'Private Eye'
1 of 12 portraits of Richard Ingrams
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'Private Eye'
by Lewis Morley
bromide print, 1965
11 1/2 in. x 14 1/4 in. (293 mm x 361 mm)
Given by the photographer, Lewis Morley, 1992
Primary Collection
NPG P512(23)
Artistback to top
- Lewis Morley (1925-2013), Photographer. Artist of 306 portraits, Sitter in 5 portraits.
Sittersback to top
- Jill Brooke. Sitter in 3 portraits. Identify
- Jan Elson. Sitter in 3 portraits. Identify
- Barry Ernest Fantoni (1940-), Broadcaster, cartoonist and jazz musician. Sitter in 7 portraits, Artist of 17 portraits. Identify
- Paul Mackintosh Foot (1937-2004), Writer and journalist. Sitter in 6 portraits. Identify
- Gabby Hughes. Sitter in 3 portraits. Identify
- Richard Reid Ingrams (1937-), Journalist and editor. Sitter in 12 portraits. Identify
- Tony Rushton (1939-), Art director at Private Eye. Sitter in 8 portraits. Identify
- Peter Usborne (1937-), Publisher; co-founder of Private Eye and founder of Usborne Books. Sitter in 3 portraits. Identify
- Michael Wale. Sitter in 3 portraits. Identify
- John Campbell Wells (1936-1998), Writer, actor and director. Sitter in 6 portraits. Identify
Linked publicationsback to top
- Pepper, Terence, Lewis Morley: Photographer of the Sixties, 1989 (accompanying the exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery from 15 September 1989 - 7 January 1990), p. 62
- Saywell, David; Simon, Jacob, Complete Illustrated Catalogue, 2004, p. 738
Placesback to top
- Place made and portrayed: United Kingdom: England, London (photographer's studio, Soho, London)
Subjects & Themesback to top
Events of 1965back to top
Current affairs
Sir Winston Churchill dies after suffering a stroke at the age of 90. By Royal Decree his body lay in state for three days before he was given a State Funeral (a very rare honour for a non-Royal). Representatives from over 100 countries attended the funeral and thousands of people watched the procession of his coffin down the Thames.Art and science
Julie Christie stars in John Schlesinger's film Darling, a film that captures fashionable London in the 1960s, while critiquing the superficiality of the jet-setting society. The film has subsequently been itself criticised for being out-of-touch with the realities of the day.The Post Office Tower (now the BT tower) opens for use, housing microwave aerials to carry telecommunications traffic from London.
International
President Johnson sends US troops to assist South Vietnam against communist North Vietnam and domestic nationalist insurgents. Johnson's plan for a short, limited war was soon quashed by North Vietnam's strategy of protracted war. As the conflict dragged on the US government instituted a draft, sparking anti-war protests that would continue until American involvement ended in 1973.Tell us more back to top
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