Stepping into Style: Fashion and the Art of Elegance collects images that treat clothing as conversation, showing how posture, gesture, and presence shape the meaning of a dress. At Holden Luntz Gallery, the exhibition moves from the sculptural control of
Horst P. Horst and George Hoyningen‑Huene to the kinetic ease of
Arthur Elgort and
William Klein, tracing a history in which fashion images shift from formal portraiture to lively social choreography. Each photograph stages not only a garment but a way of being in the world—an argument about aspiration, identity, and taste.
The show foregrounds the many languages of elegance: Horst’s studio compositions prize sculptural clarity and measured light;
Melvin Sokolsky and William Helburn pursue theatrical invention and surreal mise‑en‑scène; while Douglas Kirkland and
Mario Testino harness cinematic spectacle and celebrity pose. These varied approaches demonstrate that style operates both as costume and as social code—something performed, negotiated, and photographed into being. Across decades, photographers translate fabric into posture and posture into statement.
Other works in the exhibition emphasize freedom and immediacy. Arthur Elgort’s breezy sequences and Jim Lee’s relaxed framing capture motion and the ordinary moments where style becomes naturalized; Arthur’s images read like lived experience rather than staged tableaux. At the same time, artists such as
Albert Watson and Kali explore texture and chroma, using light and color to sculpt mood and authority. Together, these voices show elegance as a mobile practice, continually redefined by context and personality.
Seen as a whole,
Stepping into Style refuses nostalgia for a single ideal of beauty. Instead, it presents elegance as an evolving conversation between clothes, camera, and culture—where glamour can be sober, playful, political, or intimate. The exhibition asks viewers to look beyond fabric and label, to attend to the small acts of posture and gaze that make style legible, and to consider how images of elegance continue to shape our sense of self and public life.
Image:
Dovima Opera Box
Executed in 1961
© William Helburn, courtesy of the Holden Luntz Gallery