Showing posts with label Swiggy Drummond. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Swiggy Drummond. Show all posts

Swiggy Drummond for Giorgio Armani Le Collezione 90 by Aldo Fallai

Brand: Giorgio Armani Le Collezione
Year: Spring/Summer 1990
Model: Swiggy Drummond
Ph: Aldo Fallai

Jesse and Swiggy 88

GQ
"Singin' In The Rain, Dashing Raincoats For Those Darkling Days"
Year: Spring/Summer 1988
Models: Jesse Harris, Swiggy Drummond and Unknwon #9
Ph: Walter Chin
Fashion: Luciano Soprani, Massimo Osti, Giorgio Armani, Principe by Marzotto, Ungaro Uomo, Perry Ellis, Christian Dior, Missoni Uomo
Hair: Eric Gabriel for Oribe at Parachute N.Y.C


John, Frederic and Swiggy

GQ
"Notes from the Avant-Garde, French Designers sharpen their quirky edge"
Year: Fall/Winter 1987
Models: John Pearson, Frederic Gresse, Swiggy Drummond, Naomi Campbell and Ilonka Topemberg
Ph: Pamela Hanson
Fashion: Thierry Mugler, Giorgio Armani, Azzedine Alaia, Cerruti 1881, Comme des Garcons, Jean Paul Gaultier, Claude Montana, Issey Miyake
Hair and Make-Up: Rodney Martin for Pipino-Buccheri N.Y.C



1989 male models

Another great article posted in the supermodelsofthe70s-80sorg facebook group, this one from 1989 with great info of John Pearson, Swiggy Drummond, Bruce Hulse, Cameron Alborzian, Curt Butrum, Michel de Windt, Cameron Alborzian, Hermes, Devron McDonald (a new name to me) and David Rachid (a new name to me).

The Golden Years of Nikos

Nikos Apostolopoulos
Contemporary Fashion
01/01/02 by Richard Martin; Nelly Rhodes

Homoerotic masculinity is the motive of Nikos fashion. Invoking an idealism of gods and demigods, stretching and flexing on Olympus wearing versions of jock straps, ergonomic t-shirts and tank tops, and some street clothing, Nikos projects a similar image of apparel. Beginning with his first collection in 1985, Nikos employed cotton and Lycra for the stretchy, minimalist, erotic clothing of the gods and all who aspire to their condition of pumped-up muscles and physique divinity.



Joe Gogol and other male model photographed by Chimene Lasserre
Pictures from http://www.nikosapostolopoulos.com/fullscreenmainpage.html

In 1988 Nikos worked with American photographer Victor Skrebneski in an ideal collaboration of like-minded fashion erotics. Denizens of South Beach and Venice, California, were logical candidates for this self-assured, body-flaunting clothing driven by heat, narcissism, and sexuality. Men who might dress for the evening in Gianni Versace might choose Nikos for activewear. While the line diversified to some street clothing for men and swimwear and exercise wear for women, Nikos still primarily addresses the homoerotic male.

Nikos Apostolopoulos
- Spring/Summer 1987
Models: Joe Gogol, Scott Benoit ...




Nikos' clothing template is the jock strap. He customarily provides a band (including many in the late 1980s that, like the underwear of competitors, included the designer name) around the waist from which an extended cod-piece or pouch distends. The designer's phallic primacy is complemented by bared sides and minimal coverage of buttocks, offering voyeurism (and implied accessibility) front and rear to the male. His tanks stress angularity almost as if to clothe men of granitic triangulation, rather than the ordinary soft body.

Further, two devices frequent in Nikos' work exacerbate the homoerotic content. In effectively using stretch materials, Nikos often opens apertures in the briefs and tops, allowing a peek-a-boo spectatorship more often associated with female undergarments. Additionally, Nikos relishes piecing and visible seams, the stretchy activewear taking on something of the aspect of a virile Vionnet or an Azzedine Alaïa transferred to Muscle Beach. The effect, of course, is to promote even further the sense of the garment as strapping, swaddling, a slight covering for muscles and body movement. In instances when Nikos uses stripes, his only pattern, line enhances the verticality and size of the phallic pouch.



