SNOWDON

SNOWDON - ADVERTISEMENT FOR HAMLEY'S TOYS, 1956 SNOWDON - GRETA WATSON IN A TATLER FASHION SPREAD, 1955 SNOWDON - GLORIA CLARRY IN A TATLER FASHION SPREAD, 1955
SNOWDON - FASHION STILL FOR VOGUE ENTITLED SUMMER LIFE, 1957 ACRILAN ADVERTISEMENT, 1957 SNOWDON - ROBIN TATERSAL IN AN ADVERTISEMENT FOR ACRILAN, 1957
SNOWDON - SEKERS SILK ADVERTISEMENT, CERVINIA, ITALY, 1958 SNOWDON - JEAN QUICK IN AN ADVERTISEMENT FOR COURTAULDS HATS, 1957 SNOWDON - ROBIN TATERSAL IN AN ADVERTISEMENT FOR ACRILAN, 1957
SNOWDON - MR WILLIAM STONE, ALBANY, PICCADILLY, LONDON, 1953 SNOWDON - FASHION STILL, NEW YORK CITY, 1957 SNOWDON - FASHION STILL, JUNKYARD, QUEENS, NEW YORK, 1957
SNOWDON - THE LONDON STOCK EXCHANGE, LONDON, 1958 SNOWDON - THE ETON AND HARROW CRICKET MATCH, LORDS, LONDON, 1958 SNOWDON - SUNDAY LUNCH AT THE BRIDGEHOUSE HOTEL, CANNING TOWN, LONDON, 1958
SNOWDON - LAST DAY OF THE CHELSEA FLOWER SHOW, LONDON, 1958 SNOWDON - NANNIES ON ROTTEN ROW, LONDON 1958 SNOWDON - TROOPING THE COLOUR, LONDON 1958
SNOWDON - MARLENE DIETRICH, THE CAFE DE PARIS, LONDON, 1955 SNOWDON - LAWRENCE OLIVIER AS ARCHIE RICE IN THE ENTERTAINER, ROYAL COURT THEATRE, LONDON, 1957 SNOWDON - JACQUI CHAN, VENICE, 1956
SNOWDON - BRENDAN BEHAN, DUBLIN, 1957 SNOWDON - PAUL SCOFIELD IN THE POWER AND THE GLORY, ROYAL COURT THEATRE, LONDON, 1957 SNOWDON - ALBERT FINNEY, 1960
SNOWDON - THE ROYAL FAMILY, BUCKINGHAM PALACE, LONDON, 1957 SNOWDON - BABE PALEY, NEW YORK CITY, 1958 SNOWDON - SALVADOR DALI, 1958
SNOWDON - GLORIA HIGDON, 1959 SNOWDON - RUDOLPH NUREYEV, ROYAL BALLET SCHOOL, LONDON, 1963 SNOWDON - MARGOT FONTEYN AND RUDOLF NUREYEV IN SWAN LAKE, VIENNA, 1965
SNOWDON - SVETLANA BERIOSOVA IN JOHN CRANKO'S PRINCE OF THE PAGODAS, COVENT GARDEN, LONDON, 1956 SNOWDON - FONTEYN & NUREYEV REHEARSING MARGUERITE AND ARMAND, ROYAL BALLET SCHOOL, LONDON, 1963 SNOWDON - STUDENT AT THE VAGANOVA SCHOOL, ST PETERSBURG, 2002
SNOWDON - ANTHONY BLUNT, LONDON, 1963 SNOWDON - LUCIEN FREUD, PADDINGTON, LONDON, 1963 SNOWDON - FRANCO ZEFFIRELLI, LONDON, 1965
SNOWDON - JOHN PIPER, HENLEY, 1963 SNOWDON - DAVID SYLVESTER, TATE GALLERY, LONDON, 1963 SNOWDON - LEONARD BERNSTEIN, 1966
SNOWDON - PETER SELLERS AND BRITT EKLAND, 1967 SNOWDON - PETER COOK, CAMDEN TOWN, LONDON, 1967 SNOWDON - TOM STOPPARD, ROTHERHITHE, 1967
