Tatjana Patitz
Tatjana Patitz (born 25 May 1966) is a German model and actress who achieved international prominence in the 1980s and 1990s representing fashion designers on runways and in magazines such as Elle, Harper's Bazaar, and Vogue.[2][3] Patitz is one of the big five[4][5][6][7] supermodels who appeared in the 1990 music video "Freedom! '90" by George Michael,[8] and is associated with the editorial, advertising, and fine-art works of photographers Herb Ritts and Peter Lindbergh.[9][10][11]
Tatjana Patitz | |
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Tatjana Patitz Personality Award 2005 | |
Born | Hamburg, Germany | May 25, 1966
Occupation |
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Modeling information | |
Height | 1.80 m (5 ft 11 in) |
Hair color | Dark blonde |
Eye color | Blue |
Agency |
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In his 2015 book Models of Influence: 50 Women Who Reset The Course of Fashion, Nigel Barker reflected on Patitz's modeling career during the height of the supermodel era in the 1980s and 1990s, writing that Patitz possessed an exoticism and broad emotional range that set her apart from her peers.[12] In her 2012 memoir, creative director of Vogue Grace Coddington regarded Patitz as one of the original supermodels and a must in photographs and on the catwalk.[13] Harper's Bazaar wrote, "Indeed, Patitz's features almost confuse. Like Garbo or the Mona Lisa, the inexplicable gifts of line and luminescence defy definition."[14] Vogue editor-in-chief Anna Wintour[15] stated that Patitz had always been one of her favorite models.[16] Patitz's work bridged the eras of the exhibitionist 1980s and the minimalist 1990s in an enduring way, as Barker concluded, "The most lasting images of her are when she was really looking like herself."[17] As noted by author Linda Sivertsen, Patitz is greatly responsible for establishing the acceptance of statuesque and curvaceous beauty in an industry of extreme thinness.[18]
Today, Patitz is an avid horsewoman who continues her lifelong passion for animals and the environment by campaigning for ecological causes and animal rights.[19] Her self-described eclectic and bohemian design aesthetic for residential architecture and home design in her adoptive home state of California has been recognized internationally.[20][21][22][23]
Early life
Patitz was born in Hamburg, Germany[24] and raised in Skanör, Sweden. Her father is German and his job as a travel journalist allowed his family to travel and live in different countries.[25] Patitz's mother is Estonian and was a dancer who performed at the world famous Le Lido in Paris.[26] Patitz, whose parents met at a wine tasting in a bodega in Spain while her mother was a student traveling with a modern dance company, has said that her parents' romance is a case of two people falling in love and spending the rest of their lives together.[27] Patitz learned to ride horses at the age of seven.[28] During the summers, she found respite at her family's summer vacation home in Mallorca, where she participated in horse camps.[29]
Career
1980s
In 1983 at the age of 17, Patitz entered and became a finalist in the Elite Model Look (formerly known as Elite Models' "Look of the Year" contest), and based on a Polaroid, she was placed third by Elite Model Management founder John Casablancas.[30] Patitz won a contract and moved to Paris to begin working as a model.[31] Though not an immediate success,[32] by 1985, Patitz worked regularly and at the end of that year, she modelled for the cover of British Vogue,[33] her first major cover.
That year she began to work with photographer Peter Lindbergh with whom she cultivated a 30-year collaborative relationship which contributed to the launch of the supermodel era.[34][35][36][37][38][39] In his book, 10 Women, Lindbergh wrote, "I admire Tatjana because she always stays herself. She's very soft, but at the same time she's very strong and knows how to stand up for what she thinks, and it's always very enriching to be with her. It's impossible not to admire her and over the years not to be just a little bit in love with her."[40]
Patitz's work in Europe led her to New York where she worked for Vogue and such photographers as Irving Penn, Helmut Newton, Steven Meisel, Denis Piel, Sheila Metzner, and Wayne Maser. She also worked with Gilles Bensimon at Elle and Francesco Scavullo at Cosmopolitan.
