Posts Tagged ‘photography’

‘David LaChapelle in Seoul’ at Seoul Arts Center

Thursday, December 29th, 2011
Burning Down the House (Alexander McQueen & Isabella Blow) (1996)

Seocho
22 November 2011 – 26 February 2012

Opening hours: Monday – Sunday, 11:00-19:00
Admission: 13,000 won
http://www.dlcseoul.com

By Andy St. Louis

David LaChapelle. The name doesn’t trigger the same immediate reaction that others–say, Annie Liebovitz, Juergen Teller, Baron Wolman, or even Terry Richardson–might. David LaChapelle. To some, portraits of rock stars and celebrities on hte cover of Rolling Stone may come to mind. To others,the more fashion-oriented covers of Vogue and Vanity Fair. To few does high-concept/socially critical photography come to mind (if, indeed, anything comes to mind at all). And yet, this photographer, who is still very much in mid-career (he is 48), is gaining renewed insternational respect as more than a one-trick pony with an eye for best-selling magazine cover shoots. “David LaChapelle in Seoul” at Seoul Arts Center is a veritable trove of of visual delights—at nearly 200 works, it is the most comprehensive selection of the prolific photographer’s work ever seen in Asia—revealing the astounding ways in which LaChapelle’s visual output has transformed since he became a professional photographer while still in high school.

The themes and subject matter in LaChapelle’s work have changed considerably over the years, from his early work shown at galleries in New York’s East Village in the 1980s, to his cover and editorial work for fashion and lifestyle magazines, and more recently, work that resonates with the artist’s withdrawal from the “world” and subsequent retreat to his current residence in a cabin in the rainforest. Despite the radical turns LaChapelle’s career has taken over the past two and a half decades, the threads running through his enormous catalogue of images remain true to his own deeply personal worldview. The work that results inevitably falls into one of these four broad categories: mass consumption, fame, religion and the human form.

Death by Hamburger (2002), from the ‘Inflatables’ series

While still in high school, a teenage LaChapelle was “discovered” by Andy Warhol who offered him a job taking photos for Interview magazine. One can only imagine the profound influence that the so-called “father of pop art” must have had on the up-and-coming photographer, and it is no surprise that much of LaChapelle’s work examines the material culture that was at the center of Warhol’s own artistic practice. With a constant eye toward society’s excessive consumption, LaChapelle wields both humor and gravity to injurious effect in his oblique criticisms of human nature, subverting social conventions by placing his subjects in fabricated surreal environments. His Inflatables series (2002) adopts a humorous tack in its variation on the USA’s bigger is better mentality, marooning fashion models in the grips of super sized household products seeking vengance on their consumers.  Other images appropriate disaster and devastation to reflect a converse approach to the topic of consumerism, such as LaChapelle’s Destructions series (2005), where haute couture is stripped of its visual appeal by scenes of death and tragedy.

The artist’s disdain for consumerism is no doubt wrapped up in the subject matter that dominated his early career. Indeed, the work he is perhaps most widely known for is his celebrity portrait portfoliocharacterized by its images’ shock value, aesthetic intrigue and a hint of voyeurismplays directly into the mass market for which it was produced. Eminem, Britney Spears, Madonna, Tupak Shakur, Lil’ Kim, Naomi Campbell, David Bowie, Drew Barrymore, Angelina Jolie, and Lady Gaga have all been received the “LaChapelle treatment” over the years, and the photographer’s primary focus on this subject matter for so much of his career had a direct effect on the way he looked at the world. Society’s fascination with—and interconnected reverence for—celebrity evoked by these defining images must have struck a discordant note in the photographer’s perception of humanity, evidenced by his gradual departure from this line of work and turn to a more critical line of inquiry.

