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Bruce Weber (photographer)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bruce Weber
Weber in 2011
Born (1946-03-29) March 29, 1946 (age 78)
Occupation(s)Photographer, filmmaker
SpouseNan Bush

Bruce Weber (born March 29, 1946) is an American fashion photographer[1] and filmmaker[2] known for his work with fashion brands and magazines.

His ad campaigns include projects for Calvin Klein, Ralph Lauren,[3] Pirelli,[4] Abercrombie & Fitch, Revlon, Miu Miu,[5] Armani,[6] Louis Vuitton[7] and Gianni Versace. His editorial work has appeared in Vogue, GQ, Vanity Fair, Elle, Life, Interview, and Rolling Stones magazines.

Weber has also directed several films, including "Let's Get Lost" (1988), a documentary about jazz musician Chet Baker, and "Chop Suey" (2001), a portrait of a wrestler. "Let's Get Lost" received an Academy Award nomination for Best Documentary Feature and a Cinecritica Award at the Venice Film Festival.[8]

Weber is also the founder and co-owner of Little Bear Press, which publishes books and the independent arts magazine All-American.[9]

Weber has been accused of sexual assault by more than 20 models, and has been the subject of three lawsuits[10], all of which have reached settlements.[11]

He currently resides in Miami[12][13] and is married to Nan Bush [de], who is also his agent.[14][15]

Life and work

[edit]

Weber was born in Greensburg, Pennsylvania, to a Jewish family.[16] His fashion photography first appeared in the late 1970s in GQ magazine, where he had frequent cover photos. Nan Bush, his longtime companion and agent, was able to secure a contract with Federated Department Stores to shoot the 1978 Bloomingdales mail catalog. He came to the attention of the general public in the late 1980s and early 1990s with his advertising images for Calvin Klein.[17] He was first approached by Klein to work on an underwear campaign, and Weber took inspiration from Herbert List's shoot in Santorini.[18] His straightforward black-and-white shots, featuring an unclothed woman and man on a swing facing each other, two clothed men in bed, and model Marcus Schenkenberg suggestively holding jeans in front of himself in a shower, catapulted them both into the national spotlight.[18][19] His photograph for Calvin Klein of Olympic athlete Tom Hintnaus in white briefs is an iconic image.[20][21] He photographed the winter 2006 Ralph Lauren Collection.

A Weber photograph in the background on display at an Abercrombie and Fitch store

Some of Weber's earliest fashion photography appeared in the SoHo Weekly News and featured a spread of men wearing only underwear. The photos became the center of controversy and Weber was told by some that he would never find work as a fashion photographer again. This reputation stuck with him as he says: "I don't really work editorially in a large number of magazines because a lot of magazines don't want my kind of photographs. It's too risky for them."[22][17][23]

After doing photo shoots for and of famous people (many of whom were featured in Andy Warhol's Interview magazine), Weber made short films of teenage boxers (Broken Noses),[2][24] his beloved pet dogs, and later, a longer film entitled Chop Suey.[25][26] He directed Let's Get Lost, a 1988 documentary about jazz trumpeter Chet Baker.[27][28]

Weber's photographs are occasionally in color; however, most are in black and white or shades of a tone.[2] They appear in compilations in books including A House is Not a Home,[29] as well as Bear Pond and Gentle Giants. The latter two are books of his photographs of his pet dogs.[30]

Weber began collaborating with crooner Chris Isaak in the mid-1980s, photographing Isaak in 1986 for his second album, Chris Isaak. In 1988, Weber photographed a shirtless Isaak in bed for a fashion spread in Rolling Stone.[31] Isaak appeared in Let's Get Lost and Weber has directed a music video for Isaak. Weber photographed Harry Connick, Jr. for his 1991 album Blue Light, Red Light. In 1993, Weber photographed singer-songwriter Jackson Browne for his 1993 album I'm Alive.

Weber at Condé Nast publishing house in Milan

Filmmaking

[edit]

Weber's cinematic works—including his five feature-length films—often begin with a photo sitting. "All my films begin from finding someone I want to take a photograph of,"[32] Weber told the Sunday Times of London in 2008.

