Apr 04

Outstanding Author pictures from Eamonn McCabe

Eamonn McCabe continues to provide a wonderful photographic insight into the minds of authors, poets, novelists and cultural writers with his outstanding portrait photos. Writers are probably one of the hardest subjects to photograph as their profession takes place completely inside their heads. They don’t stand on a podium and wave a baton, or demonstrate the physical beauty of playing a musical instrument. The photographer has to somehow capture what it is that inspires authors to create and communicate this to his audience.

Shirley Hughes has captivated decades of young readers with her sympathetic characters and she smiles winningly at us, Ruth Prawer Jhabvala, who died on 3rd April as we are writing, seems to muse on the endless magic webs she spins around her characters in India and America. Chinua Achebe, the Nigerian author recognised for his key role in developing African literature, has died on 21st March in Boston, where he was working as a professor, draws us close in Eamonn McCabe’s photo. A C Grayling, Master of the New College of Humanities, welcomes us to his book lined office. Nadeem Aslam, the young British writer, sits anxiously on the edge of the bench. The skill of a great photographer is that he allows the viewer a place to weave their own fantasies around the images that he shows them. Eamonn McCabe fits into this category.

Adam Phillips
Adam Phillips

Chinua Achebe
Chinua Achebe

Shirley Hughes
Shirley Hughes

Paul Durcan
Paul Durcan

Nadeem Aslam
Nadeem Aslam

A.C.Grayling
A C Grayling

Jan 24

David Farrell – Lebrecht Music & Arts photographer obituary

Lebrecht Music & Arts announces with deep regret the passing away of their photographer David Farrell on January 3rd aged 93. David has been represented by this photo library for seventeen years. He was not only a true gentleman but also he had an extraordinary career. From an early age he had shown an exceptional talent for the violin and was accepted at the Royal Academy of Music, later studying under Max Rostal. He enthralled everyone in the library with his memories of the major young violinists of this time – of sheltering from the Blitz in St John’s Wood Station together with the short-lived violinist Joseph Hasid; and of sitting in on classes with Ginette Neveu and Ida Haendel when they were studying under Carl Flesch .

David went into Bomber Command during World War II as a pilot officer. Demobbed in 1946, his growing family responsibilities and financial circumstances led to the difficult decision to give up his ambitions to become a solo violinist. He turned to music recording and then photography and print media for a living. His role model was Cartier Bresson and he soon gained a local reputation for excellence, often portraying people naturalistically in their own environments. Gloucestershire, where he lived with his family in the 1950s was the home for a wide range of intellectuals and artists and, David and his wife Manning, were an important part of this circle, counting Jacob Bronowski, Lynn Chadwick and Peter Nichols as close friends. Under a major commission from the British Council David photographed many famous artists and their work, providing the Council with some definitive portraits and photos of the work of contemporary sculptors, including Chadwick, Eduard Paolozzi, Henry Moore and Barbara Hepworth.

In 1955 David’s first music assignment was to photograph Yehudi Menuhin and Sir Thomas Beecham at the Bath Festival. This was the beginning of a lifetime friendship with Menuhin and of a career photographing classical musicians at work and in less formal moments. Across the next thirty years he photographed virtually every classical musician who performed in the UK, providing intimate performance photographs of musicians ranging from Louis Armstrong, Leonard Bernstein and Jacqueline du Pré to Kennedy and Ravi Shankar.

He liked to tell that he was present the night that Margot Fonteyn, deeply involved with Rudolf Nureyev and dancing at Menuhin’s Bath Festival, was told that her husband had been shot in Panama – and it was his unique photograph that captured this historical moment.

He also took early sessions of the Beatles and the Rolling Stones in the 1960s . In the 1970s and 1980s he turned to photographing theatre and film.

David is survived by his wife Manning, whom he married in 1942, by two of his three sons, and by two daughters. He was a delightful man, with a ready smile and a passion for music that remained fresh to the end. He will be greatly missed by everyone who had the privilege of knowing him.

Thackeray David Farrell, photographer, born 28 August 1919, died 3 January 2013

Farrell

Aug 29

Lebrecht Photographer Wolfgang Suschitzky turns 100 today!

Lebrecht Music & Arts would like to wish photographer Wolfgang Suschitzky a very happy 100th birthday!

Born in Vienna in 1912, Wolfgang first came to London in 1934, fleeing Fascism in Austria. Having trained as a photographer in Austria and later as a cinematographer in the UK, he created many thousands of photographs during his career and became well known as a film cameraman on documentaries and feature films – working on over 200 films.