The House at the End of the World (2005), from the ‘Destructions’ series

LaChapelle frequently mobilizes religious imagery in his later work, mining its vast repository of ready-made mise–en–scènes for their characteristic formal qualities. This body of work, which largely dates from 2006 onward, abandons LaChapelle’s standard mode of social critique in favor of a much more subtle treatment of the issues revolving around veneration and piety. By appropriating ubiquitous religious motifs and reframing them in a modern context—Michelangelo’s Pietà, for instance, set in an archetypal children’s playroom, Courtney Love assuming the persona of the Virgin Mary (Heaven to Hell, 2006)the photographer communicates a pervasive sense of not-quite-right-ness indicative of his own loss of faith in humankind itself. Though celebrity figures such as Love occasionally appear in these images, they serve only to underline the artist’s concern with the power of images and the currency they exert over society. Interestingly, the figures that occupy these works are much more gestural than those of LaChapelle’s earlier days, hinting at an aesthetic maturity and return to nature. Nude, contorted, and imbued with either unrestrained pathos or absolute tranquility, they signal a sea change in the photographer’s artistic motivation and intellectual investment in his work.

Of course, it is the body itself to which this visionary photographer has unremittingly devoted his lifework, and it is this most empathetic of all possible subject matter that has given the most back in return. LaChapelle’s understanding of the human form and eye for capturing it at its most superlative—sensuous, grotesque, endearing, menacing, and all manner of emotional states—will always be his trademark. He is not merely an image-maker, documenting the human condition through his unique perspective, he is a purveyor of desire itself. The photographs are just the tools; we, the very consumers of these images, are the true objects of the photographer’s manipulation. This creator-consumer interaction is rare in its reciprocity; the audience is at once a third-party observer as well as the very apotheosis of LaChapelle’s ideological questioning. The result is an ongoing dialogue between the  images (and by extension, the artist himself) and their audience that give this gargantuan exhibition its essential intimacy.

Last Supper (2003) – from the ‘Jesus is my Homeboy’ series

The Color of Calm at Laughing Tree Gallery

Monday, February 7th, 2011

Haebangchon
29th January- 5th February 6-9pm
6th- 12th February by appointment
Admission: free
Contact: info@LaughingTree.com
www.laughingtree.com

by Andy St. Louis

These days, it seems that a lot of “fine art” has lost that which for so long had defined it; namely beauty, a concept which is inherently impossible to consider objectively. Theories abound as to what makes an object, person or image beautiful, but in the end it all comes down to the emotional response automatically triggered as a result of certain combinations of rods and cones being activated on the retina. In the the nanoseconds before the brain begins to infer all sorts of data and mental assimilations from the content of an image, there is an intuitive—or reflex—appraisal that takes place instantaneously. Certain combinations of shapes and colors, arranged in certain compositional forms and dimensional formats, make us happy or sad, excited or lethargic, agitated or calm, all simply because of what they look like, not what they mean.

Anya Dennis, "Fortitude" (2010). Courtesy of the artist.

Anya Dennis, "Fortitude" (2010). Courtesy of the artist.

Though most visual artists don’t likely think along such scientific (read: deconstructionalist) lines, it’s easy to pick out the ones who justifiably might do just that. Mark Rothko, Piet Mondrian, Ellsworth Kelly, Jackon Pollock—all painters—as well as Anish Kapoor and Richard Serra—both sculptors—immediately come to mind, their work eschewing higher-order thinking in favor of what the Korean Zen master Seung Sahn would call “no-mind.” But to associate photographers with this school of aesthetic thought and artistic practice is no easy task; perhaps because photography is inherently a means of capturing “actuality” (fact, narrative, documentation) or perhaps because a photo represents the encapsulation of an instant whereas a painting or sculpture represents instead the culmination of an artist’s prolonged interaction with a medium. It would seem easier for painters and sculptors to explore, develop and cultivate such a direct emotional engagement with their artwork, given the sheer amount of time required to get it “just right,” working and struggling with it until it speaks the language of “no-mind.” So when one discovers photographs (apart from photograms à la László Moholy-Nagy) that speak this language, it’s best to take note.

Anya Dennis, "Ritual" (2010). Courtesy of the artist.

Anya Dennis, "Ritual" (2010). Courtesy of the artist.