Broken Noses (1987)

While he was photographing the Olympic hopefuls for Interview Magazine in 1984, Weber met Andy Minsker, a young boxer from Oregon, and started interviewing him on camera.[8] While he originally intended to make a short to accompany an exhibition he was opening in Paris, Weber became very excited when he reviewed the dailies and decided to continue the story.[8] Broken Noses (1987), the resulting feature documentary, was nominated for the Grand Jury Award at Sundance in 1988.[8]

Let's Get Lost (1988)

As Weber was completing work on Broken Noses, he met the jazz trumpeter and vocalist Chet Baker and began filming him, again with a mind to creating a short film based on their portrait sitting.[8] But filming with Baker continued right through the presentation of Broken Noses in Cannes that year—with Weber ultimately assembling the footage of travel, recording sessions, and interviews into his second feature, Let's Get Lost (1988). The film debuted in Venice (where it won the Cinecritica award) and was subsequently nominated for a Grand Jury Award at Sundance, and for an Oscar for Best Documentary Feature.[8] Filming took a year with Weber approaching it, as he told The Times of London, "like his (Baker's) interpretation of a song, open-ended, not lyrical or strict."[33] The film features clips of Baker "in his prime in the 1950s...combined with his drug-damaged incarnation in the film's present day: gaunt and spaced out but still striking." Baker, Weber said, "was like a geyser in a national park. Exploding up and raining and raining back down, falling apart on everyone."[33]

Chop Suey (2001)

Chop Suey, a kaleidoscopic portrait of the wrestler Peter Johnson, was released in 2001. The Sunday Times of London reviewed it as "an aesthetic autobiography, in which he ruminates on some of his heroes and inspirations."[34] According to a New York Times review at the time the film "moves easily between video and film and between black-and-white and color as Mr. Weber explores the world around him, a world that he finds full of beauty and erotic possibility. One of his most engaging discoveries is the 91-year-old Sir Wilfred, who as a young desert explorer made photographs of Bedouin tribesman that prefigure Mr. Weber's own work."[35]

A Letter to True (2004)

Weber released the impressionistic anti-war film A Letter to True in 2004,[8] in the aftermath of 9/11.[36] The film is an 'audiovisual scrapbook'[37] and addressed to one of Weber's beloved golden retrievers."[38] In a review of the film The Sunday Times of London details how Weber rhapsodises over some of his favourite people, memories and ideas. (He) is a shameless old softie for whom dogs are emblematic of a happy home, (and)‘cherishes domestic security amid the fear created by the…attacks."[39]

The Treasure of His Youth (2022)

Weber's fifth feature-length film focuses on the prominent Italian photojournalist Paolo Di Paolo, who was 94 when Weber began shooting the documentary.[40]

Short Films

His work-in-progress Robert Mitchum feature, Nice Girls Don't Stay for Breakfast was screened at the New York Film Festival in 2017.[41] He has also directed seven short films: Beauty Brothers, Parts I-IV (1987), Backyard Movie (1991), Gentle Giants (1994), The Teddy Boys of the Edwardian Drape Society (1995), Wine and Cupcakes (2007), The Boy Artist (2008), and Liberty City is Like Paris to Me (2009).[8]

Sexual assault allegations

[edit]

In December 2017, model Jason Boyce sued Weber in New York State Supreme Court, claiming sexual assault, including inappropriate touching and kissing during a 2014 casting session.[42][43] The suit also targets Jason Kanner of Soul Artist Management, which managed Boyce when the alleged assault took place, and Little Bear Inc., the production company operated by Weber's companion, Nan Bush.[44] A second model, Mark Ricketson, came forward in December 2017 alleging similar claims and joined Boyce's lawsuit against Weber.[45]

Weber has denied the allegations,[46] stating to The New York Times that the allegations were "untrue" and that he had "never touched anyone inappropriately".[47]

In January 2018, The New York Times detailed sexual assault allegations by 15 male models against Weber.[48]

In January 2019, it was reported that Weber asked to dismiss the original suit by Jason Boyce, with evidence provided that the model sent him racy photos and texts prior to and after the shoots.[49]

By 2020, the Plaintiffs' cases against Weber began to face apparent setbacks, and in June 2020, Lisa Bloom, a high-powered harassment claims lawyer representing Weber's accusers in various suits, was ordered to pay Weber $28,000 in legal costs after Boyce refused to answer certain questions at a deposition.[50]

By September 2021, the 3 cases against Weber were each either dismissed or settled for undisclosed sums.[11]

On 3 April 2024, The Hollywood Reporter published an interview on Alan Ritchson wherein the Reacher star comments on prior allegations against Weber and Mario Testino reported by The New York Times:[51]

Some of the stories were just like mine. I was just starting to build a platform and get my voice in the business, and I wondered, ‘Should I say something?’ Because all of the stories that those models were telling were my own. It’s all true.