SNOWDON - PRINCESS MARGARET, LONDON, 1967 SNOWDON - PRINCESS MARGARET, CARIBBEAN, 1960S SNOWDON - PRINCESS MARGARET, 1962
SNOWDON - LONELINESS (DEAF MUTE IN BRIGHTON),  1966 SNOWDON - OLD AGE, 1964 SNOWDON - MENTAL HOSPITALS, PATIENT KNITTING, 1968
SNOWDON - SOME OF OUR CHILDREN, 1965 SNOWDON - MENTAL HOSPITALS, NURSE AND PATIENT, 1968 SNOWDON - NURSE AND HYDROCEPHALIC CHILD, 1975
SNOWDON - CHILDREN UNDER STRESS, 1970 SNOWDON - AMISH CHILD, 1971 SNOWDON - AMISH WOMAN KNITTING, 1971
SNOWDON - AMISH CHILDREN, 1971 SNOWDON - AMISH HORSE AND CART, 1971 SNOWDON - DAVID HOCKNEY, PADDINGTON, LONDON, 1968
SNOWDON - ARAB HORSE, MARYLAND, 1966 SNOWDON - BARBARA HEPWORTH, ST IVES, 1964 SNOWDON - VENICE, 1972
SNOWDON - ERIC CLAPTON, 1970 SNOWDON - CATACOMBS, PERU, 1972 SNOWDON - MONKEY SKINNING, PERU, 1972
SNOWDON - RODEO, TEXAS, 1974 SNOWDON - THE GOONS, 1972 SNOWDON - JACK NICHOLSON, 1978
SNOWDON - NOEL COWARD, TRAFALGAR SQUARE, LONDON, 1970 SNOWDON - SIR JOHN BETJEMAN, LONDON, 1971 SNOWDON - IGOR STRAVINSKY, 1970
SNOWDON - DAVID BOWIE, LONDON, 1978 SNOWDON - J.R.R. TOLKEIN, BOURNEMOUTH, 1972 SNOWDON - SOFIA LOREN, 1970
SNOWDON - RALPH RICHARDSON, 1981 SNOWDON - JOAN COLLINS, 1988 SNOWDON - CLINT EASTWOOD, 1985
SNOWDON - LADY MARY WILSON & JOHN WELLS, BROMPTON CEMETERY, LONDON, 1980 SNOWDON - IRIS MURDOCH, 1980 SNOWDON - JEREMY IRONS, 1981
SNOWDON - THE QUEEN, LONDON, 1982 SNOWDON - THE WAILING WALL, JERUSALEM, 1985 SNOWDON - BERLIN WALL, 1986
SNOWDON - NATTERJACK TOAD, 1985 SNOWDON - HENRY MOORE HOLDING A MAQUETTE OF MOTHER AND CHILD, 1983 SNOWDON - RUDOLF NUREYEV'S FOOT, 1982
SNOWDON - FRANK BRUNO, 1983 SNOWDON - ANTHONY SHER AS RICHARD III, 1985 SNOWDON - JEFFREY AND MARY ARCHER, 1987
SNOWDON - ALI DUNN, 1986 SNOWDON - DARCEY BUSSELL, VIVIANA DURANTE AND NICOLA TRANAH IN WINTER DREAMS, 1991 SNOWDON - FAROUKH RUZIMATOR, KIROV BALLET, 1990
SNOWDON - PRINCESS DIANA WITH PRINCE WILLIAM, 1982 SNOWDON - PRINCESS DIANA, 1991 SNOWDON - PRINCESS DIANA, LONDON, 1996
SNOWDON - HELEN MIRREN, 1995 SNOWDON - RICHARD O'BRIEN, 1995 SNOWDON - RICHARD HARRIS WITH PETER O'TOOLE, THE DORCHESTER, LONDON, 1995
SNOWDON - STEPHEN FRY, 1994 SNOWDON - YVES ST LAURENT AND DOG, 2000 SNOWDON - QUEEN ELIZABETH THE QUEEN MOTHER WITH HER GREAT-GRANDSON, ARTHUR CHATTO, WINDSOR, 1999
SNOWDON - BARONESS THATCHER, 2004    