“The Color of Calm,” a solo exhibition by New York-based photographer Anya Dennis, is the impetus for precisely this sort of revelatory experience. Currently on view at the intimate Laughing Tree Gallery in Haebangchon, Dennis’s photos trigger a reflex sense of serenity, balance and calm. The power of suggestion, of course, plays not a small role in conditioning viewers to embrace a pre-rational way of looking and abandon—or at least try to ignore—the free associations that create “mental noise.” And yet, the whole show could do without any title whatsoever and would still speak the same way to its viewers.

Created over a period of two months in the summer of 2010, the photos selected for this, the artist’s first international exhibition, reflect the ways in which color, beauty and emotion are inextricably linked. In this case, Dennis explores this relationship using the color green as her point of entry, a color full of latent symbolism via notions of renewal, growth, nature and vitality. While she certainly taps into the natural environment in some her subject matter, more often than not the color green finds its way into her photos innocently, or even subversively in some cases. In Ritual, for instance, one of the more overtly portraiture-oriented photos in the exhibition, green appears as an ever-so-faint layer of patinated moss on a red-brick background. Dennis’s attention to such subtleties in her photos reflects her uncanny ability to capture images that luxuriate in color, contrast and composition—all of which induce a sensory response rather than a cognitive one.

Anya Dennis, "In Awe" (2010). Courtesy of the artist.

Anya Dennis, "In Awe" (2010). Courtesy of the artist.

Dennis’s photographs are indeed beautiful, but casual or sceptic observers may entertain internal monologues something along the lines of: “These are just beautiful vacation photos in nice frames … If I were in [insert tropical Southeast Asian country], I’m sure I could take pictures that are just as good as these … What’s so special about these images?” Such a self-assured statement, however, is hopeful at best, especially when taking into account Dennis’s years of honing her craft and her artistic process. A self-taught photographer, Dennis’s eyes were metaphorically opened during an extended stay in Accra, Ghana in 1997, while still a student at Clark Atlanta University. Her travels across the African continent since that initial encounter provided her with the “blank canvas” she needed to explore the relationship between culture and identity and deepen her commitment to photography as a means of “capturing the soul.”

It is her most recent body of work, however—created in Bali, Malaysia, Singapore and Japan—that truly testifies to Dennis’s having fine-tuned her craft to a level that many only dream of. Her ability to capture images that penetrate to the very essence of her subjects and enrapture viewers by appealing to their eyes—the windows to the soul—rather than their rational sensibilities sets her apart from even the most prolific “travel photographers:” a title altogether inadequate for someone of Dennis’s caliber. In her artistic practice, Dennis works along thematic—as opposed to specific—lines; instead of setting out to photograph monks, she looks instead for manifestations of spirituality. Or rather, she doesn’t go looking for anything at all, but has an eye towards sights, stories and situations that resonate with the emotions, concepts and sensations that she is constantly exploring. The result is a deeply personal body of work that can’t help but captivate whosoever comes in contact with them. This expert eye, in synchrony with the intimacy and immediacy indelibly inscribed in her images, confidently locates Dennis’s recent work alongside any cover of National Geographic.

Anya Dennis, photographer, and Adam Lofbomm, Laughing Tree Gallery curator

Anya Dennis, photographer, and Adam Lofbomm, Laughing Tree Gallery curator

The installation at Laughing Tree Gallery—images all of one uniform shape and orientation—does away with all distractions, embracing the simplicity of the gallery’s physical space that encourages the mindful engagement that Dennis’s work demands. The sequencing of different images in the show, itself executed in a highly conscious manner, only further serves to facilitate genuine interaction with the images individually and as a progressive and comprehensive “calming” unit.

“I don’t choose my images,” says Dennis, true to form and her unique way of seeing the world, “my images choose me.” A bold claim perhaps, and yet it speaks great truth about her work; like Pollock and indeed, the entire company of what may be aptly called “no-mind” artists in Western art history, Dennis’s photographs reflect a oneness of spirit with her subjects that speaks a universal language.