Personal life

[edit]

Weber is married to Nan Bush[14] who is also his agent and one of his collaborators.[15]

In a 2002 interview he said, "I've had a lot of great romances. Men and women, I mean I feel like I can fall in love almost every day. I feel sorry for people who don't feel that."[15]

He has lived in Miami since 1998.[12][13]

Films

[edit]
Year Title Length Cast
1987 Broken Noses 75:00 Andy Minsker
Beauty Brothers (Part I-IV) 12:26 Paul Dillon, Brian Dillon, Tim Dillon, Rodney Harvey, Maya Oloe
1988 Let's Get Lost 119:25 Chet Baker, Chris Isaak, William Claxton, Flea, Lisa Marie, Rodney Harvey
1991 Backyard Movie 8:55
1994 Gentle Giants 14:35
1995 The Teddy Boys of the Edwardian Drape Society 3:45 Tobey Maguire
2000 Chop Suey 94:00 Peter Johnson, Robert Mitchum, Diana Vreeland, Frances Faye, Jan-Michael Vincent
2003 A Letter to True 78:00 Julie Christie (narrator), Marianne Faithfull (narrator), Dirk Bogarde, Elizabeth Taylor, Paul Smith, Tully Jensen
2006 The Legend of True 11:35
A Tribute To The Delta Society 2:23
Best Friends 3:44
2007 Wine and Cupcakes 12:10 Angela McCluskey, Paul Cantelon
2008 Looking for Chet, Again, In All The Familiar Places 25:00
The Boy Artist 9:00
You Feel Me? 3:36
2009 Liberty City Is Like Paris To Me 16:00
2014 Iris 79:00 Iris Apfel
2022 The Treasure of His Youth: The Photographs of Paolo Di Paolo 105:00 Paolo Di Paolo
'All-American' Documentary Series (Work-in-progress)
Nice Girls Don't Stay For Breakfast: Robert Mitchum Documentary, Paolo Di Paolo Documentary (Work-in-progress) (Work-in-progress)
CZ Guest Documentary project (Work in progress)

Music videos

[edit]

In 1990, Weber directed the music video for the Pet Shop Boys single "Being Boring". He filmed a party with a diverse group of models. The video was filmed in one day by two film crews in a house on Long Island. Content including male and female nudity prevented the video from being played on MTV in the United States. In 1996 he directed the video for the Pet Shop Boys single "Se a vida é (That's the Way Life Is)" on location in a Wet 'n' Wild, a water park near Orlando, Florida. In 2002, he again directed a Pet Shop Boys video, for the song "I Get Along" from the album Release. Weber filmed this video on location at his own Little Bear studio in New York City. He also directed the music video for the Chris Isaak song "Blue Spanish Sky".[citation needed]

Year Song Title Length Artist Album
1988 Everything Happens to Me 3:42 Chet Baker Let's Get Lost (Soundtrack album)
1990 Being Boring 4:55 Pet Shop Boys Behaviour
1991 Blue Spanish Sky 4:13 Chris Isaak Wicked Game
1996 Se a vida é (That's the Way Life Is) 4:50 Pet Shop Boys Bilingual
2002 I Get Along 5:46 Pet Shop Boys Release
Light My Fire 3:44 Will Young From Now On

Bibliography

[edit]