Joe Gogol was his favourite model the very first years, ph: Chimene Lasserre

In the early 1990s collections emphasized more moderate clothing for the street, including the graphically strong spring/summer 1993 collection with outfits in black-and-white for exercise and shirts with bold designs inspired by Matisse cutouts. The spring/summer 1994 collection stressed sportswear for the street and offered a repertoire of loose, long knits and colorful shorts and white and black oversized trousers. Whenever Nikos had shown streetwear in the late 1980s and 1990s, the look was still of extremism, with see-through tank tops, faux leopard skins, and tailored clothing with zoot suit bravado. In the street clothes, Nikos did not abandoned fetishes, but moved toward mainstream menswear, ironically leaving many other designers from Dirk Bikkembergs to Gianni Versace to fill his gap on the wild side.

Nikos Apostolopoulos - Fall/Winter 1987




One can either dismiss Nikos for his marketing of the most blatant homoerotic clothing, of which probably a considerable portion is purchased but seldom worn, or worn only for the private circumstance. Or one can understand that Nikos stands, with many designers of men's underwear and related athletic wear, as one who cultivates specific and definable traits of the homoerotic to develop garments possessing their own brand of beauty.

Nikos ventured into fragrances in 1994 with, oddly, a women's scent rather than one for men. Sculpture Femme launched amidst much fanfare did well enought to encourage Nikos to develop a complementary men's scent, preferably one as iconoclastic as its creator. Sculpture Homme, introduced in 1995, didn't disappoint with its sexy mythical connotations and spicy base, rolled out with widespread media advertising. Both Nikos incarnations sold very well at a time when upscale retailers were in a slump. The designer pondered additional fragrances as well as bath and body lines.

—Richard Martin;


1987, Brian Buzzini and Mark Kleckner

Ph: Victor Skrebneski

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Nikos Apostolopoulos - Spring/Summer 1988
Models: Iman Abdulmajid, Mark Kleckner
Ph: Victor Skrebneski



Fashion Show Models: Scott Benoit, Joe Gogol, Brad Harryman ....




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Nikos Apostolopoulos - Fall/Winter 1988
Models:
Steve Lyon, Joe Gogol, Iman Abdulmajid, Odile, Paul Wadina and other male model (no id yet)
Ph: Victor Skrebneski



The official Nikos website has a whole set of pics of the catalog.


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Nikos Apostolopoulos - Spring/Summer 1989
Models: Iman Abdulmajid, Odile and a male model
Ph: Victor Skrebneski



Fashion show models: Steve Lyon and Odile






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Nikos Apostolopoulos - Fall/Winter 1989
Iman Abdulmajid and Steve Lyon, Chris Martin, Bert Van Emden, Moose Ali Khan, Swiggy Drummond, Odile.




^ 4:24, Iman + Steve Lyon = a must see, amazing!

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Nikos Apostolopoulos - Spring/Summer 1990
Models: Marpessa Hennink and a male model
Ph: Herb Ritts



Fasfion show models: Steve Lyon, Walter Schupfer, Nick Scotti, Chris Martin, Moose Ali Kahn, Hermes ...




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Nikos Apostolopoulos - Fall/Winter 1990
Models: Yasmeen Ghauri and male models
Ph: Michel Comte



Fashion Show models: Michiel Van Dijk, Yaron Fink, Cameron Alborzian ....





GQ 1988

GQ
"Something Wild"
Spring/Summer 1988
Model: Swiggy Drummond
Ph: Sacha





here by Bruce Weber for Calvin Klein 1987


and GQ 1987 by Arthur Elgort



Btw, who is that Sacha photographer? I don't know him.

Bruce Weber Models - Id Challenge

These 2 Calvin Klein Sport ads photographed by Bruce Weber were in every magazine in 1987 and 1988, they were practically the favourite models of Bruce Weber back in the day, I'm trying to identify them but there are some unknown faces (to me) so Bruce Weber experts are required.




#01 = Sophie Horenz
#02 = Blake Gratkowski
#03 = Ana Drummond
#04 = Justin Lazard
#05 = Lisa Marie Smith
#06 = Tobi Morris
#07 = David Moore
#08 = Marielle MacVille
#09 = Curt Butrum
#10 = Rebecca Rollinson
#11 = Swiggy Drummond
#12 = Bert Van Emden
#13 = Cecilia Chancellor
#14 =
#15 = Walt Pickell
#16 = Rebecca Ghiglieri
#17 = Stefano Tartini
#18 = Olivier Anquier
#19 = Peter Bjerg
#20 = Cynthia Lamontagne
#21 = Serena
#22 = Eric Knorpp
#23 = Ted Stephenson
#24 =
#25 = Patrick Muldoon
#26 =
#27 = Lance Palumbo ?
#28 =
#29 = Antonia Rizo



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