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Steven Meisel: Iconic

Past exhibition
7 October 2023 - 3 February 2024
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Steven Meisel, Shalom Harlow, New York, 1992.

Steven Meisel American, b. 5/06/1954

Shalom Harlow, New York, 1992.
Archival Pigment Print.
.
Small
Image: 50.8 x 41.9 cm / 20 x 16 1/2 in
Sheet: 61 x 50.8 cm / 24 x 20 in
Edition of 7

Medium
Image: 101.6 x 83.8 cm / 40 x 33 in
Sheet: 106.7 x 88.9 cm / 42 x 35 in
Edition of 6

Large
Image : 152.4 x 125.7 cm / 60 x 49 1/2 in
Sheet : 157.5 x 130.8 cm / 62 x 51 1/2 in
Edition of 3

XL
Image: 178.6 x 147.3 cm / 70 1/4 x 58 in
Sheet: 183.6 x 152.4 cm / 72 1/4 x 60 in
Edition of 1
.
Edition of 17 plus 3 artist's proofs
Hand-signed by artist, titled, numbered and print date in ink label affixed to mount verso.
Shalom Harlow appears suspended between breath and stillness, a young woman caught in the quiet eye of New York’s early‑nineties storm. Her gaze drifts just past the camera, neither inviting...
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Shalom Harlow appears suspended between breath and stillness, a young woman caught in the quiet eye of New York’s early‑nineties storm.


Her gaze drifts just past the camera, neither inviting nor refusing, as if she were listening to something only she can hear. The curve of her neck, the angle of her shoulders, and the measured fall of fabric turn a fleeting moment into a sculpted pause in time.


Steven Meisel frames her with an almost architectural precision, allowing light to skim her skin and gather in the dark of her eyes.


The city is implied rather than shown; New York becomes an invisible partner, pressing in from outside the frame. What remains is an atmosphere of intimate distance, where vulnerability and composure circle one another without ever quite touching.


There is a sense of rehearsal and revelation at once, as though she has just stepped out of character and not yet slipped into herself.


Meisel’s photograph preserves that in‑between state, when identity is fluid and nothing has fully settled. In 1992, with fashion poised between excess and minimalism, Shalom embodies both: a luminous, almost austere beauty, carrying the weight of a decade that has not yet learned its own name.

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