![]() ![]() ![]() Everyone had a place - Yves was the designer, my father was the photographer, François-Xavier and Claude Lalanne were the sculptors, François-Marie Banier, the writer. “My father was really close with Yves Saint Laurent and Pierre Bergé, and a handful of other people in their group - Loulou de la Falaise, Betty and François Catroux, Hélène Rochas, Thadée Klossowski, Fernando Sánchez, and Paloma Picasso - whom they saw regularly over the course of a few years,” Sonia told us. “They were all really, really creative. “Marvelous, because he took good care of my brother and me … He taught us about the beauty in the world.” Long before Sonia’s birth, Jeanloup made his first fashion photo in 1952, and he spent the next two decades working for French Elle, Harper’s Bazaar, Queen, Jardin des Modes, and Vogue, producing some of the iconic images for which he’s now known - like Astrid Heeren, cigarillo-in-mouth, in Palm Beach.īy the seventies, Jeanloup’s studio doubled as a salon for Paris’s boldface names. “Marvelous,” said Sonia Sieff, when asked about her childhood with the late Jeanloup Sieff, her father and one of France’s great fashion photographers. ![]()
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