Muse flash: Vincent Ferrané gets up close and personal with Parisian model Jeanne Damas
The French photographer explores the myth and mystique of female icons in contemporary culture for a new book

Vincent Ferrané first met model Jeanne Damas through mutual friends during Les Recontres d’Arles in 2015 – back then, the French fashion influencer was still relatively unknown. Still, the photographer was fascinated by the persona he observed her constructing for a virtual audience over the course of the festival. The Parisian It girl is now the subject of Ferrané’s latest book project, Iconography: XXV Figures of Jeanne Damas, a series of intimate portraits and personal curios in a pared-back moodboard of her daily life.
‘I wanted to create a series that looked like an investigation – something close to a document, or a quest for proof,’ Ferrané tells us, explaining he’s documented fragments of Damas that ‘a fan might collect’. The photographer mined Damas’ Instagram feed, methodically extracting her poses and objects before inviting her to recreate them in front of his lens. ‘[Her fans] could search for her destiny in the lines of her hand, or keep as a relic the traces of lipstick on her cigarette butts. How can a collection of images express these desires?’
Damas gets into character against a neutral backdrop; rendered in black and white, the images sever their connection to the typically glossy and colourful qualities of fashion editorials. ‘These images seem inspired by a long history of the representation of women forged by what ones called the codes of patriarchy.’ To wit, Ferrané’s wide-ranging influences include Renoir’s Odalisque (1870), film noir, the artistic tradition of contrapposto (a type of classical pose), Irving Penn’s close-ups of cigarettes butts, and Walker Evans’ 1955 portfolio for Fortune magazine, Beauty of the Common Tool.
In a climate where the male gaze is under increasing scrutiny, Ferrané’s photographs tread the fine line between reverence and objectification of his female muse. The more intrusive images – detail shots of bare limbs and body parts – seemingly veer towards the latter. Yet, Damas is both subject and creative collaborator, always in strategic control of the image she crafts for her audience and now, Ferrané’s camera. She has, after all, spent years honing and cultivating this persona in the digital sphere.
Ferrané notes the modern appetite for visual culture is more voracious than ever before. ‘Today, we consume more and more images, some by actively searching but mostly passively,’ he notes. ‘What interests me is that the images are never innocuous, they always convey hidden meanings and, with regards to the body, a political dimension, too. Iconography seeks to explain – as much as to question – the elements of a popular representation of feminine beauty.’
INFORMATION
Iconography: XXV figures of Jeanne Damas, €40, published by Libraryman. vincentferranephotography.com
Wallpaper* Newsletter
Receive our daily digest of inspiration, escapism and design stories from around the world direct to your inbox.
-
Fendi celebrates 100 years with all-out runway show at its new Milan HQ
In the wake of Kim Jones’ departure, Silvia Venturini Fendi took the reins for a special co-ed A/W 2025 collection marking the house’s centenary, unveiling it as the first act of celebrations within Fendi’s expansive new headquarters in Milan
By Jack Moss Published
-
‘Leigh Bowery!’ at Tate Modern: 1980s alt-glamour, club culture and rebellion
The new Leigh Bowery exhibition in London is a dazzling, sequin-drenched look back at the 1980s, through the life of one of its brightest stars
By Amah-Rose Abrams Published
-
Inside the unexpected collaboration between Marni’s Francesco Risso and artists Slawn and Soldier
New exhibition ‘The Pink Sun’ will take place at Francesco Risso’s palazzo in Milan in collaboration with Saatchi Yates, opening after the Marni show today, 26 February
By Hannah Silver Published
-
Daniel Arsham’s new monograph collates the works of the auto-obsessed American artist
‘Arsham Motorsport’ is two volumes of inspiration, process and work, charting artist Daniel Arsham’s oeuvre inspired by the icons and forms of the automotive industry
By Jonathan Bell Published
-
Era-defining photographer David Bailey guides us through the 1980s in a new tome not short of shoulder pads and lycra
From Yves Saint Laurent to Princess Diana, London photographer David Bailey dives into his 1980s archive in a new book by Taschen
By Tianna Williams Published
-
Inside Joan Didion’s unseen diary of personal relationships and post-therapy notes
A newly discovered diary by Joan Didion is soon to be published. Titled 'Notes to John', the journal documents her relationship with her daughter, husband, alcoholism, and depression
By Tianna Williams Published
-
Carsten Höller’s new Book of Games: 336 playful pastimes for the bold and the bored
Artist Carsten Höller invites readers to step out of their comfort zone with a series of subversive games
By Anne Soward Published
-
Distracting decadence: how Silvio Berlusconi’s legacy shaped Italian TV
Stefano De Luigi's monograph Televisiva examines how Berlusconi’s empire reshaped Italian TV, and subsequently infiltrated the premiership
By Zoe Whitfield Published
-
How a sprawling new book honours the legacy of cult photographer Larry Fink
‘Larry Fink: Hands On / A Passionate Life of Looking’ pays homage to an American master. ‘He had this ability to connect,’ says publisher Daniel Power
By Jordan Bassett Published
-
New Jay-Z coffee-table book dives into the Brooklyn rapper's archives
'Book of HOV: A Tribute to Jay-Z' is a hefty tome for a hefty talent
By Craig McLean Published
-
Discover Eve Arnold’s intimate unseen images of Marilyn Monroe
‘Marilyn Monroe by Eve Arnold’, published by ACC Art Books, is a personal portrayal of an icon
By Hannah Silver Published