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PAST EXHIBITION ARCHIVE
Shooting Stars
Camera Portraits by Cornel Lucas
27 July 2005 - 22 January 2006
Balcony Gallery
Admission free
Supported by


Cornel Lucas and Yvonne
De Carlo
by Cornel Lucas, 1954

Joan Collins
by Cornel Lucas, 1951

Virginia McKenna
by Cornel Lucas, 1954
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Working first as a portraitist
for British Film Studios during the 1940s and 1950s, and then
as a freelance advertising and fashion photographer, Cornel Lucas
has enjoyed a career at the forefront of portrait photography
for over forty years. This display brings together fifty of Lucas's
finest works including iconic portraits of Joan Collins, Lauren
Bacall, Dirk Bogarde and Brigitte Bardot.
Cornel Lucas was born in Highbury
in London on the 12 September 1920. One of eight children he
had six sisters and one elder brother whose work in a film-processing
laboratory provided a first introduction to the film industry.
Lucas started work aged fifteen as a junior trainee and also
studied photography at the Regent Street Polytechnic. During
World War Two he worked at the RAF Photographic School at Farnborough
before going to work at Denham Studios in 1945. An early task
was assisting Cecil Beaton on a portrait session for an Alexander
Korda film.
His skill as a portraitist and
stills man in the late 1940s lead to a special portrait session
with Marlene Dietrich during the making of No Highway
(1951). The success of these images and the many others created
up to this point lead to he Rank Organization suggesting he leave
Denham and set up a specially equipped 'Pool' studio at Pinewood
to photograph the fifty plus major stars they had under contract.
A specially created portrait studio was fitted out on the site
of an old swimming pool to mirror what Hollywood photographers
such as Clarence Sinclair Bull had created for MGM in Hollywood
in the 1930s.
From the late 1940s until the
end of the 1950s Lucas took thousands of photographs at Pinewood
and other studios as well as on film locations and creating many
iconic images of the leading players of the era shown here. In
1959 he left Pinewood to open his own studio in Flood Street
in Chelsea where he made a second career embracing other aspects
of photography including advertising and fashion photography
whilst still continuing as a portraitist.
In the 1980s David Puttnam paid
tribute to Lucas' enduring talent by reviving interest in his
career by commissioning new work on films that he had produced
such as The Mission (1986) as well as writing to the foreword
to Lucas' first book. In 1998 Lucas became the first Stills Photographer
ever to be awarded a Bafta for his services to the British Film
industry. This display celebrates Lucas's 85th birthday and a
lifetime in photography represented in fifty of his most compelling
portrait photographs. It is accompanied by a deluxe publication,
exclusively signed by Cornel Lucas, cinematographer and director
Jack Cardiff and film producer David Puttnam.
Publication
Shooting Stars - Camera Portraits
by Cornel Lucas. This
slip-cased and limited edition book is available from the National
Portrait Gallery Bookshop and online.
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