gallery

Revisit Helmut Newton’s Best Magazine Spreads

Queen magazine, 1968.
Queen magazine, 1968. Photo: Helmet Newton

Helmut Newton may be best known for his provocative, sexually charged portraits, but he didn’t shoot what he considered his first nude until 1980. Before that, he’d spent decades shooting for the biggest fashion magazines of his time: Elle, Harper’s Bazaar, and Marie Claire; ‘60s titles like Nova and Queen; and just about every Vogue possible, including French, British, Australian, German, Italian, and American.

Some 500 of his best spreads, spanning the time period from the 1950s to the ‘90s, are now on display at the Helmut Newton Foundation in Berlin. The exhibit comes with a reissue of a book of the same name, Pages From the Glossies, which Newton himself first compiled in 1998. Both keep the photos in their original contexts, so they’re complete with captions, headlines, and even page numbers. Click through the slideshow to see for yourself.

“Helmut Newton: Pages From the Glossies” can be seen along with “Greg Gorman: Color Works” at the Helmut Newton Foundation Museum of Photography in Berlin until May 22, 2016.

Photo: Helmet Newton

French  Vogue

Rio, 1962.

Photo: Helmet Newton

Queen

1968. 

Photo: Helmet Newton

Elle

Dior, 1969.

Photo: Helmet Newton

Nova

1971. 

Photo: Helmet Newton

French Vogue

Melbourne, 1973. 

Photo: Helmet Newton

American Vogue

The Story of O., 1975. 

Photo: Helmet Newton

German Vogue

Berlin, 1979. 

Photo: Helmet Newton

Big Nudes in the lobby of the Helmut Newton Foundation, Berlin. 

Revisit Helmut Newton’s Best Magazine Spreads