Man and Cameraman – Shaw & Photography

“I would willingly exchange every single painting of Christ for one snapshot.” – George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950)

The Irish Playwright, literary critic and essayist was an avid amateur photographer, taking and collecting around 20,000 images between the 1870s to 1950. Shaw began his love affair with photography in 1898 when he bought his first camera, a simple box camera. He continued taking photographs until his death in 1950, using a variety of cameras. Before he began taking pictures himself, Shaw had already been an advocate of photography as an art form, writing on the subject and reviewing photographic exhibitions.

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An experimental self-portrait where only part of the negative has been developed, circa 1890s. GB Shaw/ Reproduced by kind permission of the Society of Authors, the National Trust and the London School of Economics.

“I always wanted to draw and paint. I had no literary ambition: I aspired to be a Michael Angelo, not a Shakespeare. But I could not draw well enough to satisfy myself; and the instruction I could get was worse than useless. So when dry plates and push buttons came into the market I bought a box camera and began pushing the button.”

Shaw’s collection, which the National Trust handed to the London School of Economics in 1979, gives a fascinating insight into literary, artistic and political life during Shaw’s lifetime. It also features images taken by his friend TE Lawrence, Lawrence of Arabia – during the Arab Revolt.  A conservation and digitization project was launched in 2010 at LSE the school he was a co-founder of.

Rodin

George Bernard Shaw in the Pose of The Thinker, 1906, Carbon print on platinotype, H. 29.2 cm ; W. 23 cm – Inscribed in pencil, lower right : “To M. Auguste Rodin from Alvin Langdon Coburn September 15th 1906″ collection of the Musee Rodin

On the above photograph he declared: “I’ve posed nude for a photographer in the manner of Rodin’s Thinker, but I merely looked constipated.”

His enthusiasm for photography, the human form and the accuracy of reproduction that the medium allowed is perhaps a reference to the original story of Pygmalion, and the idea of bringing artwork to life, or at least representing the human form as accurately as possible.  He certainly saw photography as the perfect opportunity to explore a more accurate representation of the human form, and commented on this several times.

As a reply to press comments on his posing in the nude for “Le Penseur”, “The Thinker” (above) he went on to say: “Though we have hundreds of photographs of [Charles] Dickens and [Richard] Wagner, we see nothing of them except the suits of clothes with their heads sticking out; and what is the use of that?” Though throughout the years Shaw photographed countless luminaries of his time, I found his self-portraits particularly interesting, ranging from the serious to the playful, audacious and experimental… From self portraits showing the intense eyes of a drama writer in classic poses, to more adventurous lighting as well as playful images using mirrors both nude and clothed, Shaw certainly went beyond the norms of early photography.

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Self-portrait of Shaw looking straight to camera, circa 1908
GB Shaw/LSE. Collection of the National Trust

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Nude self Portrait – Shaw is seen here smoking and reading a book.
GB Shaw/LSE. Reproduced by kind permission of the Society of Authors, the National Trust and the London School of Economics.

On photography and nudity Shaw said:

“The camera can represent flesh so superbly that, if I dared, I would never photograph a figure without asking that figure to take its clothes off”

Nude self-portrait, setting up a camera George Bernard Shaw c. 1910

Nude self-portrait, setting up a camera George Bernard Shaw c. 1910 – Via – IMMA, Irish Museum of Modern Art

Shaw was also an early critic of image manipulation. “Technically good negatives are more often the result of the survival of the fittest than of special creation or “retouching” which can only be compared to the pipes and moustaches with which portraits of the sovereigns of England get decorated. [manipulated/retouched images] ought…to be excluded from a photographic exhibition, on the simple grounds that it is not photography.” From Shaw’s article for an exhibition by his friend Alvin Coburn (1906).

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Self-portrait taken in 1919 .
GB Shaw/LSE. Reproduced by kind permission of the Society of Authors, the National Trust and the London School of Economics.


