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Veruschka

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new fr: Vera

http://www.veruschkaselfportraits.com/

Dankeschön 2U allVera Gottlieb Anna von Lehndorff AKA "Gottlieb"Vera Gottliebe Anna Gräfin von Lehndorff Christian von Alvensleben : alvensleben-photography.de

calling THE vera AKA veruschka, Vanity Fair is lookIN 4U

we lost your e-mail pls call RANDY.... Veruschka's enduring mystiqueFebruary 21 2003 By Naomi WestVeruschka was no ordinary '60s model; a German countess, she could be anything from Greta Garbo to a leopard in a tree. Now, at 61, she is still an inspiration.
Of all the players in Michelangelo Antonioni's cult 1966 film BlowUp, there was one legendary enough to star as herself.Veruschka - the model whose farout features dominated fashion magazines in the late '60s - appeared for hardly five minutes, but her performance was electrifying.Announcing herself ("Here I am") at the studio of the David Bailey-esque photographer (played by David Hemmings) barefoot and in a black mini-dress, she proceeded to seduce the photographer's lens by writhing on the floor like a wildcat, while he sat astride her, snapping furiously."She moves like nobody on earth," Hemmings sighed afterwards.In real life her photo shoots were no less extraordinary; US Vogue editor Diana Vreeland would give Veruschka carte blanche to conceive fashion stories with her then lover, the Italian photographer Franco Rubartelli.The leotard-clad Veruschka and Rubartelli would jump on a plane together, taking all the clothes, body paint and photographic equipment they needed to the middle of a desert, or to some snowy wasteland against which Veruschka would throw her lean body into contorted shapes. They once travelled to the Bahamian island Eleuthera on Christmas Day to take photographs by moonlight.You would expect such an astonishing figure to make an entrance. But when Veruschka, now 61, arrives at a Parisian photographic studio, she glides in swiftly, shrouded like a brightly coloured Lawrence of Arabia.Within seconds she has disappeared into a back room for a further hour to apply her make-up.Veruschka, who now goes by her real name, Vera von Lehndorff, is in Paris to meet the New York fashion designer Michael Kors, who chose to capture her spirit in his spring/summer 2003 show for the French fashion house Celine.To a sitar-laden remix of the Rolling Stones' Jumping Jack Flash, Kors sent on to the catwalk a collection he dubbed Veruschka Voyage, a holiday wardrobe gleaming with gold embroidery and hot pink and orange tie-dyes.Kors's models looked like leisured, sun-tanned bohemians, sporting collar-bone-skimming earrings made of linked brass discs.Today, von Lehndorff is just here to hang out while the photographer Vincent Peters shoots the Celine advertising campaign with the 27-year-old Midwestern model Frankie Rayder, who appears airily unconcerned about measuring up to one of modelling's all-time greats.Von Lehndorff's pale, heavily lined face and broad features remain impassive as she draws on a cigarette. Her ensemble is on the outer reaches of eccentricity; over her taut body she wears something resembling a black body stocking, a floor-length orange cardigan and a raggedy orange tie-dyed scarf.On her size-nine feet are Vivienne Westwood pirate boots, and her straggly tawny hair hangs from under an orange bandanna decorated with spangles.Odder still, earlier in the day this look was completed with a pair of orange-lensed Ali G-style sunglasses.However, von Lehndorff's career as a model has had unusually little to do with clothes. As she said to Nova magazine in 1968, "I hate the whole kind of chic look - Dior, St Laurent. They might look very nice, but I don't feel them." And her attitude hasn't changed. "I'm not especially inspired by fashion," she says slowly in her contralto, Germanic voice, before giving the rail of Celine outfits a polite but cursory survey. For von