Robert Delpire & Friends at Hangaram Art Museum, Seoul Arts Centre

Wednesday, January 12th, 2011

Seocho-dong
17th December- 27th February
Opening hours: Daily 11 am- 8 pm
Admission: Adults 10,000 won, children 8,000/ 5,000 won
www.sac.or.kr

Robert Delpire and Friends“Who is Robert Delpire?” is the first question that sprung to mind upon reading the title of one of the current exhibitions at Seoul Arts Centre, ‘Robert Delpire and Friends.’ As it turns out, Robert Delpire’s friends are far better known than he is; Delpire being a publisher and curator, and his ‘friends’ including an impressive selection of extremely influential 20th century photographers; Henri Cartier-Bresson, Robert Frank, William Klein, Robert Doisneau and Brassai to name but a few. He also happens to be married to Sarah Moon, another photography heroine. Even the most fleeting of visits to this exhibition would confirm that this unsung hero, who is a member of the prestigious photographer cooperative Magnum, and has played an essential role in introducing his photographer friends to the world over the last 60 years, is completely deserving of this retrospective.

Robert Frank, 'Les Americans,' published by Delpire, (1958)

Robert Frank, 'Les Americans,' published by Delpire, (1958)

Delpire’s colourful career began in 1951, when, at the age of 23, he began carving out his life-long profession as a publisher, abandoning his medical career in favour of publishing ‘Neuf,’ a luxury, glossy art magazine for doctors. ‘Neuf,’ was among the first publications to show works by some afore-mentioned friends of his, kick-starting their careers. Other achievements most importantly include publishing Robert Frank’s definitive photo document ‘The Americans,’ in 1958, known for its ‘street photography’ style and satirical look at the tired cliche of the American Dream, and for publishing ‘Photo Poche,’ the first paperback photography series on significant photographers of our times.

Delpire stands in front of a selection of his 'Photo Poche' series in various languages

Delpire stands in front of a selection of his 'Photo Poche' series in various languages

‘Robert Delpire & Friends,’ is a wonderful collection of largely black and white photographs and books which Delpire has published, including editions of ‘Neuf,’ ‘The Americans,’ and ‘Photo Poche,’ in multi-national, translated guises, re-iterating their significance as accessible documents of modern and contemporary photography greats. There are also a vast amount of hardback photo-documentary books on a huge selection of countries which act as ethnographic records, published in collaboration with, for example, Heni Cartier-Bresson and Werner Bischof. A small corner of this exhibition adds a deeper social dimension to Delpire’s work by showcasing some of the calendars he’s been putting together for Amnesty since 1988. A selection of his short films play on loop, including a marvelous compilation of footage shot by Sarah Moon for her pivotal design work for Cacharel. There’s also a section for visitors to sit and leaf through some of Delpire’s numerous publications whilst marvelling at the the subject of this exhibition.

Henri Cartier Bresson, 'Les Dances a Bali,' published by Delpire, 1954

Henri Cartier Bresson, 'Les Dances a Bali,' published by Delpire, (1954)

There are 52 artists represented by 185 photos, 150 photobooks and four short films in this exhibition which is a rather a lot of printed material. Unfortunately, it’s not backed up by much written information, even in Korean, meaning that visitors might leave feeling unsatisfied that they have benefited fully from the works on show. For Korean visitors, however, there are audio guides available.

Despite lack of written information, ‘Robert Delpire & Friends,’ is a most excellent tribute to a man who is well overdue the recognition he deserves for introducing some of the most influential photographers of the 20th century to the public. Through the selection of works shown, which he nurtured and heralded, the viewer gets a great sense of a man who is intelligent, passionate and dedicated to photography, not to mention very humble, having managed to side-step any mass critical acclaim… until now. Snippets of a humorous character shine through by way of inclusion of his own photographs, for example, ‘Le Pains de Picasso.’ Who is Robert Delpire? A more thorough and deserving exploration of this question awaits you at Seoul Arts Centre.

