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Think of any superstar over the past four decades and it’s likely that has photographed them. David Beckham and David Bowie, and , and — the list continues to grow. Though other notable photographers whose careers and resumes have extended the length of LaChapelle’s — the late Chi Modu and Janette Beckman being several — rarely has anyone replicated the zeitgeist in the surrealist and hyper-saturated manner as him.

LaChapelle wants his subjects to feel larger than life and in over the course of that lifelong mission, he has (inadvertently) come to prophesize the legacies of some of pop culture’s biggest names — from framing with a crown of thorns long before (2013); showing Tupac Shakur as the saintly figure he’s posthumously remembered as and fetishizing high trash culture through early shots of the Kardashians and Paris Hilton. In other instances, LaChapelle’s images have also come to spotlight (and foreshadow) the darker underbelly of fame and governance, such as a portrait of Diddy perched aggressively over an unconscious woman, along with a sanctified depiction of Julian Assange, the WikiLeaks founder still wanted by the FBI for exposing the corruption of the US government. “Each picture tells a story,” LaChapelle says.



At 61, he has both seen and helped cultivate the mythology around the biggest celebrities in the Western world. It would be easy to hang it up and enjoy the fruits of his labor, but tirelessly, LaChapelle continues to create some of .

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