In 1992 Reed also brought back to the fashion world the model Ingmari Lamy, marking her return from an 11 years hiatus and the start of her second career in fashion.[1]
He later moved to Berlin,[2] where he established a new creative hub and photo studio called The Apartment.
By the end of the 1990s Reed established a second residency in Cuba, where he made a photographic documentation of Havana. During the course of a year and a half, Reed explored the streets of Havana and their inhabitants with an 8x10 camera. The photographs are in black and white and show the ordinary life of the city, as well as more private moments. The project was presented for the first time in Havana with the name Fin de Siglo and later as an exhibition at the Kulturhuset in Stockholm.[3]
In 2012 with the publication Berliner, The Asphalt Portraits,[4] Reed presented a gallery of characters from the creative Berlin scene with a series of black and white portraits.[5]
Since 2015 Reed is a member of the Jury Board at the Independent Film Festival Boddinale.
Excursion for Miracles: Paul Sanasardo, Donya Feuer, and Studio for Dance (1955–1964). Wesleyan University Press, 2005. ISBN978-0-8195-6744-4.
Schweppes Photographic Portrait Prize. London: National Portrait Gallery, 2005.
American Hipster: A Life of Herbert Huncke: the Times Square Hustler who Inspired the Beat Movement. Magnus, 2013. ISBN978-1-936833-21-4. Included Reed's photographic reportage on the life of Herbert Huncke.
References
^Bosse, Lisa. "Magnus Reed". Freunde von Freunden. Retrieved 26 April 2016.