JEAN FRANÇOIS LEPAGE

High fashion photographer and stunning artist

Lookfilter Magazine
5 min readOct 7, 2015

first appeared on Lookfilter.com

FASHION, PAINTINGS AND STAPLES

Lepage is a high fashion photographer and artist at the same time. The French photographer, born in 1960 in Paris, started his career more than twenty years ago. Whilst working for countless fashion and lifestyle magazine — Harper’s Bazar, GQ, Vogue are just a few to name — he developed his unique style and created amazing looks.

Mixing his artistic view on the world, which seems strongly influenced by painting, drawing and reminds of cinematographic elements or sceneries, with high fashion results in images that are truly stunning and most of all not “typically fashion”.

Some even say he invented the genre completely new.

© Jean François Lepage

In some of Lepage’s pictures the models seem the live in their own worlds, lost in their thoughts rather hovering in the frame of the image than being part of it, even though it’s all about them. They are isolated from everything around them. Other pictures look like Lepage is working against this separation: drawings, paintings and graphics and even staples unify model and environment… at least at first sight.

Jean-François Lepage’s pictures and his style definitely inspire your imagination — no matter if you think of them as fashion or fine art or a mixture of both.

© Jean François Lepage

Learn even more about Monsieur Lepage in the following interview it tells you more about his intentions, what inspires him and what he thinks about his style. Thanks for answering our questions, Jean-François.

Who or what inspired you to take up photography?

Jean: Painting has always and still influences photographers as it’s the birth of visual arts. Four hundred years before the invention photography, Pieter Bruegel was already capturing movements and framing like photographers do. However, at the end of the 19th century photography has clearly influenced painting this time, because of photography some painters were seeing the world differently. We can figure out clearly in Degas works and later in the works of Edward Hopper.

© Jean François Lepage

When I was a teenager my uncle offered me 3 books of 3 photographers, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Eugene Smith and Robert Frank.

Those photographers are still part of my creative process, they are my base, my foundations because they reach, without the purpose of being artists, simplicity and truth. I love painting, movies and photography, because this 3 mediums have in common the ability to reveal us instants and moments of life we don’t see clearly with our eyes.

What equipment/camera do you use?

Jean: I work with 4X5 or 8X10 cameras.

© Jean François Lepage

Why do you concentrate on people?

Jean: For the moment I make mostly fashion pictures and even if I like still life photography, I rather prefer to photograph people.

How many hours do you spend on editing your pictures and how much time do you actually have for „taking photos“?

Jean: I make very few images to get my photographs, so my editing is extremely fast. I shoot most of the time between 4 or 6 photos a day and when I get one or two good images, I’m happy.

© Jean François Lepage

Do you prefer digital or analogue photography?

Jean: As I’m shooting with big format cameras, for now, I’m still shooting with films. I follow the evolution of digital photography and I’m pretty sure I will, one day, find my way to work with digital. There is no rush about it…digital is clearly the future of photography. At the end a good photographs is a good photographs whatever the technique used.

How would you describe your look / your style in five words?

Jean: Paradoxal — Paradoxal — Paradoxal — Paradoxal — Paradoxal

What was the best advise you ever received?

Jean: Most people who give you advise care about you. I’ve never listened to advise, not because I don’t care about people but because most of the time those advices are to reasonable and reasonable thinks are the beginning of immobility. I would recommend to a young photographer to follow his intuitions and translate, all advise he will inevitably get, into his own way. We are all different and we need to take many different roads sometimes to reach our own universe.

How do you recognize the perfect moment? Can you actually feel it?

Jean: I often say that perfection is the opposite of what I’m looking for, I like to improvise and built images in a sort of non-organize situation. For me, making each new image is a puzzle of many pieces to join together in a certain laps of time and of course it’s never the same puzzle.

© Jean François Lepage

Can you see the world with “non-photographer eyes”?

Jean: Yes, yes, yes, I’m only concentrated on making images when I have my camera near by…and my camera is big!, So most of the time I don’t have it with me.

© Jean François Lepage

If you had the chance to meet a person of your wish who would it be? And what would you ask?

Jean: Albert Einstein: ‘Can you give me a bit of your IQ?’

See more of his stunning work

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This article first appeared on Lookfilter.com

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