Robert Delpire, 'Le Pains de Picasso,' 1952

Robert Delpire, 'Le Pains de Picasso,' (1952)

Yuki Onodera at Hanmi Museum of Photography

Friday, November 12th, 2010

Jamsil, Songpa-gu
11th September- 4th December
Opening hours: Weekdays 10am- 7pm, weekends 11am- 6:30pm
Admission: 4,000 won
http://www.photomuseum.or.kr/

Yuki Onodera, one in a series of 'Portrait of Second-hand Clothes,' 1994-1997

Yuki Onodera, one in a series of 'Portrait of Second-hand Clothes,' 1994-1997

Yuki Onodera (b. 1962) is a prominent Paris based Japanese photographer who has become well known for her signature series’ of lustrous, silvery, gelatin prints. Her work typically follows in the anti-photographic tradition of Modernist photographer predecessors, in its obsessive investigation into the formal characteristics of the camera. However, these are far from passé regurgitations of bygone art. Onodera makes use of current technology, adds a dash of mischievous humour and blends them into a distinct mix of earnest technological explorations featuring mystery and intrigue. Leap upon the chance to delve into Onodera’s world at Hanmi Museum of Photography.

An example of Edward Weston's 'straight' photography, 'Pepper,' 1930

An example of Edward Weston's 'straight' photography, 'Pepper,' 1930

‘Portrait of Second-hand Clothes,’ (1994-97) is a standout series in the exhibition, and serves as a wonderful introduction to the method in Onodera’s madness. The gelatin prints share identical square formats and abrupt close-up angles. No camera tomfoolery has been employed here; they are straightforward photographic documentations, recalling the ‘straight’ photographic trajectory of Modernist Edward Weston. The subjects are abandoned pieces of girls’ clothing, un-crumpled and displayed proudly, propped against a window, with a view of the Montmartre sky behind. Onodera acquired the clothes from Christian Boltanski’s exhibition, ‘Dispersion,’ (1993) in which he filled a room with discarded clothing, conjuring issues of lost childhood and loneliness. In a Post-Modern twist, Onodera breathes new life into these destitute threads and they become negative portraits of the girls who once filled them and the fingers that once buttoned, zipped and smoothed them. Typical to her work, this series has multiple and open- ended meanings.

In stride with the Modernist tradition of camera experimentation, two series of photographs are worthy of note in their investigations into photographic reproduction. For ‘How To Make A Pearl,’ (2000- 01), Onodera inserted a marble into the body of the camera. What at first glance could be mistaken for disco balls in the final images of crowds of people, are actually halos of other- worldly light reflected from the marble. The inclusion of a marble and its’ halos reminds viewers of the intermediary role that the camera plays between themselves and the subject as well as undermining the camera’s characteristic of photo-realism by deeming the outcome adjunct to light.

Yuki Onodera, 'The Bee- The Mirror n°32,' 2002

Yuki Onodera, 'The Bee- The Mirror n°32,' 2002

In ‘The Bee- The Mirror,’ (2002), Onodera took a series of photographs of the interior of a dark flat, using only the flash of the camera and a mirror to capture the images. An other- worldly atmosphere is prevalent, as she captures split second, chance moments of a realm unknown even to the inhabitants of the flat. The glaring flash illuminates toothbrushes, bookshelves, tables, a pile of shoes and various other household items on a dark background, making them appear at once familiar yet bizarre.

Onodera is clearly besotted with cameras. Presenting mainly series’ of works, she shows a fanatic quality akin to that of a mad scientist as she playfully tests the camera’s role as bearer of the truth. There is an undeniable and tender bond between artist and medium that permeates her work, which is enrapturing. Whoever coined the phrase, “the camera never lies,” would have an interesting debate with Onodera, I’m sure.

Capture the Moment: Pulitzer Prize at Seoul Arts Centre

Tuesday, July 13th, 2010

Seochodong
22nd June- 29th August
Opening hours: Daily 11am- 8pm
Admission: Adults 10,000 won
www.pulitzerkorea.com

'A Hero's Return,' Earle E. Bunker, 1944

'A Hero's Return,' Earle E. Bunker, 1944

The Pulitzer Prize was one of these names that I was aware of, but not exactly sure what it was. Well, it’s an annual US competition for journalism, literature and music, founded in 1917. The photography category was added in 1942, and the current exhibition,  Capture The Moment: Pulitzer Prize Photographs, at Seoul Arts Centre, consists of 145 pieces of award winning photo journalism from 1942 up to the present day.