Books and monographs

[edit]
Year Title Publisher Genre
1977 Looking Good:
A Guide For Men
Hawthorn Books
(U.S.)
by Charles Hicks; all pictures by Weber
1978 Etre Beau:
Un Guide Pour Les Hommes
Guy Authier
(France)
French edition of Looking Good: A Guide For Men
1983 Bruce Weber Twelvetrees Press
(U.S.)
First monograph
1983 The Sun and the Shade
Florida Photography, 1885–1983
Norton Gallery
West Palm Beach
(U.S.)
Exhibition catalog for an exhibit curated by Weber
1984 Interview Magazine Andy Warhol/Interview
(U.S.)
Special edition on American Athletes of the 1984 Olympic Games; all pictures by Weber
Photographs Of Athletes Olympus Gallery
(U.K.)
Published upon the exhibition held in London (U.K.) at the Olympus Gallery
1986 O Rio De Janeiro Alfred A. Knopf
(U.S.)
Monograph
Summer Diary 1986 Condé Nast (Vogue Italia)
(Italy)
Special insert of the Italian magazine Per Lui; all pictures by Weber
1987 The Andy Book Doeisha Co., Ltd.
(Japan)
Monograph on Andy Minsker, star of Broken Noses
Bruce Weber Idea Books
(Italy)
Catalogue of the exhibition held in Venice (Italy) at Palazzo Fortuny
1989 Bruce Weber Alfred A. Knopf
(U.S.)
Monograph
1990 Bear Pond Bulfinch Press
(U.S.)
Monograph
Great Contemporary Nudes
1978–1990
C-Two Gallery
(Japan)
Published upon the exhibition held in Tokyo.
(Box containing three books dedicated to the three participating photographers, Weber, Robert Mapplethorpe and Herb Ritts.)
1991 Bruce Weber Fahey Klein Gallery
Parco Exposure Gallery
(U.S. / Japan)
Published upon the exhibition held in: New York at the Fahey Klein Gallery and in Tokyo at the Parco Exposure Gallery
Calvin Klein Jeans Condé Nast (Vogue)
Calvin Klein
(U.S.)
Speciale insert of Vanity Fair, all pictures by Weber
Bear Pond Treville Monograph
1992 Hotel Room With A View: Photographs by Bruce Weber Smithsonian Institution
(U.S.)
"Photographers at Work", A Smithsonian Series
1994 Gentle Giants Bulfinch Press
(U.S.)
Monograph dedicated to the Newfoundland dogs
No Valet Parking Photology
(Italy)
published upon the exhibition held in Milan (Italy) at the Galleria Photology
1996 A House Is Not A Home Bulfinch Press
(U.S.)
Monograph
You Can Take The Boy Out Of Vietnam
But You Can't Take Vietnam Out Of The Boy
Condé Nast (Vogue Italia)
(Italy)
Special insert of the Italian magazine L'Uomo Vogue published upon the exhibition Vietnam, Versace, Viaggi, Weber, held in Milan at Palazzo Reale
1997 Branded Youth and Other Stories Bulfinch Press
(U.S.)
Monograph
Pirelli Calendar Pirelli Tires
(Italy)
1998 Calendar, starring: Patricia ArquetteGeorgina GrenvilleDaryl HannahShalom HarlowEva HerzigovaKirsty HumeElaine Irwin MellencampMilla JovovichKiara KabukuruTanga MoreauCarolyn MurphyRachel RobertsStella Tennant

and
B.B. KingBonoPaul CadmusFrancesco ClementeKris KristoffersonJohn MalkovichEwan McGregorDermot MulroneyDan O'BrienSonny RollinsKelly SlaterFred Ward

1998 The Chop Suey Club Arena Editions
(U.S.)
Monograph on Peter Johnson
2000 Stern Magazine TeNeues Publishing
Stern Portfolio
(Germany)
Spezial Fotografie Portfolio Number 22
2001 Roadside America TeNeues Publishing
Stern Portfolio
(Germany)
Monograph No. 22 of the "Stern Portfolio" series
Pirelli Calendar Pirelli Tires
(Italy)
2003 Calendar, starring: Alessandra AmbrosioMariacarla BosconoSophie DahlYamila Diaz-RahiIsabeli FontanaBridget HallFilippa HamiltonHeidi KlumKarolína Kurková • Jessica Miller • Sienna MillerRana RaslanEva RiccobonoLisa Seiffert • Valentina Stilla • Natalia Vodianova

and
Marcelo Boldrini • Stéphane Ferrara • Tomasino Ganesh • Alessandro Gassman • Jak Krauszer • Ajay Lamas • Richie LamontagneEnrico Lo Verso • Davide Battista • Massimo Boninsegna • Giuseppe Conte • Luca di Marino • Pasquale Malzone • Raffaele Marciano • Alberto Perini • Serafino Roncacè

