#brooke shields

LIVE
brooke shields
brooke shields
Brooke outside the L'Ermitage Hotel in Beverly Hills, 1983

Brooke outside the L'Ermitage Hotel in Beverly Hills, 1983


Post link
Brooke and Peter Fonda on set of Wanda Nevada, 1978

Brooke and Peter Fonda on set of Wanda Nevada, 1978


Post link
Brooke at the NYS Theater opening party, 1979

Brooke at the NYS Theater opening party, 1979


Post link
18 year old Brooke Shields photographed while on vacation in Florida, July 1983

18 year old Brooke Shields photographed while on vacation in Florida, July 1983


Post link
Brooke at Michaele Vollbracht’s Fashion Show, 1978

Brooke at Michaele Vollbracht’s Fashion Show, 1978


Post link
Brooke at The Highlights: The Mountains in Photography’s opening night, 1983

Brooke at The Highlights: The Mountains in Photography’s opening night, 1983


Post link
brooke shields
Brooke photographed by Sheila Metzner for Vogue, 1985

Brooke photographed by Sheila Metzner for Vogue, 1985


Post link
brooke shields
brooke shields
brooke shields
brooke shields
brooke shields
Brooke by Francesco Scavullo, 1981

Brooke by Francesco Scavullo, 1981


Post link
brooke shields
brooke shields

The Blue Lagoon (1980). In the Victorian period, two children are shipwrecked on a tropical island in the South Pacific. With no adults to guide them, the two make a simple life together, unaware that sexual maturity will eventually intervene.

Between this and Pretty Baby, it feels pretty tragic to look back on these early films of Brooke Shields and see just how much she was sexualised and fetishised. This isn’t quite as grotesque as Pretty Baby (although it’s hard to say if that’s possible), but it still feels misguided to the point of being a little perverse. The cinematography is nice though, I guess. 3/10.

Brooke Shields was the face and body of a successful advertising campaign for Calvin Klein Jeans in

Brooke Shields was the face and body of a successful advertising campaign for Calvin Klein Jeans in the 1980′s. “So, what comes between you and YOUR Calvins…?”


Post link
Apocrypha: Brooke Shields, 1985(Source: Extra Dimensional Battle Suits: Style and Inspiration)

Apocrypha: Brooke Shields, 1985

(Source: Extra Dimensional Battle Suits: Style and Inspiration)


Post link
Andy Warhol Find from The New York TimesBy Alice Newell-HansonMay 2, 2018Recently, Pat Hackett, a NeAndy Warhol Find from The New York TimesBy Alice Newell-HansonMay 2, 2018Recently, Pat Hackett, a NeAndy Warhol Find from The New York TimesBy Alice Newell-HansonMay 2, 2018Recently, Pat Hackett, a NeAndy Warhol Find from The New York TimesBy Alice Newell-HansonMay 2, 2018Recently, Pat Hackett, a NeAndy Warhol Find from The New York TimesBy Alice Newell-HansonMay 2, 2018Recently, Pat Hackett, a NeAndy Warhol Find from The New York TimesBy Alice Newell-HansonMay 2, 2018Recently, Pat Hackett, a NeAndy Warhol Find from The New York TimesBy Alice Newell-HansonMay 2, 2018Recently, Pat Hackett, a NeAndy Warhol Find from The New York TimesBy Alice Newell-HansonMay 2, 2018Recently, Pat Hackett, a NeAndy Warhol Find from The New York TimesBy Alice Newell-HansonMay 2, 2018Recently, Pat Hackett, a NeAndy Warhol Find from The New York TimesBy Alice Newell-HansonMay 2, 2018Recently, Pat Hackett, a Ne

Andy Warhol Find from The New York Times

ByAlice Newell-Hanson

May 2, 2018

Recently, Pat Hackett, a New York-based writer and editor, opened an unassuming three-ring binder in her Gramercy Park apartment and discovered 83 unpublished photographs by Andy Warhol. The images — which depict, among other subjects, Brooke Shields, Muhammad Ali, Farrah Fawcett, Jean-Michel Basquiat and Warhol’s two pet dachshunds, Archie and Amos, seated with Lou Reed — had been gifted to Hackett by Warhol not long before his death, in 1987, and had not left her home since.

Hackett was one of Warhol’s frequent collaborators and confidantes; she contributed to Interview, co-wrote his final film, “BAD” (1977), and later edited his posthumously published “Diaries” (1989). While working on another project, Warhol’s arch entertaining manual “The Party Book” (1988), she took home a selection of the artist’s photographs — casual portraits of friends and vivid snapshots of New York nightlife — to review as possible illustrations. “A few days later, when I mentioned that I would bring them back soon, he said, ‘Oh you don’t have to.’ He’d noticed how much I loved them,” recalls Hackett.

The previously unpublished and unexhibited images, which will go on show for the first time on May 3 at Hedges Projects in Los Angeles, are all one-of-a-kind silver gelatin prints that capture their subjects in stark black and white. “Oddly, as much as Andy is known as ‘the master colorist,’ there is a whole powerful, primitive area of his work that was exclusively black and white,” says Hackett.

Warhol turned to photography more and more in the years before his death, and “you could see how much it excited him,” she adds. “His whole view of the world and of art had always been that reality could not be improved upon. That made photography a natural next big step in his evolution as an artist.”

Correction: May 2, 2018An earlier version of this article misstated the year Andy Warhol’s film “Bad” was released; it was 1977, not 1987.

“Through Andy’s Lens: Never Before Seen Works From the Collection of Pat Hackett,” May 3-June 10 at Hedges Projects, 305 North Laurel Avenue, Los Angeles, hedges-projects.com.


Post link
Farrah Fawcett (A Black Label Barbie of Farrah Fawcett) as repainted and restyled by artist Noel CruFarrah Fawcett (A Black Label Barbie of Farrah Fawcett) as repainted and restyled by artist Noel CruFarrah Fawcett (A Black Label Barbie of Farrah Fawcett) as repainted and restyled by artist Noel CruFarrah Fawcett (A Black Label Barbie of Farrah Fawcett) as repainted and restyled by artist Noel CruFarrah Fawcett (A Black Label Barbie of Farrah Fawcett) as repainted and restyled by artist Noel CruFarrah Fawcett (A Black Label Barbie of Farrah Fawcett) as repainted and restyled by artist Noel CruFarrah Fawcett (A Black Label Barbie of Farrah Fawcett) as repainted and restyled by artist Noel CruFarrah Fawcett (A Black Label Barbie of Farrah Fawcett) as repainted and restyled by artist Noel Cru

Farrah Fawcett (A Black Label Barbie of Farrah Fawcett) as repainted and restyled by artist Noel Cruz of ncruz.com featured in different photos on FLICKR by FARRAHF in dioramas built by Ken Haseltine of regentminiatures.com. Other repaints inlaced Bo Derek, Brooke Shields, Jennifer Lopez, Angelina Jolie, David Doyle, Kate Jackson, Jaclyn Smith, Chris Reeves, and a Lindsay Wagner Styling Bust.


Post link

My favorite Brooke shields movie .I just love her in this ❤

loading