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A self-portrait taken by George Bernard Shaw shows him experimenting with light, simulating a fire. Bernard Shaw Estate/ Reproduced by kind permission of the Society of Authors, the National Trust and the London School of Economics.

 

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c1907: Self portrait, Shaw is standing with both knees bent outwards on the interior side of a window sill; he is leaning forwards supporting himself with his arm to look out of the window to the left whilst resting his other arm on his knee – GB Shaw / Reproduced by kind permission of the Society of Authors, the National Trust and the London School of Economics.

 

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c1898-1899 : Self portrait. Shaw is standing leaning on a mantelpiece facing a mirror with his other arm to his hip and leg crossed, this gives the impression of a double portrait as his face is visible in the mirror reflection.
GB Shaw/LSE. Reproduced by kind permission of the Society of Authors, the National Trust and the London School of Economics.

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Handprint GB Shaw – c 1920 – Via IMMA Irish Museum of Modern Art

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GB Shaw self portrait with his wife Charlotte – Reproduced by kind permission of the Society of Authors, the National Trust and the London School of Economics.

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Interior beside Sigismund de Strobl bust, shaking head
George Bernard Shaw – Reproduced by kind permission of the Society of Authors, the National Trust and the London School of Economics.

 

Self-Portrait (young man) in chair George Bernard Shaw -  c 1904

Self-Portrait (young man) in chair
George Bernard Shaw – c 1904 – Reproduced by kind permission of the Society of Authors, the National Trust and the London School of Economics.

“You use a glass mirror to see your face; you use works of art to see your soul.” – George Bernard Shaw -

Francis Bacon & Photography

Portrait of Francis Bacon, photographer Unknown. Found in Bacon’s 7 Reece Mews studio. 1972 / (c) Estate of Francis Bacon

During a  visit to Ireland a few years ago, I went to an exhibition on Francis Bacon and the fascinating contents of his chaotic London studio. After the painter’s death, everything in his famed 7 Reece Mews studio was left untouched for years and eventually all donated to Dublin’s Hugh Lane Gallery. Paint brushes, canvases, documents, photographs, were all carefully cataloged and moved to Dublin for the eventual reconstruction of the space in Dublin. And the Hugh Lane really did put together something special, I imagined it would be his studio space with the original contents and a few supporting documents, but with all that was made accessible, it turned out to be one of the best exhibits I’ve been to in a long time.

The 7 Reece Mews Studio

L: Bacon in his studio – R: Studio detail showing a portrait of Bacon and an image of Mohamed Ali

Thousands of photographic prints, magazine reproductions, scientific manuals, were found littered around his London studio, ranging from images of Mohamed Ali & Marylyn Monroe, to studies of human and animal movement, war imagery, and reproductions of work by classic painters such as Velasquez and Rembrandt. Most of the images were creased, crumpled even torn and paint stained. I knew Bacon had used some photography as inspiration, but had no idea it was to that extent… A vast database of all these pictures was accessible via touch screens on the gallery’s walls, including information on how they influenced his work, a unique insight into Bacon’s approach to painting, a man who was never filmed or closely watched while painting. The database featured images that influenced his paintings, passport pictures, even holiday snaps, and countless portraits of himself by famed photographers such as Henri Cartier Bresson, all paint stained and creased, sometimes torn, and put back together… Discovering this side of Bacon was like discovering a new artist, I stayed there for ages searching through all the documents available, fascinating.

Eadweard Muybridge’s work (above), heavily influenced the way Bacon expressed the human body’s movements.  The pioneering photographer developed a multiple camera system in the 1870s to record movement sequences first of animals and humans.   A whole room full of paint stained, torn and crumpled reproductions of Muybridge’s work, originally found in Bacon’s London studio was on display at the gallery. Bacon would often go to the Victoria & Albert museum, just round the corner form his studio, where all the original plates were kept, he later acquired reproductions and used them extensively for core elements of his paintings.