2003 Hope:
A Letter To True
Condé Nast (Vogue Italia)
(Italy)
Special insert of the Italian magazine L'Uomo Vogue
2004 Stern Magazine TeNeues Publishing
Stern Portfolio
(Germany)
Spezial Fotografie Portfolio Number 38 "Home Is Where The Heart Is"
2005 Blood Sweat And Tears:
Or How I Stopped Worrying And Learned to Love Fashion
TeNeues Publishing
(Germany)
Monograph
Filmography Kinetique Tokyo
(Japan)
Published upon the exhibition held in Tokyo at the Original True Gallery
2006 Kate Moss
Is The Girl That Got Away
Condé Nast (Vogue Paris)
(France)
Speciale insert of the French magazine Vogue Hommes International on Kate Moss
2007 Sex And Words Visionaire
(U.S.)
Monograph
2009 Roberto Bolle
An Athlete In Tights
TeNeues Publishing
(Germany)
Monograph on Roberto Bolle
Cartier
I Love You
TeNeues Publishing
(Germany)
Celebrating 100 Years of Cartier in America
2010 Standing Tall:
Portraits of the Haitian Community in Miami, 2003–2010
Museum of Contemporary Art North Miami
(U.S.)
Published for the exhibition held in Miami at the Museum of Contemporary Art
2012 All-American Volume 12:
A Book Of Lessons
TeNeues Publishing
(Germany)
12th book of the "All-American" series
2013 All-American Volume 13:
Born Ready
TeNeues Publishing
(Germany)
13th book of the "All-American" series
2014 Detroit Has Been Good To Me Little Bear Press
(U.S.)
Monograph
All-American Volume 14:
Affairs of the Heart
TeNeues Publishing
(Germany)
14th book of the "All-American" series
2015 All-American Volume 15:
Leap of Faith
TeNeues Publishing
(Germany)
15th book of the "All-American" series
2019 Holiday Magazine
The Egypt Issue
Holiday Magazine
(France)
Photography capturing the essence of Egypt's people and culture

Little Bear Press

[edit]

Bruce and his wife, Nan, began the publishing imprint Little Bear Press where, in addition to monographs and exhibition catalogs, they have published an independent arts journal titled All-American. While some volumes have been published by external publishers, the bulk of the series has been published by Little Bear Press. The All-American publishes works by artists, photographers, essayists, poets and other personalities. The subjects of the journal are sometimes already well known but just as often, the participants and subjects of All-American are noteworthy not for fame, but because their stories or accomplishments reveal something that Weber believes will resonate with readers on a deeper and more personal level. His dedication to the All-American project is motivated by a desire to connect, inspire, and support the work of emerging artists.[9]

Year Title Publisher Genre
1988 A Film Journal by Bruce Weber Little Bear Films
(U.S.)
Published in conjunction with the feature film Let's Get Lost
1990 Sam Shepard by Bruce Weber Little Bear Press
(U.S.)
Monograph on Sam Shepard starring Jessica Lange
1999 Shu Fly Little Bear Press
(U.S.)
Monograph
2001 All-American Little Bear Press
(U.S.)
1st book of the "All-American" series
2002 All-American II:
Short Stories
Little Bear Press
(U.S.)
2nd book of the "All-American" series
Mothers Days:

Imogen Cunningham

Little Bear Press
(U.S.)
A collection of works mostly taken in the 1920s and 30s by female photographer Imogine Cunningham.
2003 All-American III:
Family Albums
Little Bear Press
(U.S.)
3rd book of the "All-American" series
Thank Your Lucky Stars:
John R. Hamilton
Little Bear Press
(U.S.)
A behind the scenes look at Hollywood celebrity by Hollywood photography veteran, John R. Hamilton.
Foreword by Peter Bogdanovich
Like a Moth:

Jim French

Little Bear Press
(U.S.)
The pioneering male-figure photographer Jim French's collection of 1972 nude studies of model David Skrivanek
2004 All-American IV:
Otherworldly
Little Bear Press
(U.S.)
4th book of the "All-American" series
2005 All-American V:
Is Love Enough?
Little Bear Press
(U.S.)
5th book of the "All-American" series
2006 All-American VI:
Larger Than life
Little Bear Press
(U.S.)
6th book of the "All-American" series
People I May Know

