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Photo courtesy of ‘AVEDON’
Premiering at Cannes, AVEDON turns one of fashion photography’s most mythic names into a study of image, power, beauty, and control
Richard Avedon did not simply photograph culture. He helped invent the way it wanted to see itself.
Across fashion, portraiture, advertising, and editorial work, Avedon’s images shaped a whole visual century: models in motion, celebrities stripped of their armour, politicians forced into stillness, faces made monumental against a white background. His work could be elegant, ruthless, glamorous, intimate, theatrical, and strangely exposing all at once.

Now, Ron Howard is turning the lens back on him. The filmmaker’s new feature documentary AVEDON premieres at the 2026 Cannes Film Festival as a special screening in the festival’s Official Selection, offering a layered portrait of the photographer’s life, work, and lasting influence.
Produced by Imagine Documentaries, the film explores Avedon as an artist who used fashion, portraiture, and commercial photography to examine identity, power, fear, and beauty. Rather than treating his images as frozen icons, the documentary appears to ask what was happening beneath them: the emotional pressure of the sitting, the choreography of control, the strange exchange between photographer and subject.

That tension is what made Avedon so influential. His photographs helped define American ideas of style, beauty, and cultural authority across the second half of the 20th century, but they also unsettled those ideas. He understood glamour, yet he often pushed past it. He could make fashion feel weightless, then make a portrait feel almost confrontational in its psychological directness.

The documentary draws on archival material, footage, and interviews, including never-before-seen elements from Avedon’s world. That access matters, because Avedon’s legacy is not only in the finished photograph. It is also in the process: the studio, the contact sheets, the conversations, the performance of looking, the moment when a subject begins to reveal more than they intended.
Howard is an interesting figure to take this on. His filmmaking has often been drawn to people under pressure — performers, astronauts, musicians, industrialists, figures whose public image hides more complicated machinery underneath. With Avedon, that machinery is visual. The question is not just who Avedon photographed, but how he made people visible, and what that visibility cost.

Avedon died in 2004, but his images still feel uncannily present. Partly because fashion keeps returning to his sense of movement and drama. Partly because portraiture still borrows from his stark white spaces and emotional tension. And partly because his central question has not gone away: what happens when a camera does not flatter you, but recognises you too intensely?