A studio shoot with Lord Snowdon is quite often an uncomfortable experience. He has an uncanny ability to see through even the toughest facades, to strip pretensions, and by removing whatever pride his sitters arrive with, reveal the truth. Although famous for his charm and perfect manners, he likes to unnerve. This approach, coupled with his instinct to press the shutter at exactly the right moment, has made him a world famous photographer.

Despite this well-honed, well-known technique he has no recognisable photographic style, and indeed for the last half-century has made efforts to avoid developing one. He feels that as a photographer his role is to become an invisible observer, coaxing the truth out of his subjects without turning the result into a ‘Snowdon’. Sifting through the thousands of photographs that we reduced to this representative selection in the catalogue, it became clear just how very different his work can appear as a result. He is a master of studio portraiture, photo-journalism, theatre, fashion, advertising, travel, nature and even underwater photography. His versatility is enormous; the ultimate photographic polymath.

Antony Armstrong-Jones was born in 1930, and seemed destined for a career in the arts; it was in his blood after all. His great-grandfather was the Punch cartoonist and photographer Linley Sambourne (1845-1910), and his uncle was the legendary theatre, ballet and opera designer Oliver Messel (1904-1978). Indeed, his prep-school headmaster guessed that academia was not his thing reporting; ‘Armstrong–Jones may be good at something, but it’s nothing that we teach here.’

His first forays into photography were at Eton, where he revived the Photographic Society and at Cambridge where he was a regular contributor to the Varsity magazine. Armstrong-Jones moved to London and after two apprenticeships, opened his own studio in a converted ironmonger’s shop in 1952. From this Pimlico base he began to forge the beginnings of a reputation. His pictures were being featured in Tatler and he got his first spread in the Picture Post; flamenco dancers at an Oliver Messel party. He also began to photograph the theatre, starting with the 1954 production of Terence Rattigan’s Separate Tables. The approach that he took was unheard of at the time, and was soon to establish his name. Disregarding the tradition for highly organised, posed pieces taken with large format, plate cameras, he chose to use a miniature camera to get amongst the actors backstage and during rehearsal, in an attempt to capture the essence of the play. The best results of this technique are badly lit, grainy, blurred and unusually composed. They deliberately reject traditional photographic values, brim with atmosphere, and embody the rebellious, vigorous energy that swept through British theatre in the 1950s. A picture in this style of Alec Guinness taken during a rehearsal of Hotel Paradiso first caught the attention of theatreland, and Armstrong-Jones was thereafter the photographer of choice for actors, directors and producers at this radically exciting time.

By 1956 he was already branching out beyond portraiture and theatre, working on advertising and fashion shoots for Tatler, Vogue, Harper’s Bazaar, and The Daily Express, and beginning to research a book that was to be called simply, London. This was published in 1958 by Weidenfeld and Nicholson, and is a portrait of a city that takes the reader from seedy strip joints in Canning Town to The Chelsea Flower Show and The Trooping of the Colour. His pictures concentrate on the people of London rather than the buildings, and illustrate his interest in human interplay, reactions and expressions over formal composition and polish. His strong journalistic bent, so relied upon by newspapers in the decades to come, is obvious. London began a list of books now twenty two strong, the latest being of India, published in Autumn 2006 by the Khemka Foundation.

Armstrong-Jones’ marriage to Princess Margaret in 1960 slowed down his so far meteoric photographic career. Following the birth of their son, David, in 1960, he was created 1st Earl of Snowdon and spent much of his time performing royal duties. However, he still made time to do shoots for The Sunday Times colour supplement. In 1962 for example, he embarked on a series of touching pictures examining old age, finally published in 1965, the first of a number of commissions that dealt with social issues. He photographed a fourteen page article on British theatre in 1966 that coined the phrase ‘swinging London’, and he travelled to India, Japan and Italy for the magazine at various points during the decade. Although his photographic career slowed down, it gave him the freedom to indulge in other creative pursuits. From 1960 to 1965 he was commissioned to design a new aviary for London Zoo. The project, now a grade II listed building, took five years to complete and remains one of Snowdon’s proudest achievements. He won two Emmys for a television documentary, Don’t Count the Candles in 1968, and was also made responsible for the overall design of the investiture of the Prince of Wales in 1969.

By 1970 he was back working for Vogue, back working at the level of intensity that suited his drive, and was one of the most in-demand photographers in the country. His output from the decade is huge; he made six television documentaries, published seven books of his own work, held exhibitions in Cologne, London, the Far East, and Australia, whilst all the time contributing to the publications he helped define. This tireless attitude to work has continued to the present day. Now aged seventy six he has problems walking due to boyhood polio, but still holds regular shoots at the remarkably small and unpretentious home studio in which many of his photographs were taken, most recently the 80th birthday portrait of the Queen. The National Portrait Gallery, which holds one hundred and seventeen of his pictures, held a retrospective show in 2000 that toured to Edinburgh, Vienna, Moscow and the Yale Centre for British Art in the United States. He has published four books since turning seventy, still travels extensively, and refuses point-blank to bask in the indelible reputation that he has worked hard at since 1952. This is his first ever selling show.


Related links

Publications:
Snowdon in New York 2007- Exhibition catalogue
Snowdon 2006 - Exhibition catalogue


Exhibitions:
Snowdon in New York 2007
Snowdon 2006

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