The Korea Herald

피터빈트

Boston museum shows royal family, celebrity photos

By Korea Herald

Published : Oct. 22, 2012 - 19:13

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BOSTON (AP) ― Mario Testino poses for photographs in front of photographs.

Cameras flash as Testino stands, arms crossed, in black jeans, black suit coat and black collared shirt, the top two buttons open. Behind him, model Gisele Bundchen steps out of a car wearing a sparkly, silver dress in a 2007 Vanity Fair photograph.

Photos of superstars line the dark teal walls as museum Director Malcolm Rogers goes in for a photo with Testino, joking that he is the beast to the photographer’s beauty.

“I’ve never thought of myself as a beauty as I work with these people,’’ Testino replies with a laugh.
Supermodel Gisele Bundchen poses with photographer Mario Testino prior to an evening reception at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, last Wednesday, for the U.S. exhibitions of Testino’s photographs “In Your Face” and “British Royal Portraits.” (AP-Yonhap News) Supermodel Gisele Bundchen poses with photographer Mario Testino prior to an evening reception at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, last Wednesday, for the U.S. exhibitions of Testino’s photographs “In Your Face” and “British Royal Portraits.” (AP-Yonhap News)

The celebrity and fashion photographer has himself become a celebrity, specifically requested by Madonna and the British royal family, Vogue and Vanity Fair, Gucci and Burberry. He helped launch the modeling careers of Bundchen and Kate Moss.

In his U.S. debut, two Museum of Fine Arts, Boston exhibits showcase Testino’s three decades of work. The photographer himself selected the pieces in the exhibits, one of celebrity photos and one of the British royal family portraits.

Most of the pictures are familiar, splashed across American and European Vogues, Vanity Fair and the Internet. But this time, they’re 2-, 3- and 8-feet tall.

“This is a contemporary artist who is in the thick of pop culture,’’ museum curator Anne Havinga said.

Art critics may bash the show, because it’s commercial, colorful and sexy, Rogers said.

Jennifer Lopez as a boxer. Patriots quarterback Tom Brady and a snarling dog. Nude models, celebrities and athletes.

“I like to bring things here that are unexpected ... take on new color, really to find excitement and beauty in things taken for granted,’’ Testino said.

Born in Peru in 1954, Testino fell in love with fashion, from bellbottoms to a lilac terrycloth suit, when accompanying his father on business trips to the United States.

He moved to England in 1976 and took his first photograph of the British royal family in 1981, an impromptu shot of Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Edward in a parade celebrating Prince Charles’s marriage to Lady Diana Spencer. He sat on a mailbox to capture the shot, which features a smiling queen, seeming to look right at the camera.

More than a decade later, Testino went on to photograph the royal family in depth, often capturing them relaxed and informal in official portraits.