ThiagoMello
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That's from the Miu Miu show right? You've done a great job, thanks a lot 

thanks guys! yes, it is! but this is just a study, i might come up with something more later... 
thanks Royal-Galliano for posting 


"Non-Stop Ultimate Pumping"
Pages 17-24 Plus Credits
Credits:
PHOTOGRAPHY: Steven Meisel
FASHION EDITOR: Edward Enninful
MAKE-UP ARTIST: Pat McGrath
HAIR STYLIST: Jimmy Paul
SET DESIGNER: Jack Flanagan
CHOREOGRAPHY: Michael Carson, D.A.Jason Duzansky, D.P.Sebastian Kim
EXECUTIVE PRODUCER: Ruk Richards
PRODUCER: Oliver Hicks
PHOTO ASSISTANTS: Steven Pan, Wayne Wakino
LIGHT EFFECTS: David Diesing
FASHION ASSISTANTS: Caroline Newell, Catherine McGlone, Kate Robertson
MAKE-UP ASSISTANTS: Chiho Ohmae, Marla BeltDawn, Broussard Ebara, Heather Currie
HAIR ASSISTANTS: Heather Packer, Nikki Providence, Tony Chavez
SET ASSISTANTS: Josh Loucka, Brian McSherry, Jared Little, johnMiguel BenavidesAshley Fontentot
MODELS: Ross Cassidy, Derrick Hayes, Matt Isbell, Missy Rayder, Hilary Rhoda, Coco Rocha, Hana Soukupova, Julia Stegner, Gemma Ward, Raquel Zimmermann
SPECIAL THANKS: Ben Sealey, Quixote Studios, Bumble & Bumble
sorce: steven meisel's thread


vmag03.14.08 THE OTHER WOMAN
In a new show, Inez van Lamsweerde & Vinoodh Matadin investigate the power of female archetypes
The Dutch photographers Inez van Lamsweerde & Vinoodh Matadin are known for many things—namely, their smart, glam, and perverse fashion editorials and portraits, as well as a keen understanding of women and the naked form. In the third installment of their continuing gallery series, "The Now People," the photo team turns its eye to female archetypes of past and present, from the earth mother and the goddess to the demon, the shaman, and the innocent. This runs the gamut of van Lamsweerde's self-portraits to studio photographs of supermodels like Carmen Kass and Raquel Zimmermann—often nude, often in black and white. The show also includes collaborations with the artist Eugene van Lamsweerde, whose scrap metal sculptures interact with the couple's photographs in extreme ways. In The Seance, for example, portraits of Lady Amanda Harlech are pierced by the Dutch sculptor's metalwork, bringing the photography out of the two-dimensional and into a new mixed-media sphere.
