"Beyond the smoke and mirrors of the runway lies another part of the fashion world." It is there that Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer Lucian Perkins finds the most compelling images: über-waif Kate Moss sipping champagne decked out in an undershirt, jeans, and a bogling network of curled hair extensions. Design maven Isaac Mizrahi fretting over a voluminous skirt. Glamour-pusses Naomi Campbell and Veronica Webb lolling around, waiting for their curlers to set, while the clock ticks at the rate of $250 per hour. Perkins gets up on the runway, too. He turns his camera on his colleagues, who form an impenetrable wall of extra-long lenses and tripods. He looks out into the audience, where he finds the gender-bending RuPaul, Southern belle Dolly Parton, and actress Mira Sorvino parked amid the ubiquitous fashion editors and buyers and socialites. And he follows the impossibly fabulous creatures as they strut their wares down that most glamorous corridor--the runway.
The unusually long and narrow shape of the book is an excellent format for Perkins's atmospheric panoramic shots, and leaves room for quotes by Azzedine Alaia, Coco Chanel, and other fashion fixtures to accompany the smaller images. Readers who don't share original supermodel Iman's fashion ennui--she's quoted as saying she "couldn't get excited about another dress"--should be more than sated by the 100 fantastic photos of frocks, gowns, and shifts in Runway Madness.
The Washington Post Bookworld
Backstage at a fashion show is all about smoke and mirrors: Just look at these photographs of models girding themselves for the runway, pouting at their own reflections, daubing paint on lips, eyes, cheeks, while cigarettes dangle from their limp elegant fingers. Lucian Perkins, a Washington Post staff photographer, won a Pulitzer Prize in 1995; in Runway Madness, he focuses not on the clothes but on the people creating and parading them. The primping, the waiting, the nerves, the backstage champagne, the gossip, the girl talk, the quick sashay down and back: That's the fashion world as captured here by Perkins and Robin Givhan, fashion writer for The Washington Post. Quotes from fashion mavens accompany the photos. 'So what's there to do after the thrill is gone' says model Yasmeen Ghauri. 'Maybe I'll go back to school and study economics or something. Oh, I don't know. Tell 'em I want to be an astronaut.'
Photography Annual
Lucia Perkins, a staff photographer for the Washington Post, has received numerous awards including "Newspaper Photographer of the Year" in 1994, by the National Press Photographers Association for a portfolio that included projects in Russia an his behind-the-scenes fashion work in New York, the focus of Runaway Madness. The New York fashion world seems far removed from war-torn Chechnya, where Perkins photographed a small boy looking out the window of a bus, which won him World Press Photo of the Year in 1996, or the work for which he and Post reporter Leon Dash were awarded a Pulitzer Prize-a four-year study of the effects of poverty on three generations of a Washington, DC family. But he has spent ten years covering New York's fashion shows, often-outlandish, intensely theatrical events which transform New York's Bryant Street Park into a three ring fashion circus every spring and fall. At the end of the 20th Century, when models are modern-day princesses adulterated by the press, given movie-star status and name recognition for wearing clothes prettily, there is no better time or a book like Runaway Madness, which captures with documentary zeal and perfection, the artificial world of fashion. Perkin's photographs blend a subtle sense of humor with a documentarian's eye for the telling moment: a model lets down her guard backstage; a model preening like Narcissus in an available mirror in front of a table cluttered with a myriad of makeup tubes and compacts; fashion editors scrutinizing the shows, their seating arrangement an indication of their status and importance. Despite the constraints evident in shooting a fashion show, and the split-second timing required for an artful composition, Perkin's collection of photographs conveys the hectic energy, excitement and staged spontaneity of the New York shows. Especially striking is a line of models all identically dressed in long white gowns and several close-ups of the astonshing detail of haute couture garments.
Liquid
Beyond the smoke and mirrors of the runway lies another fashion world, one that is raw, not so practiced, rich in passion, but complicated by personalities and human frailties. 'Runway Madness,' by Pulitzer prize-winning photographer Lucian Perkins, with text by Washington Post fashion critic Robin Givhan, is not the typical survey of 'what's hot' for the season. With totally arresting, provocative, and candid photographs, 'Runway Madness' is an irreverent and playful look inside the theatrical media event that is a fashion show.
Runway Madness FROM THE PUBLISHER
The unexpected runway moment, the candid dressingᄑroom expression, the steely eyed scrutiny of the front-row denizens. Runway Madness is a personal invitation to New York's infamous Fashion Week. More than 100 arresting photographs by Pulitzer Prize- winning photographer Lucian Perkinsᄑmany never published until nowᄑtell the behind-the-scenes story of this unparalleled fashion event. Perkins captures the models up-close and personal: Kate Moss without make-up, Naomi Campbell in curlers, and Shalom Harlow, Amber Valetta, Christy Turlington, and many others in high pomp as well as unguarded circumstance. Also exposed are the fashion editors and buyers, journalists, and stars whose high-visibility presence is essential. Quotes from fashion insiders provide a running commentary and captions by Washington Post fashion writer Robin Givhan explain each image. The beat, the lights, the cascade of beauty and color: this is not only a performance, but also a performance art. Long and lean like the runway itself, Runway Madness is the total high fashion experience.