Sølve Sundsbø - Photographer | Page 16 | the Fashion Spot

Sølve Sundsbø - Photographer

Thanks for posting all of Sølve's work, guys, he's really amazing. I hope he'll be able to expand from beauty and fragrance ads into more fashion ads soon. I can only remember him doing Etro. :)
 
His work definitely skews more towards the art side of fashion photography.

It really is pretty genius the way in which he subtlety introduces new and innovative techniques into his commerical work for magazines and so forth.

I wish he would shoot campaigns. I can see him working for Balenciaga. His aesthetic mirrors Ghesquieres futurism I think.
 
I wish he would shoot campaigns. I can see him working for Balenciaga. His aesthetic mirrors Ghesquieres futurism I think.

As I mentioned in my earlier post, he already does a lot of fragrance and beauty ads for Givenchy, Yves Saint Laurent, Christian Dior, Guerlain, Estée Lauder, Lancóme, etc. :flower:

Don't forget, he's still young and has atleast 20-25 years left of his career, so I'm sure we'll se a lot more ads from him in the years to come.

His "recent" move into Vogue Italia will hopefully give him even more recognizion. ;)
 
Here are a few examples of his ad work;







And this, perhaps his most famous, which apparantly caused quite a stur, when it was released ..



All photos are from Art + Commerce.
 
I think this one's from Harper's Bazaar USA 2003 - and I think January? But I'm not 100% sure.

The Best of Milan - Gisele Bündchen by Sølve Sundsbø, Harper's Bazaar USA 2003

Feel free to use or repost anywhere, just please don't remove the tag! :)
Source: giselebundchenfan.com
 
I found this article about Sølve from The Independent, which I thought a few of you guys here might be interested in.

Solve Sundsbo: His bizarre, cleverly manipulated images have made him fashion photography's hottest new star

By Lena Corner
Sunday, 3 February 2008

When fashion photographer Solve Sundsbo started his career, for a while it seemed as though he would get no further than the dole queue. "People would say to me, 'I'm not sure I can hire you, I'm not sure what you're doing. What is your style?' I was mortified and thought I was never going to make a living as a photographer."


The problem was that curiosity had got the better of the young Norwegian and he couldn't help but embrace every photographic technique going. His work incorporated everything from X-rays and 3-D scanning to hi-tech manipulation and laborious hand-painted retouching. "If I've got a style," says Sundsbo, "it's that I've got no style."

Undeterred, and still in his early twenties, Sundsbo hopped on a plane to London to set about seeking his fortune. And four months into a photography course at the London College of Printing he got a call from Nick Knight, who was looking for an assistant. For a young fashion photographer, there are few better places to start. Knight is not only regarded as one of the world's most visionary fashion photographers, but his Show Studio gallery continually pushes the boundaries of artistic possibilities. "It was hard – almost medieval in the way that you devote yourself utterly to your teacher for nearly four years. But you get that same devotion back from your teacher."
The hard work paid off and Sundsbo is now regarded as a fashion-world institution.

The designer Tom Ford cannot speak highly enough of him. "Solve is a great talent in the fashion industry," he says. "His photographs speak for themselves. They are powerful, beautiful, always fresh, and I am lucky to have worked with him over the past decade."

Sundsbo's portfolio reads like a who's who of luxury designers – Yves Saint Laurent, Dior, Gucci, Hermès, Bally and Armani. He has also branched out into short films, teaming up with Alexander McQueen to produce a piece for the Florence Biennale. "We set Eva Herzigova on fire," he says. "She was really floating on water but it looked as if she was going up in flames." He's also responsible for the covers of this month's Dazed & Confused and the current issue of Pop, featuring supermodel Stephanie Seymour.

Despite his versatility, it's easy to spot a Sundsbo image. His pictures look as if they've been digitally altered, when in fact often they haven't. "People assume my work has been through a computer but actually I also use a lot of old-fashioned techniques," he says. The concept is also more important to Sundsbo than the finish and he probably has more in common with a fine artist than slick fashion snapper. When he was asked to take a picture of Nitin Sawhney, for example, he made a plaster-cast model of the musician's head and took a picture of that instead. And when YSL hired him to shoot a fragrance campaign, he persuaded a former member of the French Olympic tae kwon do team to appear in advertising's first full-frontal male nude shoot. "We're raised to understand that women's bodies sell products," he says, "but when you apply the same notion to a male, people can't accept it. It was an interesting exercise in people's perceptions."

