Here it is. Some of it anyway.
I’m talkng about the 2018 Pirelli Calendar.
For this the 45th edition of the famous calendar, British photographer Tim Walker applied his unmistakable style to one of the classic stories of British literature: Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland.
His inspiration came not only from Lewis Carroll’s fantastic story, but most importantly from the illustrations that Carroll himself had entrusted to John Tenniel for the first edition of 1865.
In Tim Walker’s 2018 Pirelli Calendar they become 28 shots consisting of 20 different and extraordinary sets for a new unique Wonderland.
”Alice has been told so many times”, Tim Walker said, “and I think I wanted to go back to the genesis of the imagination behind Lewis Carroll so that you could tell it from the very beginning again. I wanted to find a different and original angle”.
In order to convey his idea of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland , Walker has portrayed a cast of 18 personalities, both established and upcoming, including musicians, actors, models, and political activists.
It features Sudanese-Australian model Adut Akech, Ghanaian-British fashion model and feminist activist Adwoa Aboah, Senegalese-German model Alpha Dia, Beninese-American actor and model Djimon Hounsou, South Sudanese-Australian model Duckie Thot, Gambian women’s rights activist Jaha Dukureh, British model King Owusu, American rapper and singer Lil Yachty, Mexican-Kenyan actress Lupita Nyong’o, British supermodel and actress Naomi Campbell, American actor, television personality and singer/songwriter RuPaul, American actress Sasha Lane, American rapper, singer, songwriter, actor, record producer and entrepreneur Sean “Diddy” Combs, American model Slick Woods, South African model and lawyer Thando Hopa, American actress, comedian, author and television host Whoopi Goldberg, British model Wilson Oryema and British fashion stylist, designer and singer Zoe Bedeaux.
Together they form an all-black cast, for the second time after the 1987 Pirelli Calendar in which British photographer Terence Donovan shot five beautiful black women, including a then sixteen-year-old Naomi Campbell and model, writer and activist Waris Dirie.
To realise his calendar, Walker collaborated with two eminent artists in their own right: Shona Heath, one of Britain’s leading creative directors and set designers, and the fashion icon Edward Enninful who was the stylist behind this year’s elaborate costumes.
Shona Heath was responsible for creating the striking sets and installations which allowed for the creative storytelling in this depiction of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland .
Elements of the tale which are today part of our collective imagination have been turned upside down, for example: the white rabbit has become a black rabbit while the Queen’s red roses have been painted in black by the Playing Cards.
“I was always trying to find something to turn on its head, question what the story meant and what was the important bit, and how far could it diversify. We’re still making a very clear message that is very true to the story, actually,” Heath said.
Commenting on his contribution to this year’s calendar, Enninful who recently became both the first male and first black editor of British Vogue said. “It is very important that the story of Alice be told to a new generation.
Her adventure in Wonderland resonates with the world we live in today; obstacles we have to overcome and the idea of celebrating difference.
“Growing up in London I often lived in a fantasy world of fairy tales and detective novels. Alice was always one of my favourite characters.
“I always felt I was with her on the journey through Wonderland, and all of these extraordinary characters became my friends . . . well all but the scary Queen and her beheaders . . . To see a black Alice today means children of all races can embrace the idea of diversity from a very young age and also acknowledge that beauty comes in all colours. Culturally we are living in a diverse world. Projects like this remarkable Pirelli Calendar demonstrate that there is still hope in what sometimes feels like an increasingly cynical reality”.
Alice, no longer a child, is played by a model of unearthly beauty (Duckie Thot) whose personal history, as the child of Sudanese refugees who moved to Australia, makes her an ideal modern incarnation of Carroll’s restless and rootless heroine.
What goes on behind the scenes, the photo shoots, the stories and personalities of the 2018 Pirelli Calendar, can all be found on the calendar website here, where visitors can explore the history of more than 50 years of The Cal through films, interviews, photographs and previously unpublished texts.