Go to www.lebrecht.co.uk to see iconic and unusual images from the early stages of his career featuring London’s Charing Cross Road, images of Bali from the 1950s and San Francisco cable cars to name a few.


London. Cambridge Circus from 84 Charing Cross Road in 1937 in the fog.
© W. Suschitzky/Lebrecht Music & Arts


The Matinee Queue outside Wyndham’s Theatre’s Pit Entrance in London, England, 1934.
© W. Suschitzky/Lebrecht Music & Arts


San Francisco tram with passengers 1958.
© W. Suschitzky/Lebrecht Music & Arts

Jul 10

Neil Libbert, Lebrecht Music & Arts photographer exhibition opening at the National Portrait Gallery in London

Neil Libbert, Lebrecht Music & Arts photographer, who is well known for his outstanding photographic work with the major British newspapers such as the Guardian, Observer and Sunday Times has an exhibition opening at the National Portrait Gallery in London entitled ‘Photojournalist’. The exhibition opens on 17 September.

His work captured many of today’s leading arts personalities at the start pf their careers in the nineteen fifties and sixties. Helen Mirren as a young stage actress in 1969.

This photo accompanied a newspaper article proifling Helen Mirren as she played Cressida in the Royal Shakespeare Company’s production of ‘Troilus and Cressida;. The shoot took place inside her flat. In an interview with ‘The New York Times’ 35 years later she revealed just how seriously she took that part. Asked to reflect on bad reviews, she recalled, “I received an awful dart for …’Troilus and Cressida’. I remember the reveiwer, Benedict Nightingale. I’ll never forget him. (He’s) still out there, the bastard.”

Here is Harold Pinter 1963 aged 33 the year before he wrote ‘The Homecoming’. ‘The Birthday Party’ written in 1957 had already established his reputation as a truly gifted playwright.

Neil Libbert also has a great eye for contrast and glamour in this shot of Jayne Mansfield in Blackpool, 7 September 1959 with union leaders Ted Hill, Bill Carron of the A.E.U and Morgan Phillips, general secretary of the Labour party on opening day of TUC. This followed Mansfield ‘s lighting of the Blackpool Illuminations the day before.

We all wish him much success with this exhibition.

Jul 09

New exhibition by Lebrecht photographer Dorothy Bohm

Lebrecht Music & Arts are delighted to announce an exhibition by Lebrecht photographer Dorothy Bohm at the Margaret Street Gallery entitled “Seeing And Feeling”, opening on the 30th of July 2012.

For more information please see: www.margaretstreetgallery.com


Lisbon Portugal 1960s
© Dorothy Bohm/Lebrecht Music & Arts


Bus station Arizona USA
© Dorothy Bohm/Lebrecht Music & Arts

Jun 22

New book : Circles Within Circles

Lloyd Wolf, Lebrecht Music & Arts photographer, has created a beautiful and meaningful artist’s book. Circles Within Circles: Jewish Time Frames.

It combines his photographic collage and conceptually-based images with the poetry and prayers of his collaborator, poet Sherri Waas Shunfenthal.

You can see this book on Lloyd Wolf’s blog at http://tinyurl.com/circlesbook


Shofar / ram’s horn
© Lloyd WOLF/Lebrecht Music & Arts

Mar 09

Photographs by Lebrecht photographer, John Haynes, on display at Inverleith House in Edinburgh

Lebrecht Photo Library has received wonderful reviews of an exhibition of John Haynes’ photographs,  currently being displayed as part of a show centring on the work of conceptual artist Luke Fowler:

“…The show is worth the visit just to see Haynes’s photo of Samuel Beckett. Sharp as a pin, Beckett’s face hangs against darkness looking more like some fierce bird from a David Attenborough documentary than a mere human being. It is an extraordinary image.” Duncan Macmillan, The Scotsman. Read the full review here.

“[Luke Fowler has] curated a selection of photographic portraits by John Haynes – including powerful renderings of the enigmatic face of Laing – which serve to complement his own works, as well as being beautiful in their own right: it is surprising that this is their first time presented in a fine art setting.” Delle Tomes, The Journal. Read the full review here.

Lebrecht Photo Library is very proud to represent John Haynes’ work, including his portraits of Beckett and R.D. Laing.  Search online at www.lebrecht.co.uk for more striking photographs  by John Haynes of these iconic writers.

 

Ronald D. Laing - portrait of the Scottish psychiatrist and writer

 

Oct 06

Preview photographs of Richard Wagner ‘s Tannhäuser, opening tonight at l’Opéra national de Paris

For a full selection of images from the production, please search online at www.lebrecht.co.uk