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PAST EXHIBITION ARCHIVE
Timed ticketing is in operation during this exhibition. Advance
booking is recommended. Tickets can be booked in person at the
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Baba Beaton: a symphony
in silver by Cecil Beaton, 1925 © Cecil Beaton Archive,
Sotheby's London/Collection National Portrait Gallery
Sponsored
by

Recommended by

In association with Sotheby's
and Vogue

Marlene Dietrich by Cecil Beaton,
1935 Courtesy Sotheby's

Marlon Brando by Cecil Beaton,
1946 Vogue © The Condé Nast Publications Inc.

Marilyn Monroe by Cecil Beaton,
1956 Courtesy Sotheby's

Twiggy at 8 Pelham Place by Cecil
Beaton, 1967 Vogue © The Condé Nast Publications
Ltd/Courtesy Sotheby's
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5 February - 31 May 2004
Admission £7, Concessions £4.50
Wolfson Gallery
Cecil Beaton (1904-1980) is one
of the most celebrated British Portrait Photographers of the
Twentieth Century and is renowned for his images of elegance,
glamour and style. His influence on portrait photography was
profound and lives on today in the work of many contemporary
photographers including David Bailey and Mario Testino. Cecil
Beaton: Portraits marks the centenary of Beaton's birth and
coincides with a revival of interest in his work occasioned in
part by the publication of his unexpurgated diaries and the recent
release of Stephen Fry's film Bright Young Things. This
is the first major overview of Beaton's portraits since Sir Roy
Strong's ground-breaking exhibition at the National Portrait
Gallery in 1968.
This major retrospective exhibition
brings together over 150 portraits from the five remarkable decades
of Beaton's career, including iconic images as well as those
never seen before. Beaton captures 50 years of fashion, art and
celebrity, from the Sitwells in the 1920s to the Rolling Stones
in the late 1960s. Definitive portraits of 20th century celebrities
are shown alongside more sombre works from his time as a war
photographer.
Highlights of the exhibition
include Beaton`s 1956 portrait of Marilyn Monroe, from her own
collection, which is accompanied by his handwritten eulogy about
her. Pages from Beaton's snapshot album of the Duke and Duchess
of Windsor's wedding, showing idyllically situated portraits
of Wallis Simpson in the grounds of the Château de Candé,
France, are on public display for the first time.
Beaton acquired his first camera
aged 11 and the exhibition opens with a portrait of his sister
Baba, taken a few years later, in 1922. A number of vintage prints
from Beaton's first exhibition (1927), notable for their striking
red Beaton signature, have been reunited, including a celebrated
portrait of Edith Sitwell posed as a gothic tomb sculpture. Edith
Sitwell and her family's patronage confirmed Beaton's position
as the most fashionable young photographer of the day and led
to a number of exciting commissions, including a contract with
Vogue, with whom Beaton was associated for over 50 years.
Other significant portraits from
this early period include Nancy Cunard in front of a polka dot
backdrop, the writers and poets Sylvia Townsend Warner, Stephen
Tennant and Siegfried Sassoon, and bright young things including
the Jungman twins, Tallulah Bankhead, and three young debutantes
posing as "Soapsuds".
The exhibition features work
taken from Beaton's first four Hollywood visits including images
of Gary Cooper, Loretta Young, Marlene Dietrich and Johnny Weissmuler,
preparing for his first Tarzan film. Other works from the 1930s
include French subjects taken in Paris, such as the fashion designers
Coco Chanel and Elsa Schiaparelli, and the artists Beaton befriended
such as Jean Cocteau and Pablo Picasso.
Beaton received the ultimate establishment seal of approval when
he was commissioned by the Royal Family in 1939. The exhibition
includes two studies of HM Queen Elizabeth, later the Queen Mother,
at Buckingham Palace, taken in dappled light and offering fairytale
romance.
With the outbreak of the Second
World War, Beaton devoted himself to his work as an official
war photographer. The Home Front is represented by pictures of