Sundsbo is now intent on railing against mediocrity in fashion imagery. "Photography has become democratic – anyone with a digital camera can shoot something and alter it in Photoshop to make it look polished. For the past four or five years there's been a lot of dull, perfected work around, but there's an industry backlash going on now."

To coincide with London Fashion Week, Sundsbo is launching his inaugural exhibition in London's Spring Studios, a former paint factory that is now a devoted fashion gallery. Sundsbo's work will be blown up and reproduced to the highest quality – a luxury that fashion magazines can't afford. One of his best-known pictures on show is of the British model Karen Elson, with the colours slightly altered to give the image a harder, otherworldly edge. Then there are shots of Canadian model Jessica Stam smiling through a tiny set of fangs, and designer Gareth Pugh in a knitted American football kit. "The great thing about being a photographer is that you can manipulate your own universe," concludes Sundsbo. "It would be wonderful if the world was inhabited by these creatures. I'd love it if any one of them walked out of the frame and into my world."

theindependent.co.uk
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Our man has been busy lately!

Vogue Russia, February 2009

newcover200901150945325py6.jpg

vogue.ru via MagFan



victoriadavidbeckham.com via Miss Dalloway

Vogue China, February 2009

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voguechina.com.ch via ArsValance

Dolce & Gabbana Cosmetics


teemix.aufeinin.com via lulamm
 
Last edited by a moderator:
VOGUE Nippon
March 2009






scans by mma

The solo shots of Bianca and Magda on the 3rd page remind me of Meisel's makeover madness.
 
Such versatile portfolio of work!

Truely truely one of my favourite photographer!

The last beauty shot is amazing! With the hair and all. But VP should give him more work besides beauty editorial!
 
^ by VP you mean vogue Paris? no thanks :shock: that would be the end of a nice carrer. I've already noticed that he's been working quite a lot lately, let's hope it doesn't affect the quality of his work.
I'm going to try to update the thread, though I'm sure that I'll forget something...

Paradis #2
model: Camille Miceli


scanned by c2k at bwgreyscale.com and previosly posted by jaben on the magazine thread
 
What's New Pastels
US harper's bazaar august 08
fashion editor: George Cortina
model: Toni Garrn


scanned by Jacque Marcel
 
Best Black Dresses
harper's bazaar september 2008
fashion Editor:George Cortina
model:Lily Donaldson


scanned by Luxx
 
The best of what's new
US harper's bazaar january 2009
stylist: Nicola Formichetti



continues...
 
Divine
numéro 98
make up: Lisa Butler
hair: Ward Stegerhoek
model: Isabeli Fontana


scanned by me
 
Pac Attack
Pop winter 2008
fashion editor: Katie Grand
models: Magdalena Frackowiack, Missy Rayder, Jessica Stam, Christina Kruse, Liberty Ross, Anna Klevhag & Emma Balfour


scanned by Northern Star
 
Thanks for the update, flyingace!

In my opinion, he doesn't need Vogue Paris at all. He has Dazed & Confused and Numéro for his artistic freedom, Harper's Bazaar, Vogue Nippon and Vogue Italia for all the big names and them he throws in some Vogue Russia and Vogue China for the money.

A perfect match! Vogue Paris need him much more than he needs them.
 
^ by VP you mean vogue Paris? no thanks :shock: that would be the end of a nice carrer. I've already noticed that he's been working quite a lot lately, let's hope it doesn't affect the quality of his work.
I'm going to try to update the thread, though I'm sure that I'll forget something...

I just felt that beauty shots aren't gonna put sundsbo's full potential into good use? Yes, the latest beauty editorials are gorgeous, but i think he can do much more.

But again, like Omnis said above, he has many other fields and platforms for him to showcase his artistic aesthetics. So I guess it isn't that bad afterall...
 

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