Puzzle, puzzle No. 2 Cacharel with fashion photo from Sarah Moon.
Maybe it was made or designed for a launch or derivative
Mid-1970s
The box is in good condition despite a small embosse (see photo) and resolidified in an inner corner
The puzzle is in excellent and complete 106 pieces (see photos) The back of some pieces lacks a bit of paper but no impact on the image that is icy
Shown on the back of Delpire Advico, printed in France Phot Sarah Moon
Born in 1941 in Vernon, Sarah Moon grew up between France and England. She studied drawing, then began a modeling career that plunged her into the world of fashion, a universe that would later propel her into the world of photography. His international fame began in 1967, when his collaboration with Cacharel began. In 1970, she devoted herself exclusively to photography and her work was published in numerous journals.
Sarah Moon is particularly famous for her polaroids, her half-toned photos, her erased faces. The themes of fashion but also nature, myth, exoticism are very present in his images, always almost a little blurry ... Sarah Moon has been awarded several times for her work, she is exhibited and recognized all over the world.
"Cacharel... Sarah Moon...... or the founding encounter between a brand and a photographer. Peter Knapp, another strong image maker of the 1960s, will not hesitate to call it "a unique fact in the history of fashion." .... an original and very personal approach to image-brand interaction. ... Cacharel was the first to imagine a radically new brand concept where the fashion object fades in front of the image. And that's where Sarah Moon's talent comes in. No one had thought of introducing the image to the very heart of a brand's identity. With the complicity of Sarah Moon, Cacharel will really shape by the image his personality, his sensitivity, to the point of making the image the inimitable signature of the Cacharel spirit..."
Since 1951, Delpire Publisher has published books of very high quality, mainly devoted to photography.
Having innovated by publishing the works of William Klein, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Marc Riboud, Robert Frank and others, the house then paved the way for artists whose essential status would soon be recognized, such as Josef Koudelka, Sarah Moon, Michel Vanden Eeckhoudt and, more recently, Daido Moriyama.
Puzzle size 42 cm x 28 cm or 16 1/2 inches X 11 inches
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