www.woman-health.org Homepage Women's Health Gynecology Obstetrics Medline Women's health Guide
default
Search
May 22, 2012
Table of Contents

1 Introduction
Lisa Fonssagrives

Wikipedia

 

Lisa Fonssagrives (May 17, 1911 - February 4, 1992) born Lisa Anderson in Sweden. She was a Model (person)|Model, dancer, fashion designer, photographer and sculpture|sculptor. She brought qualities from each of these talents to her modeling creating a persona at once earthly and larger than life.

Image:LisaFVogue.jpg|200px|thumb|right|Lisa Fonssagrives <br> One of her over 200 covers on Vogue (magazine)|Vogue alone.

Image:LisaFTime.jpg|200px|thumb|right|Lisa Fonssagrives <br> on the cover of Time (magazine)|Time, September 19, 1949.


She is considered by many to be the world's first supermodel and none have surpassed her number of Vogue (magazine)|Vogue covers alone. Very little is known about this Swedish beauty, though her image graced the cover of every fashion magazine during the 1930s, 40s and 50s from Town & Country (magazine)|Town and Country, Life (magazine)|Life, Vogue to the original Vanity Fair (magazine)|Vanity Fair. Her early training in ballet could not be mistaken in the grace and poise for which she was famous. She was photographed by George Hoyningen-Huene, Man Ray, Horst P. Horst|Horst, Erwin Blumenfeld, George Platt Lynes, Richard Avedon, Edgar de Evia, not to mention both of her husbands, Fernand Fonssagrives and Irving Penn.

Image:LisaFdeE.jpg|200px|thumb|left|Lisa Fonssagrives <br> as photographed by<br> Edgar de Evia in his home in the Rhinelander Mansion.


She is known to have described herself as simply a "good clothes hanger." She was so much more. She has been described as 'the highest paid, highest praised, high fashion model in the business'. She moved from Sweden to Paris to train for ballet and she would say that modeling was simply 'still-dancing."

She was both muse and inspiration to the cream of fashion photographers with her seventeen inch waistline. Married first to Parisian photographer Fernand Fonssagrives in 1935 they divorced and in 1950 she married Irving Penn. Asked how she maintained her figure, she always insisted on the importance of eating in small quantities. She would at times consume as many as ten tiny meals a day. To her a tiny meal might mean only six grapes, a single slice of cheese, one cracker and half a glass of wine. Always eating, but never anything much was her motto.

She went on to become a sculptor and was represented by the Marlborough Gallery in Manhattan.

The Elton John photo auction held by Christies on Oct 15, 2004 sold a 1950 Irving Penn photograph of his wife, Swedish model Lisa Fonssagrives, for $57,360.

She died at the age of 81 and was survived by her husband Irving Penn, a daughter Mia Fonssagrives-Solow,who is a costume designer and her former husband Ferdinand Fonssagrives.






"Model" by Michael Gross,
Wm Morrow NY, 1995

"Lisa Fonssagrives: Three Decades of Classic Fashion Photography"
by David Seidner (Editor), Vendome Press,1996

Category:1911 births|Fonssagrives, Lisa
Category:1992 deaths|Fonssagrives, Lisa

Category:Models|Fonssagrives, Lisa
Category:Supermodels|Fonssagrives, Lisa
Category:Swedish models|Fonssagrives, Lisa
Category:Ballerinas|Fonssagrives, Lisa
Category:Fashion design|Fonssagrives, Lisa
Category:Swedish people|Fonssagrives, Lisa


This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Lisa Fonssagrives".


Last Modified:   2005-12-15


Search
All informatin on the site is © www.woman-health.org 2002-2011. Last revised: January 2, 2011
Are you interested in our site or/and want to use our information? please read how to contact us and our copyrights.
To let us provide you with high quality information, you can help us by making a more or less donation: