especially as there are a lot of hats in the show,” Souleiman explained.
Source: wwd.com
 
Thakoon F/W 13.14
Makeup: Diane Kendal
Hair: Odile Gilbert







:heart:
All That Glitters Is Blue, Backstage At Thakoon
February 11, 2013

Blue eye makeup was a big hit on the Spring runways and it has already had a few standout showings for Fall too—with good reason, according to Diane Kendal. “Midnight blue gives off a winter feel,” the makeup artist explained backstage at Thakoon, where she was layering NARS Single Eyeshadow in Outremer, a deep indigo, with its new-for-Fall Eye Paint in Ubangi, a similar shade of cobalt that was given a shimmering blue accent with its Duo Eyeshadow in Marie Galante. “The collection has fur stoles, but it’s inspired by summer clothes,” Kendal said, referencing the dragonflies and dandelion prints that adorned the designer’s pieces. “We wanted to reflect that with the makeup.” To wit, she implemented a warm-weather beauty staple that has long gotten the youth vote: glitter. “I’m using three of them,” Kendal effused, applying a liquid set to hold the deep bronze flecks that were diffused toward the outer corner of the eye, while gold sparkles were dusted across the center of lids, and a pink shade was tapered inward. Nails were flecked with clear silver sparkles, courtesy of a single coat of Priti NYC’s Bristol Fairy. To finish the face, Kendal chose to skip lip color—as well as lash lacquer. “Sometimes when you put on mascara it can look old,” she surmised.

Odile Gilbert instituted her own fun and flirty element into an otherwise simple series of chignons via a graphic, micro fringe glued halfway across the hairline. “It’s like you have a little hat on the side of the head,” she said, coating roots with Kérastase Paris Resistance Ciment Thermique to create a sleek finish, as she tightly pulled hair back away from the face, revealing a gem-encrusted ear cuff worn by ten of the shows more elite catwalkers, including Aline Weber, Bo Don, and Xiao Wen.
Source: style.com
 
US Vogue March 2013
Retro Remix

Photographer: David Sims
Models: Anais Mali & Edie Campbell
Stylist: Grace Coddington
Hair: Paul Hanlon
Make-Up: Diane Kendal


dnamodels via Mat Cyruss
 
Elle France March 12th, 1990
Bleu De Chine Une Couleur Au Zenith
Model: Stephanie Roberts
Photographer: Ian Thomas
Stylist: Corinne Nocelia
Hair: Donald
Makeup: Diane Kendal



Scanned by kelles
 
Interview March 2013
Twist
Photographer:
Craig McDean
Stylist: Karl Templer
Model: Kati Nescher
Make-Up: Diane Kendal
Hair: Eugene Souleiman


interviewmagazine.com
 
UK Vogue April 2013: Edie Campbell by David Sims


"All About Edie"
Model: Edie Campbell
Photographer: David Sims
Stylist: Joe McKenna
Hair: Paul Hanlon
Makeup: Diane Kendal
Manicure: Anatole Rainley




magazinesdownlaod.com
 
ELLE France 7th September 1992

elle aime faire chicos
Model: Patricia Hartmann
Ph: Robert Erdmann
Stylist: Patricia Boin
Makeup: Diane Kendal


Scans by kelles
 
US Vogue April 2013
Climate Change
Photographer:
David Sims
Stylist: Camilla Nickerson
Model: Raquel Zimmermann
Make-Up: Diane Kendal
Hair: Guido Palau


fashioscansremastered
 

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