Johnny Dark

Little Bear Press
(U.S.)
Part memoir/part travelogue by Johnny Dark
2007 All-American VII:
'Til I Get It Right - An Anthem For The South
Little Bear Press
(U.S.)
7th book of the "All-American" series
Live Here, Rent Free Little Bear Press
(U.S.)
Monograph
2008 All-American VIII:
Nature's Way
Little Bear Press
(U.S.)
8th book of the "All-American" series
2009 All-American IX:
A Near-Perfect World
Little Bear Press
(U.S.)
9th book of the "All-American" series
2010 All-American X:
Written In The Stars
Little Bear Press
(U.S.)
10th book of the "All-American" series
2011 All-American Volume 11:
Just Life
Little Bear Press
(U.S.)
11th book of the "All-American" series
2014 Detroit Has Been Good to Me Little Bear Press
(U.S.)
Monograph
2016 All-American Volume 16:
Wild Blue Yonder
Little Bear Press
(U.S.)
16th book of the "All-American" series
Far From Home Little Bear Press
(U.S.)
Dallas Contemporary
2017 All-American Volume 17: Glory Be Little Bear Press
(U.S.)
17th book of the "All-American" Series
2018 All-American Volume 18:
Facing The World
Little Bear Press
(U.S.)
18th book of the "All-American" series
Azzedine Bruce Joe Little Bear Press
(U.S.)
Foundation Azzedine Alaia
"Nice Girls Don't Stay for Breakfast" Film Journal Little Bear Films
(France only)
La Rabbia
2019 All-American Volume 19

No Small Thing, Desire

Little Bear Press
(U.S.)
19th book of the All-American series
2020 All-American Volume 20: Coming Home Little Bear Press
(U.S.)
20th book of the All-American series
2021 All-American Volume 21

Time Will Tell

Little Bear Press
(U.S.)
21st book of the All-American series
2022 All-American Volume 22: The Towering Feeling Little Bear Press
(U.S.)
22nd book of the All-American series
2023 All-American Volume 23: Let's Take an Old Fashioned Walk Little Bear Press
(U.S.)
23rd book of the All-American series

Museums and Libraries

[edit]

Weber exhibits his work in prominent museums around the world, often working closely with the curator and art director Dimitri Levas to realize his vision. Weber's most recent solo shows include "Far From Home" at Dallas Contemporary (2016), "Detroit: Bruce Weber" at the Detroit Institute of Arts (2012), and "Haiti/Little Haiti" (2010) at the Museum of Contemporary Art in North Miami.

Other books

[edit]
  • Rolling Stone: The Photographs, Simon & Schuster Editions (1989), pp. ??-??
  • Pictures Of Peace, Alfred A. Knopf (1991), pp. ??-??
  • Bruce Hainley and David Rimanelli, Shock of the Newfoundland: Bruce Weber's canine camera, "Artforum International 33" (April 1995), pp. 78–81.
  • Il Tempo E La Moda, Skira; Exhibition Catalogue: "Biennale Firenze" (1996), pp. ??-??
  • Gianni Versace, Rock and Royalty, Abbeville Press (February 1997), pp. ??-??
  • David Leddick, The Male Nude, New York: Taschen (1998), pp. ??-??
  • Pirelli Calendar 1964–2004, Rizzoli (2004), pp. ??-??
  • Heel To Heal (2004), pp. ??-??
  • Paintings of New York, 1800–1950 (2005), pp. ??-??
  • Monica Bellucci, Rizzoli (2010), pp. ??-??
  • Kate Moss, Rizzoli (2012), pp. ??-??