L: Bacon’s “Two Figures” – R: Muybridge reproductions found in Bacon’s studio.

Bacon on Muybridge “Michelangelo and Muybridge are mixed up in my mind together, and so I perhaps could learn about positions from Muybridge and learn about the ampleness, the grandeur of form from Michelangelo. …

Bacon also used a still image from Sergei Eisenstein’s 1925 film Battleship Potemkin as an influence for his Study after Velazquez’s Portrait of Pope Innocent X 1953 (bellow)

L: a still image from Sergei Eisenstein’s 1925 film Battleship Potemkin. R: Study after Velazquez’s Portrait of Pope Innocent X 1953

Photography played a major role in Bacon’s work. Many of the photographs found in the studio were of Bacon, his friends and various other subjects. During his lifetime, Bacon accepted only a handful of commissions. From the early 1960s he chose his closest friends as sitters, preferring to work not from life but from their photographs.
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He grew up in the age of photo documentary, with then new magazines such as Life in the US and Picture Post in the UK giving him a wealth of imagery which could often filter into his paintings through his unique and seemingly random or even careless treatment of photographs. But on closer inspection it soon becomes apparent that he would often engage in a complex form of pre-painting groundwork with the images that could be described as an art form in its own right. Creases, folds, tears and paint stains on photographs often appear to be Bacon’s own form of sketching.

Early on, he would collect all images that he thought he could use and alter for paintings. But he became more discerning and began commissioning photographers for much more specific projects. Vogue photographer John Deakin worked with Bacon and photographed the painter’s friends and his partner George Dyer. Bacon would later go on to use a Deakin image of Dyer (his now dead partner) as a reference for a portrait of his then partner John Edwards (bellow)

When interviewed, Francis Bacon often talked about his own spontaneity in painting , about how he never sketched before painting or drew outlines on canvases. The discoveries in 7 Reece Mews shed light on how he actually worked his way towards a finished painting. For all his brilliant legacy of portraits, he only ever painted four sitters from life the rest from photographs, this allowed him the space and time for behind the scenes planning with the aid of photographs. I found the damaged, creased, torn and paint stained photographic portraits really powerful and inspiring.

An exhibition in London in 2010 called “In Camera” featured many of the originals, and a fascinating book of the same name has since been published.

The Photographer’s Gallery in London dedicated an exhibition earlier this year to John Deakin’s photographs of Soho. The show, entitled ‘Under the Influence’ (John Deakin and the lure of Soho) featured a photograph of a woman captioned “party goer” – The Guardian newspaper recently revealed in their article “CIA facial software uncovers the artist Francis Bacon – In drag”   The resemblance is uncanny but there remains the issue of cleavage…

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“Unknown woman, 1930s” by John Deakin

“One question still remains. While the face is very much like Bacon’s and the mole on the model’s chest closely matches that which can be seen in the famous picture of Bacon holding two sides of meat, it is impossible to ignore the substantial cleavage.”

Bacon Vogue 1952 by John Deakin

Francis Bacon, 1952, by John Deakin. Photograph: John Deakin/Vogue

Musée du quai Branly show

I am happy to announce my participation in Paris’ musée du quai Branly ‘s “Tatoueurs, tatoués” (Tattooists, tattooed) exhibition May 2014 – Oct 2015 –

The 18 month long show examines the history of tattooing from all over the world, as well as the current renaissance of the practice. Visuals in the form of large format prints and multi-media from ‘Yantra: the Sacred Ink’ will be on show to illustrate the yantra tattoo tradition. More details on the content of the show soon.

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BRO SAISON 2013 GB PL_WEB.pdf

Lucian Freud by Francis Bacon

Today the great painter Lucian Freud died. He was, along with Francis Bacon, one of my favorite artists.

Lucian Freud by Francis Bacon.
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L: Working documents – Photos by John Deakin c 1964.
R: Double Portrait of Lucian Freud & Frank Auerbach.