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PAST EXHIBITION ARCHIVE
Angus McBean: Portraits
5 July - 22 October 2006
Porter Gallery £5/£3.50
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Audrey Hepburn
by Angus McBean, 1951

René Ray
by Angus McBean, 1938
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Angus McBean: Portraits is the first museum retrospective devoted
to Angus McBean (1904-90), one of the most significant British
photographers of the twentieth century. It brings together over
100 photographs in black and white and colour, including a large
number of vintage prints from museum collections and important
loans from private collections. The exhibition offers an unprecedented
opportunity to see the astonishing range of McBean's work. From
the striking surrealist portraits of the 1930s to his period
as indisputably the most important photographer of theatre and
dance personalities of the 1940s and 1950s. The exhibition also
showcases his cult re-emergence as a chronicler of pop music
and includes his famous Beatles covers.
Highlights of the exhibition
include the iconic 1951 photograph of the then unknown Audrey
Hepburn, her head and shoulders emerging from sand - and posed
amidst classical pillars. The forty-year spread of the exhibition
includes more recent photographs of Derek Jarman and Tilda Swinton,
while other significant portraits include Marlene Dietrich, Mae
West and Katharine Hepburn. The exhibition also features several
defining portraits of Vivien Leigh, whom McBean photographed
many times over the course of their thirty-year association.
On show for the first time is
the complete series of his self-portrait Christmas cards which
McBean produced between 1934 and 1985. These inventive and innovative
portraits are displayed alongside theatrical props used in their
composition, including a Mae West puppet, a marble 'Greek God'
bust, bisque 'bathing beauties' and two 1930s papier mâché
masks of Greta Garbo and Ivor Novello.
Born near Newport in South Wales
in 1904, Angus McBean bought his first camera at the age of fifteen.
He used his friends and family as models, and also began to make
masks and theatrical props for local amateur dramatic productions.
After the death of his father in 1924, McBean moved to London
and found work in the antiques department of Liberty's on Regent
Street, spending his spare time photographing his friends and
making masks. After leaving Liberty's in 1931 he decided to try
and live by his art, growing a distinctive beard that he claimed
was symbolic of the fact that he no longer wished to be a wage
earner. McBean was briefly apprenticed to society photographer
Hugh Cecil, who taught him photographic techniques, and after
a year he set up his own studio in Victoria.
McBean's big break came in 1936
when Ivor Novello asked him to create masks for Clemence Dane's
adaptation of a Max Beerbohm short story, The Happy Hypocrite.
Novello was delighted with the masks and immediately commissioned
McBean to take portrait photographs for the production. In 1937
The Sketch commissioned him to photograph the actress
Beatrix Lehmann playing Lavinia in Eugene O'Neill's Mourning
Becomes Electra. The dramatic composition of this photograph
was inspired by the surrealist art of the era, and working with
the artist Roy Hobdell, McBean went on to produce a number of
'surrealist' portraits of leading actresses in a weekly series,
which ran until the early months of the war. Among those on display
are portraits of Flora Robson, René Ray and Peggy Ashcroft
as Portia.
After the war, McBean set up
a new studio in Endell Street, London and was commissioned to
photograph the American actress Clare Luce in a new production
of Antony and Cleopatra at the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre,
Stratford-upon-Avon. He then produced a series of portraits that
incorporated significant objects from the lives of his sitters
into their photographs: Cecil Beaton is shown surrounded by pages
from his scrapbooks, while Ivor Novello leans over bound editions
of his musicals. Other portraits show 'Play Personalities' such
as Noel Coward, Ralph Richardson and Hugh 'Binkie' Beaumont (Binkie
Pulls the Strings). Also on display are portraits of ballet
dancers Margot Fonteyn and Robert Helpmann.
In the 1950s and '60s McBean's
career took a new direction as he began taking colour photographs
for LP covers. The exhibition shows his photographs of Cliff
Richard and the Shadows, Shirley Bassey and The Beverley Sisters
and Spike Milligan's head encased in a glass jar for his album
Milligan Preserved. McBean was responsible for the front
cover of The Beatles album Please, Please Me, taking a
spontaneous shot of the group leaning over the balcony at the
EMI Offices in London. Six years later he was asked to recreate
the 1963 photograph for the proposed Get Back album. It
later appeared on the retrospective LP The Beatles 1967-1970,
and these will be displayed alongside one another. Angus McBean
retired in 1966 to focus on decorating and restoring his house,
Flemings Hall in Suffolk, but he returned to photography in 1982
and the exhibition includes late work such as his portraits of
Vivienne Westwood and Jean Paul Gaultier.
Publication
A lavishly illustrated catalogue
accompanies this exhibition by curator Terence Pepper, and includes
excerpts from McBean's unpublished autobiography, Look Back
in Angus. Price £25 hardback. 280 x 230mm, 172
pages. 100 images
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