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PAST EXHIBITION ARCHIVE
Blair at War: Photographs
by Nick Danziger
24 February - 15 July 2007
Room 38a
Free admission
In association with The
Times

March 14, 3.30 pm: The 'den',
Ten Downing Street
'Hello, Mr Chairman.
It's Tony Blair here'.
The Prime Minister on the phone to Yassir Arafat.
by Nick Danziger
© Nick Danziger

March 27: 3.15 pm: the road
to the Camp David heliport
Once this picture
is processed it immediately gets the title of 'the Reservoir
Dogs shot'.
by Nick Danziger
© Nick Danziger
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In March 2003, as Tony Blair
took the final steps towards leading the nation to war with Iraq,
award-winning photojournalist Nick Danziger and Times Literary
Supplement editor Peter Stothard were given thirty days of
unprecedented access to the Prime Minister and his closest aides.
On display to the public for
the first time, Danziger's portraits tell the candid story of
a decisive time in Britain's political history. Revealing the
inner circle of the political players in Downing Street, at Camp
David and in the power corridors of Europe, these portraits provide
a poignant insight into Blair's hopes and fears as he took on
a sceptical electorate, the Labour Party, Jacques Chirac and
ultimately Saddam Hussein.
On their first day of thirty
days with Tony Blair, Danziger and Stothard are in 'the den'
at Downing Street. 'So they are all against me, is that it?'
Blair asks Alastair Campbell, Director of Communications and
Strategy. Campbell does not reply. With the leaders of France
and Germany, the leader of the House of Commons, the leading
figures in the Trade Unions, about half his own MPs, including
Cabinet Minister, Clare Short, all opposed to war with Saddam,
he doesn't have to tell the Prime Minister what he already knows.
Four years on, the war in Iraq
continues and Tony Blair is preparing to hand over leadership
of the Labour Party. As Britain considers the legacy left by
our Prime Minister of the past 10 years, Danziger's portraits,
displayed alongside new captions by Stothard, remind us of 'Blair
at War'.
On the display of this exceptional
private view of the Prime Minister, Sandy Nairne, Director of
the National Portrait Gallery, London says: 'Danziger's closely
observed portraits of Tony Blair take us to the heart of statesmanship:
to the interaction between world leaders at a critical moment.'
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