The December 1985 issue of Vogue featured Irving Penn's photograph, "Colored Contact Lenses", showing Patitz wearing contact lenses over closed eyelids.[41] The image would later be featured in the 1992 book "On The Edge: Images from 100 Years of Vogue" as one of the iconic photographs of the era.[42]
In 1986, she appeared on two covers of the Italian edition of Vogue[43] and continued to be featured in editorials in the American and British editions of Vogue. Patitz appeared in campaigns for Calvin Klein photographed by Bruce Weber,[44] and in 1987 for Revlon's "The Most Unforgettable Women in the World" campaign photographed by Richard Avedon.[45] Avedon also photographed Patitz for her first cover of American Vogue (May 1987), which is regarded as one of the definitive covers of the 1980s.[46] Vogue began regularly including Patitz's name on the pages of fashion editorials as early as 1987, familiarizing readers not only with her face, but also with her personality.[47]
During this period, Patitz met Los Angeles-based photographer Herb Ritts, with whom she shared another significant and enduring collaboration in fashion, fine art, and commercial work,[48] like a muse playing any role he suggested - mermaid, sprite, surfer girl, plainswoman, movie star.[49] Ritts said of Patitz, "Her features are a bit off; she's not a typical, commercial beauty, but when I shoot her, I'm never bored. Her looks have power, strength, intensity."[50] Patitz was the subject of Tatjana Veiled Head (Tight View), Joshua Tree 1988, one of Ritts' most celebrated works.[51]
As Patitz's career escalated, she was credited with expanding ideals of female beauty.[52] Patitz and a select group of individual-looking, business-minded, high-profile fashion models emerged and came to be known as the original supermodels.[53][54] An image of Patitz with other models laughing on the beach was photographed by Peter Lindbergh for Vogue during this period. Titled "White Cotton Shirts", the photograph is regarded as an iconic fashion photograph[55][56] and was accompanied by an article that singled out Patitz for her "astonishing presence",[57] praising her "uncosmeticised womanliness, new and important in the 1980s."
At just shy of six feet tall, Teutonically self-composed, and dominating any room she cared to walk into [sic], Tatjana was the biggest beast in the seething jungle; Vogue amplified the comparison by fixating on her lynx-like eyes, impossibly blue and curved around the temples like a cat's. - From Vogue Model: The Faces of Fashion[58]
In another 1988 Vogue article titled "Tatjana: Million Dollar Beauty", Patitz's creative team shared their impressions of her: "In pictures, her sensitivity is what comes through; something delicate, fragile, exciting. It's a strange mixture of lazy sensuality and moments of intense emotion," said John Casablancas, president of Elite Model Management.[59] "It's hard to get a bad picture of Tatjana. She's very photogenic, which is very rare, and she looks different in every light," added photographer Patrick Demarchelier. "While some models develop one look, she has many."[60]
Her versatility was exemplified by the changing of her hair color and style with each passing year during the late 1980s, from short-haired brunette to tawny mane to long and blond.[61][62] For an April 1989 editorial titled "Earthly Powers" in British Vogue, hair stylist Didier Malige cut and restyled Patitz's foot-long blonde hair into a cropped shag just above her shoulders.[63][64][65] "Once I cut my hair - I cried for two months," Patitz told Esquire magazine. "People said, 'We can't believe she cut her hair.'"[66] But the move[67] won Patitz covers of British and French editions of Vogue featuring her new look.[62][68] The pinnacle of that year came in July and August when Patitz was awarded with consecutive covers of American Vogue. Being on Vogue's cover two months in a row was an unprecedented achievement for a model of that time and an innovation for the recently revamped Vogue under the leadership of new editor-in-chief Anna Wintour. This period was the zenith of Patitz's career, known as "the era of Tatjana"[69] in the fashion industry - a whirlwind time when she seemed destined to walk away with the title of supermodel herself.[70]
At this point, being in such demand required constant travel for Patitz, who flew 40 flights in one month alone.[71] In an effort to live a healthier and more balanced lifestyle, Patitz began slowing down her modeling career to focus on other creative pursuits such as writing, acting, and meditation.[72] She relocated to California and made Los Angeles her homebase.[73] The move afforded Patitz, who had always searched for creative and spiritual growth, the time and space to develop other aspects of her life.
