Gair, who is New Zealand-born and was raised in Auckland,[2][8] lives in the United States and is based in Los Angeles.[2][9] In 1977, she began teaching dance at a New Zealand primary school.[3] She moved from New Zealand at the age of 21 and had a variety of stops on her way to Los Angeles.[3] Most of the time was spent in Australia and Amsterdam,until she ventured to Los Angeles at the time of the 1984 Summer Olympics, after five years away from home. With the help of the Cloutier Agency she obtained a work permit.[14] She then approached the Chanel and Gaultier beauty salons to offer her already well-respected make-up artist services. They both accepted her and she further solidified her reputation to the point where instead of being asked if she was George Gair's daughter it was more common for her father to be asked if he was Joanne Gair's father.[3] Her early work in the music industry included album cover and music video work for David Lee Roth, Tina Turner, Grace Jones, Annie Lennox, and Mick Jagger.[14] One of her early successes was being employed to do Roth's 1986 Eat 'Em and Smile album cover. These experiences led to work with Madonna, which started with music videos for "Express Yourself" and "Vogue".[14] She has also done work on music videos for Aerosmith and Nine Inch Nails.[1] Her work on the 1997 Nine Inch Nails video for "The Perfect Drug" won her the makeup portion of the best hair/makeup in a music video at the Music Video Production Awards.[15] She had also won awards for Madonna's Frozen.[2] Among the other notable musicians she has worked with is Gwen Stefani, who won Most Stylish Video at the 1999 VH1/Vogue Fashion Awards working with Gair on the video for No Doubt's song "New".[16] Gair also worked on ad campaigns and for photo features in efforts to exhibit the artistic visions of others.[17]
Woman wearing a bodypainting of a man's business suit
The August 1992 Vanity Fair nude Demi's Birthday Suit cover body painting/photo made Joanne Gair famous.
Eventually she expanded beyond make-up artistry to body painting to express her own artistic vision. In August 1991, Demi Moore caused international artistic commotion by appearing on the cover of Vanity Fair seven months pregnant with her daughter Scout
Gair, who is New Zealand-born and was raised in Auckland,[2][8] lives in the United States and is based in Los Angeles.[2][9] In 1977, she began teaching dance at a New Zealand primary school.[3] She moved from New Zealand at the age of 21 and had a variety of stops on her way to Los Angeles.[3] Most of the time was spent in Australia and Amsterdam,until she ventured to Los Angeles at the time of the 1984 Summer Olympics, after five years away from home. With the help of the Cloutier Agency she obtained a work permit.[14] She then approached the Chanel and Gaultier beauty salons to offer her already well-respected make-up artist services. They both accepted her and she further solidified her reputation to the point where instead of being asked if she was George Gair's daughter it was more common for her father to be asked if he was Joanne Gair's father.[3] Her early work in the music industry included album cover and music video work for David Lee Roth, Tina Turner, Grace Jones, Annie Lennox, and Mick Jagger.[14] One of her early successes was being employed to do Roth's 1986 Eat 'Em and Smile album cover. These experiences led to work with Madonna, which started with music videos for "Express Yourself" and "Vogue".[14] She has also done work on music videos for Aerosmith and Nine Inch Nails.[1] Her work on the 1997 Nine Inch Nails video for "The Perfect Drug" won her the makeup portion of the best hair/makeup in a music video at the Music Video Production Awards.[15] She had also won awards for Madonna's Frozen.[2] Among the other notable musicians she has worked with is Gwen Stefani, who won Most Stylish Video at the 1999 VH1/Vogue Fashion Awards working with Gair on the video for No Doubt's song "New".[16] Gair also worked on ad campaigns and for photo features in efforts to exhibit the artistic visions of others.[17]Woman wearing a bodypainting of a man's business suitThe August 1992 Vanity Fair nude Demi's Birthday Suit cover body painting/photo made Joanne Gair famous.Eventually she expanded beyond make-up artistry to body painting to express her own artistic vision. In August 1991, Demi Moore caused international artistic commotion by appearing on the cover of Vanity Fair seven months pregnant with her daughter Scout
การแปล กรุณารอสักครู่..
