Diana Vreeland
Throughout her career, Vreeland’s vision generated inspiring and revolutionary images in collaboration with great photographers including Richard Avedon & Cecil Beaton, and models including Peggy Moffitt & the freshly “discovered” Lauren Bacall.
After living in Europe for many years, Vreeland returned to New York and started working for Harper’s Bazaar in 1936 as a columnist.
Impressing the editor Carmel Snow, she progressed to fashion editor working at the magazine until 1962.
Vreeland became editor-in-chief of Vogue magazine in 1963 and helmed the magazine until 1971, after which she consulted for the Costume Institute at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York where she hired André Leon Talley as an apprentice in 1974.
The impact of Diana Vreeland on fashion cannot be overestimated – her work at Harper’s Bazaar and Vogue brought a breath of fresh air to fashion editorials.
Diana Vreeland Pop Art
Available in A4, A3, and A2 sizes to fit standard-size picture frames. Please note that black frame is not included – for a guide on choosing a frame size take a look here.
This illustrated print is part of the new collection of stylish pop art prints, exclusively by Art & Hue, inspired by Fashion Editors and features Art & Hue’s signature halftone style (halftone is an age-old technique that uses dots to make up the printed image, similar to newspapers or comic books) along with graphic blocks of colour.
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