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Displaying items by tag: cecil beaton

'They’re everywhere,’ William Herbert, the 18th Earl of Pembroke, says as he strides the 60 feet of his living room in Wilton House, near Salis­bury, searching for Cecil Beatons. The faded black-and-white photograph he retrieves from behind the family snaps is of a group of twenty­somethings picnicking on the Wiltshire Downs in 1931. It is one of several thousand photo­graphs taken by Beaton during the halcyon period in his life when he lived nearby at Ashcombe, then later at Reddish. ‘We played; we laughed a lot; we fell in love… time stood still and care was a stranger,’ he wrote in his diary in the 1940s.

Cecil Beaton was an almost permanent fixture at Wilton during the 1920s and 30s heyday of the Bright Young Things, and for a long time afterwards. He enjoyed a remarkable friendship with the Pembroke family and a great love affair with the house that he described as ‘at every time of year, in all weathers, unfailing in its beauty’.

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Known for his fashion and portrait photography, Cecil Beaton (1904–1980) also served as a wartime photographer, snapping more than 7,000 pictures between 1940 and 1945. It wasn’t until recently that 120 of these images were discovered in London’s Imperial War Museum’s Photograph Archive. Depicting life in Britain during the World War II, the photographs entered the Museum’s collection in 1948 when the Ministry of Information’s photo archive was transferred to the museum. The photographs, which had been filed by subject matter rather than photographer, had remained unattributed until now.

To celebrate the hidden treasure, the Museum will hold the exhibition “Cecil Beaton: Theatre of War through January 1, 2013.

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For the first time, two unique groups of photographs by Cecil Beaton and David Dawson of leading British artist Lucian Freud will be exhibited at Sotheby's. Spanning different periods of the artist’s life, these intimate photographs are a testament to the unique access Beaton and Dawson were given to Freud’s inner life. Leading society portraitist Beaton was drawn to Freud when he described him ‘as a true artist and a true Bohemian’ and his photographs from the 1950’s capture Freud alone, with friends, with family and with his second wife Caroline Blackwood at their Dorset retreat, Coombe Priory.

Dawson’s photographs, taken whilst he was Freud’s studio assistant between 1999 and 2011 reveal an extraordinary insight into the artist’s life. They uncover like never before an overview of the artist’s spiritual and intellectual requirements: his love of animals, his family, his devotion to the Old Masters, and his close coterie of friends and contacts. The recent triumphant retrospective exhibition of Freud’s paintings at the National Portrait Gallery which now moves to Fort Worth, gave a valuable insight into Freud’s working methods and his sitters. Now, the lens turns to the artist himself and reveals a life every bit as tantalising as those of his models. An Artist’s Life: Photographs of Lucian Freud by Cecil Beaton and David Dawson offers a unique opportunity to view a selection of many never previously exhibited images of one of the world’s greatest artists. Focussed through the lens of Beaton in the 1950s and Dawson from 2003, these photographs link the very inauguration and culmination of Freud’s extraordinary career.

Exhibition in London: Tuesday 10 July - Saturday 11 August 2012
Open 10 AM - 5 PM Monday to Saturday. Closed Sundays

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