Beatles to Bowie: the 60s exposed

News Release

25 June 2009

BEATLES TO BOWIE: THE 60s EXPOSED

15 October 2009 - 24 January 2010
Wolfson and Ground floor Lerner Galleries
Admission £11, Concessions £10/£9,Free for Gallery Supporters
Press View: Wednesday 14 October 11am-1pm (with tour at 11.30am)

Sponsored by The Bank of New York Mellon

150 photographs of the 1960s including rare portraits of The Beatles, David Bowie, Jimi Hendrix and The Rolling Stones - over 100 exhibited for the first time

A major photographic exhibition Beatles to Bowie: the 60s exposed opens at the National Portrait Gallery, to herald the fiftieth anniversary of the start of the 1960s in 2010. Celebrating the leading pop music personalities and groups who helped create "Swinging London" in the 1960s, the exhibition will show how The Beatles and rivals such as the Rolling Stones and The Kinks set the musical agenda. Bringing together 150 photographs and 150 items of ephemera including record sleeves, illustrated sheet music and magazines, the exhibition will be arranged chronologically in ten sections covering each year of the decade.  

The exhibition includes classic images - as well as over 100 previously unseen or unexhibited ones - of groups such as The Beatles, the Rolling Stones, The Kinks and The Who and early portraits of singers such as Cliff Richard, Billy Fury, Marianne Faithfull, Jimi Hendrix and David Bowie. Beatles to Bowie: the 60s exposed will illustrate how image, music, fashion and performance combined to make these musicians the leading icons of their time and London the world's most important cultural capital.

The essential rivalry of The Beatles and the Rolling Stones is played out visually by a variety of top photographers who helped create and endorse their changing images. Younger photographers such as Fiona Adams and Philip Townsend also feature as the exhibition explores how they took over from established masters of earlier eras such as Cecil Beaton and Norman Parkinson, who themselves continued to work during this period, re-energised by the youthful spirit of the time.

Early sections of the exhibition will include photographs of the hit groups from the early 1960s such as Gerry and The Pacemakers to the John Barry Seven whose signature Hit or Miss provided the introductory theme to Juke Box Jury, one of the many television programmes that brought the new pop to a wider public. 

A series of 10 showcases will feature pop ephemera including pop magazines such as Fabulous and Rave and pictorial spreads from Town magazine showing Don McCullin's photo-essay on  Marc Bolan as a Mod before he was famous and Norman Parkinson's pictures for Queen magazine in which Adam Faith demonstrated the Madison dance with top models (both in 1962).

Other sections of the exhibition will be devoted to the mini-invasion of US stars who moved to England to start their careers such as P J Proby, the Walker Brothers and later Jimi Hendrix.

The exhibition will show how female British singers not only created many pop classics but served as important role models, pioneering and promoting British fashion designers - such as Cilla Black and Lulu being dressed by the 21-year-old Caroline Charles and Sandie Shaw developing her own fashion lines.

Beatles to Bowie: the 60s exposed will also show how, as the decade progressed, pure pop was replaced by progressive music and psychedelia by groups such as Pink Floyd. Visitors will be able to see how Joe Meek's ‘Telstar' opened this extraordinary decade and how man's first step on the moon led to the first hit record by David Bowie with ‘Space Oddity', paving the way for his domination, along with Marc Bolan, of Glam Rock in the following decade.

Beatles to Bowie: the 60s exposed is curated by the National Portrait Gallery's Curator of Photographs, Terence Pepper, whose previous exhibitions at the Gallery include the award-winning Vanity Fair Portraits, Angus McBean Portraits, Cecil Beaton Portraits and the display Beatles on the Balcony.

Sandy Nairne, Director of the National Portrait Gallery, London, says: ‘Beatles to Bowie will show how in the 1960s, music changed the world - and how Britain's was the central axis of new popular culture.' 

Woody Kerr, European Vice Chairman, The Bank of New York Mellon, says: ‘The Bank of New York Mellon is proud to support the National Portrait Gallery in bringing this remarkable photographic collection to the public. We opened our first London office during the 1960s, so this exhibition has particular resonance for us, and as a company we have long been advocates of fine art and popular photography and the form's ability to capture cultural and societal change in a vivid and often definitive fashion.'

As well as appearing as an Adel Rootstein mannequin in the Pop meets Fashion section of the exhibition, Twiggy will be the subject of a concurrent Gallery display of portrait photographs Twiggy: A Life in Photographs in Room 33 (19 September-24 March 2010.) Other 1960s displays include Bob Dylan 1966 European Tour: Photographs by Barry Feinstein (Bookshop Gallery until 29 November 2009) and Portraits of the 1960s by Baron Studios (Portrait Café.)

EXHIBITION

Advance booking recommended. Visit www.npg.org.uk. Admission £11. Concessions £10/£9. Free for Gallery Supporters. A Senior Citizens Ticket Offer of £9 is available every Wednesday throughout the exhibition.

PUBLICATION

A fully illustrated book accompanies the exhibition, featuring over 300 images selected by the curator Terence Pepper, introduced by an essay by the leading cultural historian and expert on pop culture, Jon Savage. Price £30 hardback.

TOUR

Beatles to Bowie: the 60s exposed will tour to the Laing Art Gallery, Newcastle upon Tyne

(6 Feb-18 April 2010) and Norwich Castle Museum and Art Gallery (8 May-5 Sept 2010.)

For further press information, please contact: Neil Evans, Senior Press Officer, National Portrait Gallery, Tel. 020 7312 2452 (not for publication) Email nevans@npg.org.uk

To download press releases and images, please go to: www.npg.org.uk/press

National Portrait Gallery, St Martin's Place WC2H 0HE, opening hours Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Saturday, Sunday: 10am - 6pm (Gallery closure commences at 5.50pm) Late Opening: Thursday, Friday: 10am - 9pm  (Gallery closure commences at 8.50pm) Nearest Underground: Leicester Square/Charing Cross General information: 0207 306 0055  Recorded information: 020 7312 2463  Website/Tickets: www.npg.org.uk 

NOTES TO EDITORS

Sitters include Adam Faith, Cliff Richard and the Shadows, Billy Fury, The John Barry Seven, The Dave Clark Five, Sandie Shaw, Petula Clark, Cilla Black, Lulu, Marianne Faithfull, The Rolling Stones, The Beatles, The Kinks, The Tornados, Jimi Hendrix, The Walker Brothers, The Animals, The Who, Marc Bolan, Pink Floyd and David Bowie

Photographers include Fiona Adams, Philip Townsend, Gered Mankowitz, Jean-Marie Périer, Michael Cooper, Cecil Beaton, Angus McBean, Terry O'Neill, Don McCullin, David Bailey, Tony Frank and Norman Parkinson

The Bank of New York Mellon

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