So cool to be in this month's @i_d, shot by all women photographers, and this special story where 21 models with long careers reflect on our job. It was totally interesting for me to think about the last decade+ and I can't wait to hear what the other women said! Highlights from my interview below ➡️ ➡️ ➡️ What do you think about when you’re in front of the camera? Sometimes this can be a very intimate relationship. We don't often spend time with people without speaking, but this is what being in front of the camera is -- being silent, finding a way to communicate, to build a relationship, to be someone, without words. There is a lot of vulnerability in that. Not to mention it's a very physical expression, which is something we don't have a lot in our society. Someone is watching you breathe, is watching you move, is watching your lips open. They are very close to you, they are paying close attention to you. It's easy to go on auto pilot when you've been a model for a long time, but you also have an understanding of the relationship that's happening in a way that's really special, and if you trust the people you're working with, especially the photographer, you can tap into that. ➡️ ➡️ ➡️ What are the differences – if any – between being shot by a female photographer rather than a male? I've shot with fewer than ten female photographers during my entire career so it's hard to say. I have worked with incredible women and men, and women and men who have a lot of work to do before they take good photos! It’s important to think about diversity beyond the male/female binary. We need to be asking: Whose perspectives are we missing? Who gets to be creative? How do we make space for non-conformity? Who is thoughtful, inclusive, provocative, subversive? Who uses fashion to promote sustainability of environment, of culture, of self?

cameronrussellさん(@cameronrussell)が投稿した動画 -

キャメロン・ラッセルのインスタグラム(cameronrussell) - 8月25日 21時43分


So cool to be in this month's @i-D, shot by all women photographers, and this special story where 21 models with long careers reflect on our job. It was totally interesting for me to think about the last decade+ and I can't wait to hear what the other women said! Highlights from my interview below ➡️ ➡️ ➡️ What do you think about when you’re in front of the camera?

Sometimes this can be a very intimate relationship. We don't often spend time with people without speaking, but this is what being in front of the camera is -- being silent, finding a way to communicate, to build a relationship, to be someone, without words. There is a lot of vulnerability in that. Not to mention it's a very physical expression, which is something we don't have a lot in our society. Someone is watching you breathe, is watching you move, is watching your lips open. They are very close to you, they are paying close attention to you. It's easy to go on auto pilot when you've been a model for a long time, but you also have an understanding of the relationship that's happening in a way that's really special, and if you trust the people you're working with, especially the photographer, you can tap into that. ➡️ ➡️ ➡️ What are the differences – if any – between being shot by a female photographer rather than a male?

I've shot with fewer than ten female photographers during my entire career so it's hard to say. I have worked with incredible women and men, and women and men who have a lot of work to do before they take good photos! It’s important to think about diversity beyond the male/female binary. We need to be asking: Whose perspectives are we missing? Who gets to be creative? How do we make space for non-conformity? Who is thoughtful, inclusive, provocative, subversive? Who uses fashion to promote sustainability of environment, of culture, of self?


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