The photographs have been arranged in chronological order and grouped into decades. They  portray a selection of some of the most defining moments in recent world history; some familiar, some not so. They take us from picket lines of the 40‘s to Obama delivering a speech just last year. They show iconic sporting heroes such as Babe Ruth. Acts of human compassion are portrayed in various rescue scenes subsequent t flooding and war. However, they most vividly detail acts of extreme violence mankind inflicts on one another; images we are sadly all too familiar with. Assassinations, assassination attempts and murders abound; Castro, Asanumo Yasushi Nagao, Harvey Oswald to name but a few. Then there’s the scores of nameless soldiers, guerillas, tear streaked and and angry civillians from all corners of the world in between.

'Vietnam: Fleeing to Safety,' Kyoichi Sawada, 1966

'Vietnam: Fleeing to Safety,' Kyoichi Sawada, 1966

I had no idea as to the context of a number of pictures, but some were very familiar, for example, soldiers embracing families upon their return after war. There are a number of infamous photographs taken during the Vietnam war and of course, everyone recognises the horrific images of the burning Twin Towers.

Each picture has it’s own unique story to tell and the talent and dedication put in by the photographers shines through as remarkable. The shocking nature of these pictures is the reason that they are in this exhibition, making it a hard going experience. It took me a long time to take it all in.

Unfortunately, I feel that there are aspects which let it down. The setting for these images should be sharp and clean, not the uninspiring grey that it is, which detracts from the photographs themselves. I do not expect everything to be translated into English, but there are no translations for any of the details on the photographs, and no English audio guides. This means that foreign English speaking visitors have to attempt deciphering what’s going on in the picture by the title alone. I find this frustracting as it’s an American exhibition. Furthermore, Seoul Arts Centre is one of the most prestigious arts spaces in Korea which surely attracts a high volume of foreign visitors.

Oh dear, I don’t like to moan. The collection of photos is truly incredible and as a whole, very humbling. I was confronted with images which punched me in the stomach and made me well up; it’s easy to forget the chaos of the world as I go about my daily routine. But thankfully the photographers behind these pictures haven’t forgotten, and in some cases, have even put their lives on the line to bring these photos to the world. I just feel cheated that I was left wondering the stories behind each one.

Walker Evans at the Hanmi Photography Museum

Monday, June 28th, 2010

Jamsil, Songpa-gu
19th June- 4th September
Opening hours: Weekdays 10am- 7pm, weekends 11am- 6:30pm
Admission: 7,000 won

Walker Evans,'Roadside Stand near Birmingham,' 1936

Walker Evans,'Roadside Stand near Birmingham,' 1936

Walker Evans (1903- 1975) is one of the most influential photographers of the 20th century, meaning that this exhibition at the lovely Hanmi Photography Museum is not to be missed. Evans took his photos from straight forward, eye level viewpoint when other photographers were experimenting with strange angles to make the familiar appear unfamiliar (think Bauhaus) or different techniques to create dream-like or nightmarish visions (think Surrealism). However, Evans strove to produce honest pictures, sans illusions. The kinds of pictures familiar from newspapers, postcards and real estate adverts; pictures of his America.

Walker Evans, 'Sharecropper's Family, Hale County, Alabama,' 1936

Walker Evans, 'Sharecropper's Family, Hale County, Alabama,' 1936

The selection of photographs in this exhibition are largely taken from the 1930′s; a most productive period in Evans’ career. The work he is best known for is the work he did for the Farm Security Administration, documenting the effects of the Depression in the rural southern states. These pictures relay images which I, for one, have come to associate with early 20th century deep south; dry, dusty poverty with a big dollop of faded glamour. He shows us families in their minimally furnished, worn but tidy houses, or out on their wooden porches, shaded from the heat. He records people-less interiors with empty chairs, walls adorned with disused coca cola ads, beds with rifles hanging above. These pictures are solid and dignified, the light perfect. One is reminded of the still, silent houses as families toiled all day long in the sun; these mute objects communicating as much as his human subjects.

