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JEAN-LOUP SIEFF DEAD
01 October 2000


Cet article se compose de 2 pages.
1 2
French photographer Jean-Loup Sieff died from cancer in Paris on September 20th 2000 aged 66.

Born to Polish parents in November 1933 in Paris, Jean-Loup Sieff took up photography at a very young age and first worked as an amateur reporter before working for the Woman's magazine “Elle” in 1950. He then joined the Magnum agency for a brief period but did not like his job much though his talent rewarded him with the Niepce Prize.

Preferring beautiful girls, glamour and fashion, he decided to work as an independent photographer working for “The Jardin des Modes” magazine during the early 1960s. He then had Helmut Newton and Frank Horvat as rivals and invented a new way of showing women in their best attires.

Sieff settled in the U.S in 1961 and was at 27 one of the few French photographers who managed to become successful there. He notably worked for “Harper's Bazaar”, “Glamour”, “Esquire” and “Ladies Home Journal” as for “Vogue” in Europe.

Back in France in 1966, Sieff was taking great pleasure taking shots of top models and nudes. Considered as one of the best fashion photographers, he won many prizes at a time when photography was not associated to art.

While the years passed by, Sieff adopted a more severe style playing with black and white contrasts and gave a new turn to his career in 1977 when he showed an interest in landscape photography after working in the Death Valley.

Sieff produced the portraits of many stars such as Charlotte Rampling, Alfred Hitchcock, Catherine Deneuve, Howard Hawks, Nureev, Jean-Paul Sartre or Kirk Douglas among others.

But above all he showed remarkable skills in photographing female nudes with chiaroscuro effects. He really loved women and did all he could to exhale their beauties often giving a priority to black and white.

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