Showing posts with label Terry O'Neill. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Terry O'Neill. Show all posts

Sunday, March 24, 2024

Inside the Terry O’Neill Retrospective at Fotografiska New York

Terry O'Neill at Fotografiska

The Rolling Stones outside St. George’s Church in Hanover Square, London, 17th January 1964. Clockwise from bottom left: Mick Jagger, Charlie Watts, Bill Wyman, Keith Richards and Brian Jones (1942 – 1969).


Inside the Terry O’Neill Retrospectiveat Fotografiska New York

It’s never been easier to feel close to your favorite star—all it takes is a few clicks to find a selfie on their Instagram. But before social media, and even the days of peak paparazzi, Terry O’Neill defined the concept of the celebrity story in photographs you can find at Stars, a new exhibition celebrating a half-century of the photographer’s legacy at Fotografiska New York. “I remember my parents talking about stars in the mid-seventies,” says Fotografiska chair Yoram Roth. “They may as well have been talking about Bible characters. These were people who were so unknown to them that every snippet of information was passed around like scripture. To see a photo in a glossy magazine weekly or monthly made you feel like you had access to something that we now take for granted.” Just before the show’s opening, Roth made time to walk us through some of O’Neill’s most iconic images of Faye Dunaway, Mick Jagger, Elizabeth Taylor, and David Bowie.

Friday, March 22, 2024

See Terry O’Neill’s rare images of David Bowie’s last show as Ziggy Stardust

See Terry O’Neill’s rare images of DavidBowie’s last show as Ziggy Stardust

In October 1973, British photographer Terry O’Neill received a call from then-manager Tony Defries to shoot an artist by the name of David Bowie—someone he had no idea would go on to become a music superstar, trailblazing style icon, and above all, close friend. The no-holds-barred performance was to be the last appearance of Bowie’s electric alter ego, Ziggy Stardust.

My best shot / Terry O'Neill / Brigitte Bardot

'It was a picture in a million' ... Brigitte Bardot. Photograph: Terry O'Neill

Terry O'Neill's best shot



Leo Benedictus
Thursday 18 December 2008

Famous people are normal. Even Frank Sinatra, who I worked with a lot, was normal. They've got faults like anyone else. But it's better if you don't get into that – you can watch from afar.