Lehndorff, modelling was all about transforming herself. "I was always being different types of women. I copied Ursula Andress, Brigitte Bardot, Greta Garbo. Then I got bored so I painted myself as an animal," she says in a deadpan way. "One day I ended up as a stone. I was depressed and went out on to my terrace in Rome. I wanted to disappear, to be like the stones of the terrace. I painted myself lying down in the mirror, and copied the stones on to my face."But at the beginning of her career, changing was a necessity, not an artistic, endeavour. She had first travelled to New York in 1961 as plain old Vera, but failed to secure a single booking. After retreating to Milan for a spell, she returned to take Manhattan under her new name, Veruschka."I dressed all in black and went to see all the top photographers, like Irving Penn, and said, 'I am Veruschka who comes from the border between Russia, Germany and Poland. I'd like to see what you can do with my face.' "It worked; constantly booked, Veruschka gained almost mythical status. When Life magazine profiled "the most sought-after model in the world", they magnified her 1.8-metre frame to an alien 1.9 metres. Her extraordinary physique, complete with outsize hands and feet, even spawned industry rumours that she had once been a man.Von Lehndorff's background is as intriguing as the Veruschka creature she invented. Of noble birth, her full title (which she never uses) is the Countess Vera Gottliebe Anna von Lehndorff. Her father was a Prussian count who was involved in a plot to assassinate Hitler in 1944 and hanged that year, when Vera was three. Her mother was arrested, and Vera and her sisters spent the rest of the war in Gestapo camps. They were reunited with their mother after the war, but the family was destitute, and ostracised by other Germans for their father's treachery. She ended up studying textile design in Florence, where a fashion designer first asked her to model.Von Lehndorff stopped modelling in the early '70s when the newly appointed editor-in-chief at Vogue, Grace Mirabella, advised her to cut her hair so readers could identify with her ("I hate that idea"). She then sought to become "an artist who had modelled for a few years". Collaborating with the artist Holger Tradilzsch, she was photographed in 1971 and 1972 as a series of characters, clad only in body paint.Although she has made the odd foray back into modelling (for example, to launch a menswear collection for Karl Lagerfeld in 1995), von Lehndorff lives the life of an artist in a rundown area of Brooklyn, with her lover Micha Waschke, a musician who doubles as her assistant. She has exhibited a steady stream of work, from photos of herself covered in ash to a short film, Buddha Bum (1998), in which she plays a series of homeless people and Buddha.It is unfortunate that von Lehndorff talks about her art in the kind of indistinct terms that smack of half-baked pretension. "Veruschka was the first emanation of the children of illusion," she murmurs, referring to her sprawling work in progress, Emanations. Since the mid-'90s, she has collaborated with designers ranging from Helmut Lang to Paco Rabanne to explore characters that include "urbanites and savage animals, presidents and movie stars". But the results are compellingly strange, and far from anachronistic.The fashion world fosters an ongoing fascination with her '60s persona, the make-up brand MAC sells a lipstick called Veruschka, and there are still boutiques named after her, yet she is detached from any hype. Asked if she misses the glamour of modelling, she looks down her wide, flat nose unselfconsciously: "No. I have my own drama and glamour anyhow. As long as I am here, it is not gone.""Oh, I think she's more glamorous than she ever looked in her pictures," designer Michael Kors chips in, which is plainly untrue. But in fashion, where myths can hold more sway than reality, Veruschka will always be an extraordinary beauty.- Telegraph