"I don't want to do anything for fame or money or glamour or anything like that...I think people are coming to a higher awareness in the world. Everything is polluted - the oceans, the forests...and people are killing each other all over the place without realizing that we all belong together and have to share this place. Maybe I'm dreaming, but I'm hopeful." - Tatjana Patitz, Model Magazine, December 1989[74]
1990s
In the final months of 1989, Patitz was photographed with other top models in two portraits that would become defining images of the supermodel era of the 1990s: "Stephanie, Cindy, Christy, Tatjana, Naomi, Hollywood, 1989" by Herb Ritts;[75] and Peter Lindbergh's cover of the January 1990 issue of British Vogue.[76][77][78]
1990 began with Patitz gracing the January covers of both American and British Vogue.[79] She shared the British Vogue cover with Naomi Campbell, Cindy Crawford, Linda Evangelista, and Christy Turlington; the portrait of the five women is regarded as the cover that sparked the supermodel phenomenon of the 1990s,[80][81] helping each woman attain global appeal.[82][83][84] The cover inspired singer George Michael to cast Patitz, Crawford, Evangelista, Turlington and Campbell in his music video for the song "Freedom! '90" which was directed by David Fincher. Michael did not appear in the video; instead, each woman would lip-synch the song in Michael's place.[85] While Patitz and her co-stars were already the top stars in the fashion world, they won major recognition for their beauty and charisma outside of it too.[86][87] The music video was programmed into heavy rotation on MTV,[88] going on to transcend the worlds of pop culture, music, and fashion in the 1990s and remaining influential and iconic[89] in the decades to come.[90][91][92][93]
Settled in Los Angeles, Patitz continued to manage her modeling career while studying acting.[95] She work mostly with Ritts, Lindbergh and Maser but was sought after by the industry's leading female photographers such as Peggy Sirota, Ellen Von Unwerth, Pamela Hanson and Sheila Metzner as well as new photographers such as Mario Sorrenti and Juergen Teller. Los Angeles-based photographers Phillip Dixon and Matthew Rolston also frequently photographed Patitz for Harper's Bazaar. Rolston said of Patitz: "I look for more than beauty. There must be a memorable quality. Tatjana has it more than anyone else. She sticks in your mind. There's a depth, an emotional quality to her that's truly extraordinary. She's very dear, charming and extremely feminine. She's very open and her priorities are natural things - animals, the sea, the environment. That's what's so interesting about her. She's not what she seems."[96]
As the decade progressed, Patitz worked in advertising campaigns and on runways[97] for such top fashion houses as Chanel, Versace, Salvatore Ferragamo, Valentino (fashion designer), Karl Lagerfeld, Helmut Lang (fashion brand), Donna Karan, Jean Paul Gaultier, and Vivienne Westwood.[98] Most notably, Patitz was the long-standing face of Jil Sander, representing the designer's minimalist style for a generation of fashion readers[99] in era-defining ad campaigns photographed by Nick Knight.[100][101]
Patitz also shared another cover with the supermodels of the era for the centennial issue of American Vogue (April 1992) photographed by Patrick Demarchelier.[102] Also in 1992, it was announced that Patitz had won an exclusive cosmetics contract with Germaine Monteil makeup and perfumes.[103] In an interview with Harper's Bazaar, Monteil's Vice President of Marketing Worldwide, Susan Wells noted that the cosmetics company searched for a woman with a globally recognized name and beauty who had an accessible face that women could relate to.[104]
Patitz appeared on over 200 magazine covers worldwide, including seven covers of American Vogue and thirteen covers of British Vogue. French, Italian, German, Spanish, and Australian editions of Vogue have also featured Patitz on their covers and in editorials photographed by photographers such as Max Vadukul, Sante D'Orazio, Mikael Jannson, Arthur Elgort, Hans Feurer, Walter Chin, and Javier Vallhonrat. International editions of Vogue and Elle have also profiled Patitz for her signature home design and decor style including a cover story for the April 1997 edition of Elle Decor UK.[105]
2000s
Patitz began the new millennium continuing to work with top photographers at major fashion magazines such as the 2000 editorial in Vogue Italia titled, "Magnetic" by Paolo Roversi.[106] In the May/June 2000 issue of V (American magazine) Patitz was photographed by Inez and Vinoodh in a series of portraits with fellow supermodels Christy Turlington, Stephanie Seymour and Iman. Patitz also joined Chinese supermodel and actress Qu Ying at an exhibition in Beijing for Longines,[107] a brand Patitz would represent throughout the decade.[108] She also returned to the cover of Harper's Bazaar for its Chinese edition.[109]
In 2001, she was the face of the Jil Sander No. 4 fragrance campaign[110] as well as being the cover star of the July issue of Elle UK[111] and the September issue of Italian Elle.[112] Peter Lindbergh, Patitz's most frequent collaborator, photographed her for the Spring/Summer 2003 Kookai campaign.[113]
In 2004, Patitz gave birth to her son, Jonah[114] who would go on to join his mother on many editorial shoots including "The Great Escape" for American Vogue's August 2012 issue[115] and "Family Matters" in the December 2019 issue.[116] Also in 2004, Patitz starred in the Fall/Winter campaign for Jigsaw, photographed by Juergen Teller[117] and Sand Copenhagen.[118] Teller would include Patitz in his portfolio on fashion's original cover models for the September 2006 issue of W Magazine.[119] The series of portraits is notable for the inclusion of fashion icons throughout different eras and decades, including Cheryl Tiegs, Christie Brinkley, Paulina Porizkova and Shalom Harlow. Patitz's contemporaries such as Naomi Campbell, Stephanie Seymour, Cindy Crawford and Christy Turlington are also included.
