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Lisa Fonssagrives
Lisa Fonssagrives.jpg
Born
Lisa Birgitta Bernstone

(1911-05-17)17 May 1911
Died 4 February 1992(1992-02-04) (aged 80)
Other names Lisa Fonssagrives-Penn
Occupation
Spouse(s)
  • Fernand Fonssagrives
    (m. 1935; div. 1949)
  • (m. 1950; her death 1992)
Modeling information
Height 1.70 m (5 ft 7 in)
Hair color Blonde

Lisa Fonssagrives (born Lisa Birgitta Bernstone; 17 May 1911 – 4 February 1992), was a Swedish fashion model widely credited with having been the first supermodel.

Biography

Lisa Fonssagrives at Paddington Station, London, 1951
Fonssagrives at London Paddington station, 1951, by Toni Frissell

Lisa Fonssagrives was born Lisa Birgitta Bernstone on 17 May 1911, in Sweden (variously reported as Gothenburg or Uddevalla) and raised in Uddevalla. As a child, she took up painting, sculpting and dancing. She went to Mary Wigman's school in Berlin and studied art and dance. After returning to Sweden, she opened a dance school. She moved from Sweden to Paris to train for ballet (after participating with choreographer Astrid Malmborg in an international competition) and worked as a private dance teacher with Fernand Fonssagrives, which then led to a modeling career. She would say that modeling was "still dancing". While in Paris in 1936, photographer Willy Maywald discovered her in an elevator and asked her to model hats for him. The photographs were then sent to Vogue, and Vogue photographer Horst took some test photographs of her. In July 1939, she appeared in the German illustrated weekly Der Stern. Before Fonssagrives came to the United States in 1939, she was already a top model. Her image appeared on the cover of many magazines during the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s, including Town & Country, Life, Time, Vogue, and the original Vanity Fair. She was reported as "the highest paid, highest praised, high fashion model in the business". Fonssagrives once described herself as a "good clothes hanger".

She worked with fashion photographers including George Hoyningen-Huene, Man Ray, Horst, Erwin Blumenfeld, George Platt Lynes, Richard Avedon, and Edgar de Evia. She married Parisian photographer Fernand Fonssagrives in 1935; they divorced in 1949 and she married another photographer, Irving Penn, in 1950. She went on to become a sculptor in the 1960s and was represented by the Marlborough Gallery in Manhattan.

Fonssagrives died, aged 80, in New York, survived by her second husband, Irving Penn and her two children: her daughter Mia Fonssagrives-Solow, a fashion and jewelry designer and sculptor who was married to real estate developer and art collector Sheldon Solow, and her son, Tom Penn, a designer.

The Elton John photography collection auction held by Christie's on October 15, 2004, sold a 1950 Irving Penn photograph of his wife, Lisa Fonssagrives, for $57,360.

See also

Kids robot.svg In Spanish: Lisa Fonssagrives para niños

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