Helmut Newton

Exhibition

Photography

Helmut Newton

Past: March 24 → July 30, 2012

Self portrait with wife and models paris 1981 grid Helmut Newton au Grand Palais Du 24 mars au 17 juin 2012, le Grand Palais expose l'oeuvre du photographe Helmut Newton. Contre toute attente, et c’est là que poi... 1 - Pas mal Critique Panorama 04/12 La rédaction vous propose un tour d'horizon à chaud des expositions parisiennes d'avril. Du Musée d’Art Moderne à la galerie Jocelyn Wolff en passant par les galeries nationales du Grand Palais, découvrez 13 expositions passées au crible. 0712 3 grid Panorama 07/12 Du Centre Pompidou au Louvre en passant par le Palais de Tokyo, la rédaction pose un regard sans concession sur les expositions franciliennes du mois de juillet.

Since Helmut Newton’s death (1920 — 2004), there has been no retrospective of his work in France, although he did much of his work there, particularly for the French edition of Vogue.

Provocative, sometimes shocking, Newton’s work tried to capture the beauty, eroticism, humour — and sometimes violence — that he sensed in the social interaction within the familiar worlds of fashion, luxury, money and power.

The exhibition bring together more than two hundred photographs, mostly original or vintage prints made under Helmut Newton’s supervision: Polaroid, working prints in various sizes, monumental works. It will be supported by press records, and a film made by his wife of sixty years, the photographer June Newton: Helmut by June.

It takes a retrospective, thematic angle. Through the major themes in his work: fashion, nudes, portraits, sex and humour, the exhibition seeks to show that Newton was much more than a fashion photographer. His photography shook off all constraints, even though he often worked within the rigid framework of fashion and portraiture. His work is eminently classical, fitting into a very broad view of art. It experiments freely with themes and formats, and presents a unique vision of the contemporary female body.

We used to say of Yves Saint Laurent that his creations had empowered women. The same could be said of Helmut Newton, who was long intimately involved in YSL’s approach, and that was no accident. Nude or in a dinner jacket, Newton’s women are powerful, seductive and dominant — never icy but always impressive or even intimidating. They are liberated women who take full responsibility for the freedom of their bodies, timeless and unclassifiable, open to all fantasies. They are rich women, who have conquered the world and its money, and luxuriate in refinement, from evening gowns to bed. Luxe, classe et volupté could be the motto of the Newtonian woman. When Newton published A World Without Men, he formulated the visionary expression of a society in which women had gained enough power to do without men if need be.

The exhibition does not stop at Newton’s women, but explores the many, sometimes secret fields of his work. Designed by June Newton and punctuated by quotations from the photographer, it will be on both counts “Newton by Newton”.

08 Paris 8 Zoom in 08 Paris 8 Zoom out

3, av du Général Eisenhower

75008 Paris

T. 01 44 13 17 17

Official website

Champs-Élysées – Clemenceau
Franklin D.Roosevelt

Opening hours

The opening hours of the Grand Palais depend on the exhibitions or events that occur there

Admission fee

Plein tarif 11 euros, tarif réduit 8 euros