Patitz continued to be an advocate for animal rights by filming a PSA in 2007 for Orangutan Outreach[120] and appealing for the protection of orangutans in the rain forests of Borneo, Indonesia.
Still representing cosmetics brands and designers such as L'Oréal[121] and Uniqlo[122] Patitz returned to the runway for Helmut Lang, including his Fall/Winter 2000 presentation, regarded by Vogue as one of the most unforgettable fashion shows of all time.[123]
In July 2008, Patitz's interior design style was celebrated in the publication Livingetc[124] for using recycled materials such as reclaimed timber and stone which she found by scouring salvage yards - from limestone kitchen floors to wooden ceiling beams and staircase. [125]
Patitz closed out the decade by returning to the runway in 2009 for designer Jean Paul Gaultier, closing his Fall/Winter collection for Hermes during the finale.[126]
2010s
In the new decade, the scope of Patitz's work focused on issues relating to inclusivity,[127] HIV awareness,[128] LGBTQ rights,[129] age,[130] and gender equality[131] while remaining in the pages and on the covers of Vogue, Marie Claire and Elle.[132] Notably, Patitz's work and career were examined in articles by a new generation of distinguished writers such as Chloe Malle[133] and Janelle Okwodu,[134] who recognized Patitz for her enduring legacy in projecting different representations of women.[135]
When Karl Lagerfeld staged his "Coco on the Lido" 2010 cruise collection on the boardwalk along the Venice Lido, he cast Patitz as an Edwardian mother[136] to poetically reinvent the mystique of Coco Chanel's favorite locales.[137] At the conclusion of the show, Lagerfeld escorted Patitz for the finale.[138]
In 2011 and now in her 40s, Patitz made industry headlines when she was chosen as the spokesmodel to front the cosmetics campaign for the global brand Shiseido.[139]
The following year, Vogue Paris included Patitz in a black and white portfolio with Lauren Hutton, Stephanie Seymour and Daria Werbowy that celebrated examples of timeless elegance and beauty.[140][141] Photographed by Inez and Vinoodh, the editorial was highlighted in the media by such publications as W Magazine.[142]
Numéro China featured Patitz on its cover for its February 2013 issue.[143] The simple yet powerful headline read Woman and was accompanied by a 20-page editorial photographed by Philip Dixon.[144] The age-defying traits of femininity, strength of character, and enterprising talent were lauded the next year in a special issue of Vogue Italia titled Women of Today that placed Patitz among her colleagues such as Anjelica Houston, Julia Ormond and Karen Alexander.[145]
In 2014, Patitz starred in an international advertising campaign with actress Jane Fonda and model Doutzen Kroes for L’Oreal Age Perfect that celebrated three generations of timeless women.[146][147]
In the middle of the decade, Patitz was reunited with Peter Lindbergh for a new group editorial commissioned by Franca Sozzani the editor of Italian Vogue.[148] Titled "In Love With..." the pictorial celebrated Lindbergh's most frequent subjects, the 1990s supermodels, for Vogue's 2015 September issue.[149] As noted by writer Suzy Menkes in French Vogue, "This set of pictures...seems more intense in the refusal to follow the tools of today’s beauty trade - postproduction, a computerized smoothing, hair tidied, wrinkles removed. Refusing to bow to glossy perfection is Peter Lindbergh's trademark – the essence of the images that look into each person's unvarnished soul, however familiar or famous the sitter." A short film, titled "The Reunion," was also produced and made headlines worldwide for Lindbergh's celebration of maturing beauty.[150][151][152] The following year, Lindbergh advanced his mission of expanding ideals of beauty and representation when he grouped Patitz with actress Andie MacDowell and models Helena Christensen, Karen Alexander and Amber Valletta to front a campaign for cosmetics brand L'Oréal Paris, saying "It should be the responsibility of photographers today to free women and finally everyone, from the terror of youth and perfection."[153] In an interview about the shifting norms in the advertising industry, Patitz commented, "You don't want to see the plastic-fantastic faces of some celebrities today. That's not a role model for young girls; that's not a role model for an older woman, either."[154]
