
Barabara Cartland,
Herts, 1988
All works © Snowdon, 2001

Barry Humphries, 1987
All works © Snowdon, 2001

Frederick Ashton and Robert Helpmann, the Ugly Sisters,
Cinderella, 1965
All works © Snowdon, 2001
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SNOWDON
A RETROSPECTIVE
Photographs
15 March - 27 May 2001 daily 10.00 - 19.00 hrs
As one of the most versatile photographers of his generation, the
KunstHausWien is staging this retrospective of Snowdon's photographs,
his first in Austria. The exhibition will include many of his witty,
irreverent fashion photographs, as well as the portraits for which
he is best known. His more serious work, documentary photographs for
the Sunday Times magazine and others, will also be shown, revealing
an inquisitive and compassionate eye.
Tony Armstrong Jones (as he was then) studied architecture for two
years at Cambridge. Having failed his exams, he started taking photographs
of people in the theatre, encouraged by his uncle, the stage designer
and artist Oliver Messel. His grainy prints, shot on small format
cameras, often taken during rehearsal, were full of movement and changed
the look of theatrical photography and front-of-house display from
then on. For many years he has photographed the leading figures in
the world of the arts for Vogue, Vanity Fair and the Telegraph magazine.
To say that his heart is in the world of ballet, in the world of painters
and sculptors or that he has a particular empathy with stage actors
or actresses is not to marginalise his other portraits.
He brought a similar irreverent approach to his fashion photographs.
Seldom had models posed with such flamboyance on the wings of aeroplanes
or on piles of soon-to-be-crushed cars or caught the moment when champagne
glasses tumble from a suitcase or bags fly from top storey windows.
Snowdon's black and white photographs for the Sunday Times magazine
document the unfairness and inequality of life. Some of the most memorable
include the essay "Some of our Children". Equally haunting
and sympathetic are his photographs of old age, mental health and
loneliness.
Snowdon hates to be considered a specialist and has photographed,
over the years, a variety of landscapes, flowers and people, taken
he sasys "hopefully with a fresh eye". His most recent books
include small volumes on wild flowers and fruit and London Unseen,
a personal survey of London's hidden buildings.
A previous book London (from 1958), one of the earliest collections
of his photographs, is a milestone in documentary photography and
a personal view of the city from which he has worked for decades.
Photography apart, Snowdon has been at one time or other (and most
often concurrently) a designer, a writer, an Emmy Award winning film-maker,
a designer of theatre sets, ski-wear, clocks, furniture and motorised
wheelchairs. With Cedric Price and Frank Newby he designed the aviary
at London Zoo, now Grade II listed. He is also a tireless campaigner
for equal opportunities for the disabled.
He is still a force in photography, an indefatigable contributor
to publications and hopes to bring a freshness to everything he does.
The words that he wrote to describe his work in his first book London,
at the outset of his career, still hold true for his pictures today:
"I believe that photographs should be simple technically, and
easy to look at. They shoudn't be directed at other photographers;
their point is to make ordinary people react - to laugh, or to see
something they hadn't taken in before, or to be touched. But not to
wince, I think."
The exhibition will be accompanied by a catalogue - Photographs by
Snowdon: A Retrospective with contributions from Drusilla Beyfus,
Simon Callow, Georgina Howell, Patrick Kinmonth, Anthony Powell and
Marjorie Wallace. This features at least 200 illustrations (over 125
colour plates) and includes many previously unpublished photographs.
A National Portrait Gallery, London Exhibition. Tour organized by
ArtMedia Group, Inc. (New York).
THE EXHIBITION IS SUPPORTED BY:
KURIER Freizeit-CLUB,
HILTON VIENNA, AUSTRIAN
AIRLINES, YUMYUM
COMMUNICATIONS ,DEMEL,
ÖBB, THE
BRITISH COUNCIL,
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