
Peter Lindbergh German, 1944-2019
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Image: 84 x 55 cm / 33 1/8 x 21 5/8 in
Paper: 90 x 60 cm / 35 3/8 x 23 5/8 in
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Edition of 3
180 x 120 cm / 70 7/8 x 47 1/4 in
Mounted on aluminium
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Peter Lindbergh’s 1990 portrait of Helena Christensen, created for Vogue Paris inside a centuries-old Marrakech riad, distills everything that made the German photographer a radical voice in fashion.
Christensen, then just twenty-one, sits barefoot on a polished wooden table; a beaded halter spills down her torso like liquid moonlight, leaving the rest of her body free of ornament. Rather than strike an expected vampish pose, she folds one leg beneath the other and lets her gaze drift sideways, as if interrupted mid-daydream. The gesture turns a potential glamour shot into a moment of quiet self-possession.
Lindbergh surrounds this intimacy with texture and shadow. Ornate cedar doors carved with geometric arabesques rise behind the model; patterned Berber rugs stretch beneath her feet; framed paintings recede into velvety darkness. These details anchor the scene in a tangible world and remind the viewer that fashion is lived, not merely displayed.
In the late eighties and early nineties Lindbergh rejected airbrushed perfection, preferring grain, weather, and the spontaneous attitudes of his subjects. Authenticity, not flawlessness, made beauty memorable. This image embodies that conviction: Christensen’s face shows natural texture, her hair is casually parted, her body language unguarded. She is neither objectified nor remote; she is a character inhabiting a story only half-told.
The picture also announces the dawn of the supermodel era. Lindbergh’s ability to reveal personality elevated models from anonymous mannequins to cultural icons, and Christensen became one of the decade’s defining figures.
More than thirty years later, the photograph retains its magnetism. It feels less like a fashion plate than a still from an unwritten film, inviting us to imagine what came just before the shutter clicked and what might unfold after. That open-ended storytelling is Lindbergh’s enduring legacy: he granted models the dignity of narrative and viewers the privilege of imagination.