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Bruce Weber". Photography. Victoria and Albert Museum. July 29, 2015.
  2. ^ a b c Maslin, Janet (March 24, 1989). "Review/Film Festival; The History of a Musician's Disintegration". The New York Times. Retrieved September 10, 2024.
  3. ^ Mcnulty, Bernadette (May 24, 2008). "Chet Baker: 'There aren't a lot of people like Chet left'". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on September 10, 2024. Retrieved September 10, 2024.
  4. ^ Hogan, Mike (July 29, 2014). "Spotlight: Calendar Girl". Vanity Fair (magazine). Archived from the original on September 10, 2024. Retrieved September 10, 2024.
  5. ^ Farley, Emily (June 29, 2011). "Hailee Steinfeld for Miu Miu". Harper's Bazaar. Archived from the original on September 10, 2024. Retrieved September 10, 2024.
  6. ^ Moss, Hilary (July 2, 2012). "June's Best Fashion Videos: And Dior Created Daphne Groeneveld, Bruce Weber Goes Underwater, and More". The Cut. Archived from the original on September 10, 2024. Retrieved September 10, 2024.
  7. ^ Chan, Stephanie (May 14, 2014). "Nicolas Ghesquiere Enlists Three Top Photographers for His First Louis Vuitton Ads". The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on September 10, 2024. Retrieved September 10, 2024.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h "About". Bruce Weber Official Website. Bruce Weber.
  9. ^ a b De Stefani, Lucia (November 12, 2015). "Fashion Photographer Bruce Weber Unveils New Work on Instagram". Time (magazine). Retrieved September 11, 2024.
  10. ^ Bernstein, Jacob; Schneier, Matthew; Friedman, Vanessa (January 13, 2018). "Male Models Say Mario Testino and Bruce Weber Sexually Exploited Them". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved January 22, 2018.
  11. ^ a b "Bruce Weber Has Settled Another Sexual-Assault Lawsuit". September 2021.
  12. ^ a b Cashdan, Marina (November 17, 2010). "Weber Takes to the Streets in an Exhibition Focusing on Miami's Haitian Community". The Huffington Post. Retrieved June 11, 2013.
  13. ^ a b Boardman, Micky (December 2, 2010). "Bruce Weber On Haiti, The Kennedys and His Many, Many Pet Dogs". artbasel.aol.com. Archived from the original on October 4, 2013. Retrieved June 11, 2013.
  14. ^ a b Gural, Natasha. "Renowned Fine Art Photographer Bruce Weber Invites Us On An Intimate Personal Journey With His Beloved Golden Retrievers In Tender Taschen Tome". Forbes. Retrieved April 3, 2024.
  15. ^ a b c Tim Adams, Mad about the boys, The Guardian, 30 June 2002
  16. ^ Coburn, Marcia Froelke (December 16, 1987). "BAD BRUCE". chicagotribune.com. Retrieved April 9, 2020.
  17. ^ a b Muschamp, Herbert (November 14, 1999). "Beefcake for the Masses". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved January 10, 2022.
  18. ^ a b American Photo. February 1998.
  19. ^ Ferguson, Michael; Ferguson, Michael S. (2003). Idol Worship: A Shameless Celebration of Male Beauty in the Movies. STARbooks Press. ISBN 978-1-891855-48-1.
  20. ^ Coad, David (February 7, 2014). The Metrosexual: Gender, Sexuality, and Sport. SUNY Press. ISBN 978-0-7914-7841-7.
  21. ^ Stracher, Cameron (April 9, 2013). Kings of the Road: How Frank Shorter, Bill Rodgers, and Alberto Salazar Made Running Go Boom. HMH. ISBN 978-0-547-77400-8.
  22. ^ Carroll, Rosemary, "Bruce Weber" Archived February 27, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, BOMB Magazine, Spring 1985. Retrieved October 24, 2012.
  23. ^ The Bulletin. J. Haynes and J.F. Archibald. 1997.
  24. ^ Peters, Michael (December 13, 2017). The Great Sports Documentaries: 100+ Award Winning Films. McFarland. ISBN 978-1-4766-6959-5.
  25. ^ Kramer, Gary M. (2006). Independent Queer Cinema: Reviews and Interviews. Psychology Press. ISBN 978-1-56023-343-5.
  26. ^ Out. Here Publishing. November 2001.
  27. ^ Niemi, Robert (October 17, 2013). Inspired by True Events: An Illustrated Guide to More Than 500 History-Based Films, 2nd Edition: An Illustrated Guide to More Than 500 History-Based Films. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-61069-198-7.
  28. ^ Caley, Matthew; Lannin, Steve (June 1, 2005). Pop Fiction: The Song in Cinema. Intellect Books. ISBN 978-1-84150-906-8.
  29. ^ Owens, Mitchell (February 13, 1997). "Bruce Weber's Pictures of Home (Who Says He's No Homebody?)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved January 10, 2022.
  30. ^ Warren, Lynne (November 15, 2005). Encyclopedia of Twentieth-Century Photography, 3-Volume Set. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-135-20536-2.
  31. ^ Chris Isaak by Bruce Weber
  32. ^ Greenwood, Phoebe (April 12, 2024). "Self charming the light and dark sides of Chet Baker". The Times. ISSN 0140-0460. Retrieved April 12, 2024.
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