veruschka.net

a fan in "Vera" & "veruschka" rates high (internet) in respect to

original

pbase.com/veruschka/impromptuIMDB Veruschka was born in 1939 in East Prussia as Countess Vera Gottliebe Anna von Lehndorff. For a short time, she enjoyed a wealthy lifestyle residing in East Prussia in a 100-room house on an enormous estate that had been in her family for centuries. Her father, Count Heinrich Graf von Lehndorff-Steinort, was a wealthy landowner and German army reserve officer who became a key member of the German Resistance after witnessing Jewish children being beaten and killed. When she was just a child, Heinrich Graf von Lehndorff-Steinort was executed for attempting to assassinate Adolf Hitler in the July 20 Plot. After his death, the remaining family members spent their times in camps until the end of World War II. By the end of the war, her family was left homelesspress release fr: v..net
Press Release In a first for the Foundation, another artist will be given a forum at the Helmut Newton Foundation: Vera Lehndorff. Known since the 60’s, when she began her career as a model, she entered the public domain using the pseudonym 'Veruschka' – a fictional character representing pure perfection. As such she became one of the most sought-after and heavily publicized models in international fashion. Prior to her crossing over to the art world with a renowned series of camouflage body-paintings, many prominent photographers worked with her, including Newton. A decade ago, Vera Lehndorff performed and transmitted her role as the cliché model in collaboration with Andreas Hubertus Ilse as documentary photographer. ‘Veruschka Self-Portraits’ were created to represent this fictional character posing for the camera as a series of off-beat personalities. The exhibited vintage photographs show different aspects of Veruschka in eccentric, custom-made costumes. Here she can be seen exploring the boundaries of personality, whether as a trans-gendered male intellectual, a streetwise rapper, a Hollywood superstar, or her own glamorous alter-ego, Veruschka. The directed self-portraits are supplemented by an archive of magazine covers and by Vera Lehndorff’s film ”Inszenierung (m)eines Körpers”, directed by Paul Morrissey.

My Interests

Sacred Tibet - The Path to Mount Kailash

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I'd like to meet:

http://crandallbrooks.com
randy is back in the FOLDin 6th grade randy started collecting the young Vera photographs, he has illustrated her ever since. She was gracious enough to come out of her first & final attempt at retirement in the 80's and work4 cRANDALLbrooks inc. Randy is hounding Vera to make a book out of his museum of photos, tear sheets & illustrations Soon she keeps saying..

Music:

Swetlana Heger, Untitled (The Cohen Residence/Paradise Valley)

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Television:

Description: Here is the beautiful song from the movie of the same name ("Veruschka - Poesia Di Una Donna", Italy, 1971), written by Ennio Morricone and performed by the great Edda Dell'Orso, and illustrating wonderfully well the beauty of Veruschka. Veruschka was born in 1939 in Königsberg, East Prussia, Germany (now Kaliningrad, Russia) as Countess Vera Gottliebe Anna von Lehndorff, to a Prussian count (Count von Lehndorff-Steinort) who was involved in a plot to assassinate Hitler in 1944 and hanged that year, when she was three. Her mother was arrested, and Vera and her sisters spent the rest of the war in Gestapo camps. They were reunited with their mother after the war, but the family was destitute, and ostracised by other Germans for their father's treachery. She ended up studying textile design in Florence, where a fashion designer first asked her to model. She had first travelled to New York in 1961 as plain old Vera, but failed to secure a single booking. After retreating to Milan for a spell, she returned to take Manhattan under her new name... Veruschka! As an actress, she played notably in "Blow Up" (1967) and recently in "Casino Royale" (2006). She is considered as one of the world's all-time greatest supermodels. She said: "I was always being different types of women. I copied Ursula Andress, Brigitte Bardot, Greta Garbo. Then I got bored so I painted myself as an animal." Enjoy Veruschka's glamour! Veruschka / Edda Dell'Orso: Veruschka

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Books:

RUMOR LIFESTYLE: "Sexual feelings," she said. No kiddin’. When actor David Hemmings asked her "who the hell were you with last night" in Blowup, she sort of shrugged out an answer that implied she had places to go and people to do. One had the feeling that this was pretty close to Veruschka's reality. She told Michael Gross in Model that from '66 to the early '70s she lived with a photographer named Franco Rubartelli, who made an Italian film about her in '71. He was, she claimed, the first man she'd ever lived with. But not the most famous that she ever knew: Peter Fonda wrote about his flings with Veruschka in his autobiography, Don’t Tell Dad ('98). In '65 he saw her in Rome and was immediately overwhelmed by her astounding beauty. He pestered her until she consented to go out with him — once she did, they spent the next several days and nights together, rolling around on tiny twin beds that were far too short and narrow for their lanky physiques. They reunited in Paris shortly thereafter and fell deeper in love, but they split up after a few days so that Fonda could return to his wife and child in L.A. He wrote that they rendezvoused only three more times in the next six years, though they exchanged many letters during that time. Their "farewell bash," as Fonda called it, came in '71 when they holed up in a luxury hotel suite in Manhattan. A tryst of fate: The exciting evening alone was interrupted by an impromptu visit from two of the '60s' most dazzling couples — Jane Fonda/Roger Vadim, and Warren Beatty/Julie Christie. According to Peter Fonda, after the party finally died down he and Veruschka finally got down to business, which they did several times, once with his sister Jane watching from the open doorway. I'm not really hiding in plain site theKIRK fr: lumal.com,
half the calories ALL THE BLAME