land girls and Beaton's unforgettable portrait of the 3 year-old
blitz victim Eileen Dunne (1940) in a hospital bed in the north
of England. During this period Beaton also captured wartime artists
such as the poet Cecil Day-Lewis, composer Benjamin Britten and
the memorable study of the elderly Walter Sickert and his wife
Helen Lessore in their garden near Bath in 1940.
In the post-war period Beaton
photographed existentialist writers Albert Camus and Jean-Paul
Sartre in Paris, and emerging actors in America, the 21 year
old Marlon Brando and Yul Brynner, and the reclusive Greta Garbo,
the subject of Beaton`s long-term romance.
In 1956 Beaton started work on
the costume designs for the first version of My Fair Lady
for the American stage with Julie Andrews and Rex Harrison and
was to continue with the production in its various forms until
his own Oscar-winning work for the film version starring Audrey
Hepburn in 1964. In the midst of this he also won an Oscar for
his work on another great film musical Gigi (1957) with
Leslie Caron.
In the 1950s Beaton produced
many of his most famous portraits of women including Audrey Hepburn,
Maria Callas, Elizabeth Taylor, Grace Kelly and Ingrid Bergman.
Male subjects included Francis Bacon, Lucian Freud, John Betjeman,
Sugar Ray Robinson, Frank Sinatra, Sammy Davis Jr and Dean Martin.
It is testament to Beaton's flexibility
and skill that he reinvented his photographic style for a new
decade. In the 1960s he was revitalised by working with some
of the era`s brightest cult figures such as David Hockney, Jean
Shrimpton, Rudolf Nureyev and most importantly Mick Jagger. Up
until a paralysing stroke in 1974, Beaton continued a punishing
work schedule, whether working on the Barbra Streisand's film
On a Clear Day You Can See Forever or photographing Warhol
and his entourage in New York.
The exhibition concludes with
Beaton's late poignant portraits of Ralph Richardson and Louise
Nevelson, and a recumbent Bianca Jagger photographed in the conservatory
of Beaton's home at Reddish.
Cecil Beaton: Portraits is curated by Terence Pepper, Curator
of Photographs at the National Portrait Gallery. Pepper first
met Cecil Beaton in 1978 and was subsequently assistant curator
on the 1984 Barbican Art Gallery Cecil Beaton exhibition. He
has organised a wide range of exhibitions on individual photographers
including Norman Parkinson (1981), Lewis Morley (1989), Dorothy
Wilding (1991), Henri Cartier-Bresson (1998) and Horst (2001).
Publication
The exhibition is accompanied by
a fully-illustrated catalogue entitled Beaton: Portraits
by Terence Pepper, with an introduction by Sir Roy Strong and
essay by Peter Conrad. 240 pages, over 200 illustrations, published
February 2004, price £35 hardback.
All
Beaton products available through the online shop
A lavish range of jewellery and accessories to capture the glamour
and style of Beaton's work.
Events
To accompany this exhibition there is a programme of talks, films
and a one-day fashion and photography conference on 21 May. Themes
covered in the talks include Beaton and Vogue, Beaton and Dandyism
and Beaton as a war photographer.
Friday 21 May, 10.30am- 4.30pm
Fashion as Photograph, Tickets £25/£15
A one-day conference, organised in partnership with the University
of Westminster, brings together leading voices from the worlds
of museums, galleries, auction houses, academia and the fashion
industry
All events take place in the
Ondaatje Wing Theatre and are free, except where indicated. Tickets,
where required, can be obtained from the Ticket Desk.
Links
- Touring Exhibition Venues
Related display
Beaton Drawings
From 12 December 2003
Room 31
Admission Free
To coincide with the major retrospective Cecil Beaton: Portraits
this case display features material from the Gallery's Archive
acquired after Beaton's death. It showcases work by Beaton as
illustrator, caricaturist and Oscar-winning costume designer.
Gaiety Girls
and Footlights Favourites from the 1900s to the 1920s
From 5 April - 22 August
Book Shop Gallery
Admission Free
Photographs taken by Bassano of Edwardian actresses idolised
by Beaton in his early years.
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