Walker Evans, 'Lunchroom Buddies,' 1931

Walker Evans, 'Lunchroom Buddies,' 1931

Evans also takes us to 1930′s New York; into the streets and into subway where he took pictures with a hidden camera in his jacket. We’re also shown pictures of Cuban workers in much the same vein as his portraits of the deep south. However, despite different subject matter, all photos seem to convey a solid sense of carefully catching and preserving a segment of time.

Don’t be put off by the 7,000 won entry fee. It’s a steal for seeing the works of one of the socio- realist photographer heroes of our time. So Walker on over there!

Cecil Beaton, ‘Beauty of the Century,’ at Seoul Arts Centre

Tuesday, June 8th, 2010

Seocho-gu
30th April- 24th June
Opening hours: Daily 11am- 8pm
Admission: Adults W9,000, teens W8,000, children W6,000
www.sac.or.kr

Cecil Beaton, 'Marlene Dietrich,' 1935

Cecil Beaton, 'Marlene Dietrich,' 1935

Cecil Beaton is one of the most recognized and influential photographers of the 20th century. Although not known as a skilled technical photographer, by focussing on capturing the essence of his celebrity sitters, he managed to create some of the most memorable portrait images of the 20th century. He photographed a dizzying amount of superstars in his time and six of them are the subject of the current exhibition ‘Beauty of the Century,’ at Seoul Arts Centre.

The entrance to the exhibition is a giant white embossed frame, marking the movement into a dreamy realm of white draperies set as backgrounds to images of some of the most well known 20th century foxes. Audrey Hepburn is there, looking very prim and proper in her lavish costumes for My Fair Lady, which Beaton actually designed himself. Elaborate hats frame her pretty face and highlight what Beaton referred to as her “heron’s eyes and eyebrows slanted toward the Far East.” He has somehow managed to make her appear different in each photograph.

Elizabeth Taylor is there in full glamour mode with her gorgeous shapely eyebrows and perfect features. Marilyn Monroe is there in positions which we are familiar with by now; playful and seductive, a mischievous twinkle in her eye… frolicking on hotel beds and sofas. Vivian Leigh is there too, in her exotic Anthony and Cleopatra get up, as well as in a series of more casual shots.

However, it was the Greta Garbo and Marlene Dietrich portraits which really appealed to me. The shots of Garbo, with whom Beaton had an affair with, were all taken at the Plaza Hotel in New York in 1946. They are melancholy and dark, yet sultry. She lies on a velvet couch, looking out with sad eyes. She straddles a chair in a Pierrot outfit, looking unhappily down at the floor. She faces the camera, arms full of flowers, a shoulder bared and hair tousled as a blinding light shines straight into the camera from the top right. Most striking is the image of her leaning on a white wall, a strong sideways Caravaggio-esque light illuminating half of her face, the rest in shadow, an elongated silhouette thrown against the wall to the side. This particular piece exemplifies a fine use of negative space in the picture, which is visible in occasional photographs.

Cecil Beaton, Marlene Dietrich, (1935)

Cecil Beaton, Marlene Dietrich, (1935)

Dietrich blurs in and out of her otherworldly backdrops of meshes, gauzes and wisp- like threads; her perfect, porcelain features sometimes mimicking small statuettes placed beside her. Some of the shots are even slightly blurry and I find them surrealistic in their dream- like nature. My favourite is a portrait which shows Dietrich peering out of a black background, her head resting on her palms. Only her head and hands are shown, as if they are floating in some kind of cosmic soup with some white flowers in the bottom right foreground.

I arrived expecting a Beaton retrospective, crammed full of 20th century celebrities grinning out of the photo frames. However, I think that this small selection of work sums up what Beaton did well. He photographed famous people; beauties of the last century, in stage costumes, in hotel rooms, and staged atmospheric sets for them to indulge in fantasy. He made use of strong lighting and worked with mainly in black and white, allowing for striking arrangements which resemble modernist paintings. He showed us the personalities behind these glamorous public figures, and a little of his own at the same time. So take a step through the Alice in Wonderland style giant photo frame and into his exotic world!