National Portrait Gallery Logo - link to our homepage NPG nav image for Thursday
National Portrait Gallery Homepage Search The Collection What's On? About the Gallery
Visitor Information National Portrait Gallery Around the Country Search the Website
Education Research Publications Picture Library Gift & Bookshop Membership Sponsorship Venue Hire Press
You are in National Portrait Gallery | Press releases | Philippe Halsman: A Retrospective
Pressregister for our e-newsletter


PHILIPPE HALSMAN: A RETROSPECTIVE

23 May - 2 September 2001
Admission free
Photography Gallery

This long-awaited retrospective celebrates one of the most imaginative portrait photographers of the twentieth century. The National Portrait Gallery is delighted to present the first European showing of this exhibition which is organised by the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery, Washington.

Philippe Halsman (1906-1979) set the standard for celebrity portraiture. From the 1940s until the 1970s his portraits of actors, intellectuals and politicians appeared on the covers and pages of the biggest magazines in Europe and the US. He arrived in New York in 1940, with little English, no money, no contacts and a camera. Within two years his work appeared on the cover of Life magazine, beginning a 30 year association with the magazine. Life published 101 covers by Halsman - a record unmatched by any other photographer.

This exhibition brings together over 70 photographs including portraits of Woody Allen, Marlon Brando, Bogart, Churchill, Jean Cocteau, Dali, Ingrid Bergman, Grace Kelly, Liz Taylor, Louis Armstrong and Vivien Leigh. From Albert Einstein to Marilyn Monroe and Audrey Hepburn, Philippe Halsman: A Retrospective is a comprehensive look at a true master of portrait photography.

Through lighting, focus and cropping Halsman turned formal fashion shots into serious studies of character. His ability to combine glamour, sex and wholesome energy in one portrait made him a favourite with Life for stars such as Marilyn Monroe and Sophia Loren. Many of Halsman's portraits became the definitive image of the sitter, most notably his famous portrait of Monroe for which he used the camera and his assistants to corner her and compete for her attention. The resulting portrait, included in the exhibition, is now one of the best known images of the actress.

Halsman's style owes much to the Surrealist movement - from them he learnt to surprise his viewers. He had a long collaborative relationship with Salvador Dali and they worked together on many occasions. Their most notable production was the startling Dali Atomicus in which the artist, canvas, furniture, cats and water all appear to be suspended in air.

Halsman grew up in Riga, Latvia, and began his photography career in Paris in the 1930s, contributing to Vogue and other fashion magazines. He shunned the old fashioned portrait style of soft focus in favour of dark sharp images and soon gained a reputation as one of the best portrait photographers in France. However, with the invasion of France by Hitler's troops he fled to America having obtained a visa with the help of his friend Albert Einstein.

Halsman's big break in New York came when he met Connie Ford, a model who agreed to pose for him in exchange for prints for her portfolio. When Halsman showed the resulting pictures of Ford against an American flag to the cosmetics company Elizabeth Arden they used the image to launch a national advertising campaign for "Victory Red" lipstick. A year later he was commissioned by Life to photograph new hat designs. His portrait of a model in a Lily Daché hat was the first of his many covers for Life.

In the 1950s Halsman photographed a group of comedians from the TV channel NBC including Bob Hope and Groucho Marx. Each comedian performed while Halsman shot pictures, sometimes taking 300 frames in a single session. Photographing the comedians in action inspired Halsman to produce his famous "jump" pictures, which capture noteworthy people, from Richard Nixon to the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, mid-air, jumping for the camera. Halsman felt that asking a person to jump distracted them from posing for the camera and so revealed more of their natural personality. A special section of the exhibition is devoted to Halsman's "jump" portraits.

Of all the great photographers of his time, Halsman belongs most completely to the magazine era. His subjects create a vivid picture of prosperous American society in the middle years of this century and he captures the laughter, high spirits and glamour of his time, as well as its intense emotions and true optimism.

Following the London showing of the exhibition, Philippe Halsman: A Retrospective will tour to its final venue, Hotel de Sully, Patrimoine Photographiques, Paris, from 4 October 2001 - 6 January 2002.

Publication
A fully-illustrated catalogue, by Jane Halsman Bello and Steve Bello, accompanies the exhibition including an introductory essay by Mary Panzer of the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery. Published by Pavilion Books with 150 illustrations. Price £40 (hardback).

National Portrait Gallery opening hours
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Saturday, Sunday: 10:00 - 18:00,
Late Opening: Thursday, Friday: 10:00 - 21:00
Recorded information: 020 7312 2463
General information: 020 7306 0055
Website: www.npg.org.uk

For further press information please contact:
Hazel Sutherland, Press Office, National Portrait Gallery
Tel: 020 7312 2452 Fax:020 7306 0058 Email:hsutherland@npg.org.uk




home | search the collection | what's on? | about the gallery | visitor information | npg around the country | search the website
education | research | publications | picture library | gift & bookshop | membership | sponsorship | venue hire | press

Betsie icon Go to a large print, text-only
version of this site

All images and text are subject to copyright protection. 04 December 2008


Comments and suggestions

National Portrait Gallery, St Martin's Place, London WC2H 0HE. Tel: 020 7306 0055