Heroes:

http://www.stern.de/unterhaltung/fotografie/562310.html?q=ne wton+veruschka&cp=10
Veruschka von Lehndorff wurde in ein ostpreußisches Adelsgeschlecht geboren. Ihr Vater, Heinrich Graf von Lehndorff-Steinort, wurde 1944 wegen seiner Teilnahme an der Verschwörung des 20. Juli 1944 gegen Adolf Hitler hingerichtet, ihre Mutter kam in ein Arbeitslager.Nach dem Krieg wuchs sie mit ihrer Mutter und drei Schwestern in Flüchtlingslagern und der Obhut von Bekannten auf. Sie begann ein Design-Studium, welches sie nach zwei Jahren abbrach, um sich in Italien ganz dem Malen zu widmen. In den 1960er Jahren entdeckte man die hoch (1,83 m) gewachsene Schönheit bei einem Aufenthalt in Florenz als Fotomodell. Unter dem Namen Veruschka wurde sie das erste deutsche „Supermodel“.Veruschkas Filmdebüt in Michelangelo Antonionis Kultfilm Blow Up (1966) blieb ihr bekanntester Auftritt auf der Leinwand. Es folgten noch einige Rollen in europäischen Produktionen. 1983 trat sie in dem deutschen Dokumentarfilm Vom Zusehen beim Sterben auf, der dazu beitrug, die Öffentlichkeit auf das Schicksal der vietnamesischen Boat People aufmerksam zu machen. Sie spielte die Hauptrolle in Ulrike Ottingers Dorian Gray im Spiegel der Boulevardpresse.Veruschka von Lehndorff, die in den Hungerjahren nach dem Krieg ein ambivalentes Verhältnis zu ihrem sehr schlanken Körper entwickelte, ist auch eine Pionierin des Bodypainting sowie anderer Inszenierungen und künstlerischer Verfremdungen des eigenen Körpers. Sie arbeitet heute als eigenständige Malerin und Performerin. 2004 drehte der durch seine Zusammenarbeit mit Andy Warhol bekannt gewordene Regisseur Paul Morrissey einen Dokumentarfilm über sie (Veruschka - A Life For the Camera).Seit Juni 2006 zeigt die Helmut Newton-Stiftung im Berliner Museum für Fotografie die Ausstellung Veruschka Self-Portraits. Ebenfalls 2006 hatte Veruschka von Lehndorff einen Cameo-Auftritt in dem James Bond-Film Casino Royale. 2007 war sie in der ARD-Dokumentation „Frauen auf der Flucht“ zu sehen, wo sie über ihre Erlebnisse auf der Flucht aus Ostpreußen berichtete.http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Veruschka_Gr%C3%A4fin_von_Lehnd orffhttp://www.theage.com.au/articles/2003/02/21/1045638469233.h tmlhttp://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Veruschka

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Veruschka by Francois Weyergans

Hello Veruschka, goddess one day, goddess always ! And they have not seen yet "Couleur Chair" (Flesh Color) : with Veruschka by Francois Weyergans (Prix Goncourt 2005 #;o). On a screen near you so...
Posted by Veruschka on Mon, 12 Feb 2007 11:44:00 PST