News, analysis and comment - visual arts |
Today’s fascination for celebrities dates back from decades, as celeb snapper Terry O’Neill shows in his new retrospective exhibition, Terry O’Neill ‘Behind the Scenes’, currently showing at the Getty Images Gallery in Shepherd’s Bush’s Westfield shopping centre.
And aside from his photographic skills, O’Neill can proud himself of his AAA credentials which gave him one-to-one exclusivity with some of our (erstwhile but timeless) dearest stars in the most intimate, as in humanised, contexts possible, whether on a film set, in rehearsal or other site-specific locations. We bet his contact book/mobile phone is super valuable, almost golden, telling by the two-dozen-portrait-strong portfolio on display: here we’ve got cinematic dinosaurs (The Mitchums, the Newmans, the Quinns, the Hoffmans, etc…), musical prophets (The Stones, The Beatles, Springsteen) and music hall gods (Frank and Sammy), as well as onscreen beauties Faye Dunaway and Brigitte Bardot, and the only truly current subject in Amy Winehouse . All shots, most of them in black and white retain a genuinely iconic quality about them, with O’Neill’s technique purposely (or not) taking the back seat to focus on each subject’s character (a bit like the ’90s supermodels shadowing the clothes they were supposed to model…): all intentionally celebrities like O’Neill’s collection book title hints.
So, if you’re into visually digging deep into the tabloid fillers of back in the day, ‘Behind The Scenes’ is the place for you to be and see.
Behind The Scenes opened on July 7th and will run until August 3rd.
Solange Moffi is a London-based freelance writer whose interests lie predominantly in music, visual arts and film.
E: editor@artshub.co.ukChristine Pettman 8 Nov 2010
BJORN VENO: His latest project entitled ‘Destroy Art’ has caused a stir in the contemporary art world and seen him escorted from the Tate Modern.
Angela Meredith 2 Nov 2010
BANG: In Holding a smile for as long as I am able (2010), the viewer witnesses the artist doing exactly that: eyes cast down, hair flopping, Linington has the concentration of a choirboy.
Emma Enderby 28 Oct 2010
YUDI NOOR: His success lies in bringing together a range of materials and objects, and through these diversities and juxtaposition he touches on the complexities of contemporary culture and the roles that history, religion ...
Neville Farmer 28 Oct 2010
'Crucible' is a dramatic collaboration between the Gloucester Cathedral and the Pangolin Gallery that pushes the boundaries for many traditional worshippers. The sight of Damien Hirst’s “St Bartholomew Exquisite Pain” ...
Angela Meredith 18 Oct 2010
PROBE: The sculptures are frequently elevated above us, so that we become almost childlike, gazing up to appraise them, while being surveyed from a lofty angle by something not human, but seemingly sentient.
Angela Meredith 7 Oct 2010
HAMLET: Shakespeare’s work exposes the virtuoso nature of performing and under Nick Hytner’s direction, the company shines as individuals and ensemble players.
Christine Pettman 7 Oct 2010
BED-IN: "To expose the scandal of global poverty, and human rights injustices though the power of craft and public art. This will be done through provocative, non-violent creative actions, with the aim to show people that ...
Angela Meredith 6 Oct 2010
MONIKER: Laurence Billiet was first on the panel to identify the Internet as a major tool in the promotion of street art – and a major factor in the rise of its broader appeal: “Street artists have been active in putting ...
Angela Meredith 20 Sep 2010
BAZOOKA: The French left-wing newspaper Libération was so excited by Bazooka that in 1977, the ‘graphic commando’ was offered a period of editorial control over the paper – and ran riot, offending everyone, including the ...
Angela Meredith 20 Sep 2010
THE ANTI DESIGN FESTIVAL: The extroverts – the voice of the people – shout through megaphones that lurch across the ceiling on a primitive pulley and cantilever system; the introverts – the thinkers – are trying out the ...
Emma Enderby 15 Sep 2010
CHTO DELAT? On walking in, one is bombarded with imagery, words and colour, newspapers (the collective’s published work - also available as handouts) line the base of the wall, and drawings are scattered across the white ...
Solange Moffi 22 Oct 2009
This time round though the yearly extravaganza took a rather sober stance and as a regular one couldn’t help but notice how many drastic changes it had undergone.
Solange Moffi 25 Apr 2009
“A celebration of today’s multicultural, multi-class and multi-ageist British youth" - it manages to make one want to have been young earlier if not forever….
Gordon Haynes 19 Mar 2009
This spring the Dean is showing the works of four Scottish painters: Wilhelmina Barns-Graham, John Bellany, Alan Davie and Anne Redpath, all artists of the post-second world war period.
Gordon Haynes 19 Mar 2009
Despite the sign there are no paths, only grassed banks and ramps, so this interactive sculpture is only good until it gets worn out.
Solange Moffi 27 Nov 2008
Thursday 20 November saw the pre-launch of a temporary new hangout in London as the German artist Carsten Höller, known for his slide installation at Tate Modern last year, unveiled his new design.
Amodonna Plume 28 Oct 2008
Young Greek costumier-scenographer takis strikes a resonant chord with his lavish pitch to reclaim the forgotten peacock in the conformist world of male fashion.
Gordon Haynes 22 Aug 2008
Picasso has never produced the goods for me despite having stood in front of the Demoiselles d’Avignon in New York and wandered around the museum dedicated to him in Paris. Nothing resonated. That is until last week when I ...
Gordon Haynes 22 Aug 2008
This summer, Kilmorack has been waving Gerald Laing’s portrait of Kate Moss as its star attraction, Laing having lately returned to his pop art roots with screen printing. In the context of the other works on display it is ...