|
Born 1947 - Camera Press at
60
30 October 2007 - 20 April 2008
Room 38a, Contemporary Galleries

Ronnie Wood
by Sean Cook, 2007
© Sean Cook/Camera Press, London

Adam Faith
by Tom Blau, 1960
© Tom Blau/Camera Press, London
|
The UK's largest independent
photographic agency celebrates sixty years with the unveiling
of newly commissioned portraits by leading photographers of famous
personalities all born in 1947 including Sir Salman Rushdie
by Bryan Adams; Ronnie Wood by Sean Cook; and Tessa Jowell by
Lord Snowdon.
This display marks the sixtieth
anniversary of independent photographic agency, Camera Press,
founded by Tom Blau in 1947. In addition to presenting to the
public for the first time a group of newly commissioned portraits
of notable Britons celebrating sixty this year, Born 1947
Camera Press at 60 also includes a selection of photographs
by Tom Blau of subjects from the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s.
Born and raised in Berlin, Jewish
Hungarian reporter and photographer Tom Blau left Nazi Germany
in 1935 and moved to London. He initially worked as a freelance
photo researcher before setting up the international photo library,
Pictorial Press, on behalf of an American investor. After becoming
a British citizen in 1947, Blau founded his own agency, Camera
Press. With only £2,000 to set up the business, he said
'everyone I knew tried to dissuade me. The world's opinion is
always 'Don't do it!! Or if you must do it, don't do it now!!'
This of course is sheer nonsense. All depends on your own determination,
single-mindedness and stamina.' (Tom Blau, 1983)
Camera Press is now the largest
independent photographic agency in the UK and represents some
of the world's leading photographers including Karsh, Cecil Beaton
and Patrick Lichfield as well as contemporary photographers such
as Jude Edginton, Gavin Smith, Adrian Green and Sean Cook. Its
material includes an unparalleled royal collection, premium celebrity
portraits, travel, news and features from around the globe and
a vast historical archive.
Born 1947 Camera Press
at 60 celebrates the
history of the agency and the talents of the photographers it
represents, beginning with Tom Blau and ending with the photographers
who have been specially commissioned by Camera Press to mark
the anniversary.
The commissioned photographic
portraits of celebrities also celebrating their sixtieth birthdays
this year are: fashion designer Katharine Hamnett by Mary McCartney;
actor Jonathan Pryce by Perou; author Sir Salman Rushdie by Bryan
Adams; singer Sandie Shaw by Jillian Edelstein; actress Stephanie
Beacham by Nicky Johnston; conductor Mark Elder by John Swannell;
Rolling Stone Ronnie Wood by Sean Cook and politician Tessa Jowell
by Lord Snowdon.
Born 1947 Camera Press
at 60 also includes some
of the Tom Blau's most striking portraits, showing an informal,
intimate style of photography that reminds us of a bygone age
when the gulf between photographer and famous subject was much
smaller than it is today. Many sessions took place at people's
homes and involved spending large amounts of time with the sitters
lunches, dinners, evenings out, even holidays and
as a result friendships were often formed between Blau and his
famous subjects. In this display, John and Yoko Ono are pictured
in a deep, loving gaze in 1969; Sir Laurence Olivier and Vivien
Leigh are photographed relaxed at the fireside of their home
at Durham Cottage in the early fifties, and - in a rarely seen
colour image - a sultry Christine Keeler is shown on a London
film set in 1963.
Blau's other sitters included
are: Harold Pinter, Somerset Maugham, Daphne Du Maurier, Elizabeth
Bowen, Nancy Mitford, Barbara Cartland, Richard Dimbleby and
family, Anna Zinkeisen painting Sally Ann Howes, Sir Michael
Redgrave and Rachel Kempson, Cliff Richard, Adam Faith, Jaqui
Chan, Mandy Rice-Davies and the 1977 Conservative Cabinet.
Talking about the 60th anniversary
and this commemorative display at the National Portrait Gallery,
Emma Blau Executive Director of Camera Press and granddaughter
of Tom Blau, says: 'I know my grandfather would be thrilled with
this display at the National Portrait Gallery, showcasing not
only his own photography but also new works by some of the illustrious
contemporary names that continue to contribute to the agency.
It is photographers such as these who are responsible for our
continuing success in the photographic industry.'
|