2020s
Entering her 5th decade in fashion, Patitz garnered praise not only for her years of work but also for her elusiveness, with Vogue articles such as "Who Was Tatjana Patitz, The Most Mysterious Of The Original Supers?",[155] “'True West' Is the Fashion Fix You Need After Months of Lockdown"[156] and Harper's Bazaar's "The 21 Top Supermodels That Dominated Fashion in the '90s"[157] that were published during the global pandemic of 2020. The year also marked the 30th anniversary of George Michael's "Freedom! '90", regarded by Spin Magazine as the 15th most iconic music video of all time.[158]
As one of the "Original Supermodels",[159][160][161] she has never stopped working[162] and remains in demand - periodically returning to the runway for select designers, such as Etro, Jean-Paul Gaultier and Chanel.[163]
Acting and other appearances
In 1987, she appeared in the Duran Duran music video for "Skin Trade" which charted on Billboard's Hot 100. In 1988, she appeared in the Nick Kamen music video for "Tell Me". Patitz then starred in George Michael's "Freedom! '90" music video with Cindy Crawford, Christy Turlington, Linda Evangelista, and Naomi Campbell in 1990, regarded as one of the greatest videos of all time by Spin (magazine),[164] Parade,[165] and Billboard (magazine).[166] In 2000, she appeared in the Korn music video for the song "Make Me Bad," a top 10 hit on Billboard's Mainstream Rock Songs chart.
Patitz has appeared in international television commercials for Cartier,[167] Revlon,[168] Levi (jeans),[169] DuPont Luxura,[170] Pantene,[171] Dockers,[172] Ralph Lauren[173] and the iconic Vauxhall Corsa[174] commercial directed by Tarsem Singh and starring supermodels Campbell, Turlington, Evangelista, and Kate Moss.[175]
Her first major film appearance was as a murder victim in Rising Sun (1993). Following this, Patitz had appearances on television series such as "The Single Guy" and "The Larry Sanders Show."[176] Her largest role was in the 1999 thriller Restraining Order.
Along with Michael J. Fox, she appeared in the 2011 Carl Zeiss AG calendar, photographed by Bryan Adams in New York City in the summer of 2010.[177]
Personal life
In 1989, Patitz went to live on a ranch in Malibu, California where in 2009 she was reported to have four horses, four dogs and two cats, commenting "I needed nature around me". She has a son, Jonah, who was born in 2004, and is separated from his father, a marketing executive.[3]
Patitz is vegetarian.[178]
References
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...what's interesting about these latest graduates to the highest echelons of modeling is how little they conform to stereotype. Each girl is an individual. An identifiable character on the page. Some - like Tatjana Patitz and Rachel Williams - are even slightly odd-looking, but what they all share is an uncosmeticised womanliness, new an important in the eighties...The logic of their ample, amplified individuality says, 'Don't try to be like me - be yourself', a reflection of the self-assurance of women today
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...Tatjana - always the chameleon - appears to have refashioned herself...
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Tatjana Patitz was photographed on a beach losing her blonde tresses to hairdresser Didier Malige
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Tatjana recently decided to work a little less and to concentrate on studying acting
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