mercredi 21 octobre 2009

National Portrait Gallery

BEATLES TO BOWIE: THE 60s EXPOSED - EVENTS

15 October 2009 – 24 January 2010
Wolfson and Ground Floor Lerner Galleries
Tickets: £11/£10/£9 concessions

Free for Gallery Supporters
Sponsored by BNY Mellon

Autumn blockbuster - The Evening Standard

This major exhibition explores the leading pop music personalities who helped create ‘Swinging London’ in the 1960s and placed the city as the world’s most important cultural capital.

Over 150 photographs, together with a range of memorabilia including record sleeves and magazines, illustrate how the photographic image, music and performance made these pop stars the leading figures of their time.


David Bowie by David Bebbington, 1969
David H. Bebbington
© David Bebbington/Retna Pictures

Longer hair, sex and nudity, and marriage were key elements that helped define aspects of pop in 1969. In March David Bailey shot a naked portrait of Jane Birkin. She topped the charts with her lover Serge Gainsbourg in October with the duet 'Je T'Aime... Moi Non Plus'. But the sixties turned sour with the drug-related death of Brian Jones, a murder at The Rolling Stones concert at Altamont, California and the continuing death toll of the Vietnam War.

The Beatles bowed out with their last recorded album Abbey Road. The sleeve image by Iain Macmillan showed them walking away from the studios where so much of their career had been forged. Meanwhile Pink Floyd continued to build on their growing success with an album of progressive, electronic music entitled Ummagumma, its cover designed by photographer Storm Thorgerson.

The successful Apollo 11 moon landing in July inspired David Bowie's first Top 10 hit in September, 'Space Oddity'. He was pictured in music press advertisements, extolling the Stylophone beat box, and in his spacesuit in the London flat of kinetic sculptor Dante Leonelli by David Bebbington.

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