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The display will be accompanied by a book from Sir Paul titled 1964: Eyes of the Storm. National Portrait Gallery reopening to include unseen Paul McCartney photos Skip to main content
5/5 The National Portrait Gallery couldn’t have chosen a better show to reopen its £44m revamp Paul McCartney Photographs 1963-64: Eyes of the Storm review: Macca’s remarkable snaps capture ...
Yes, says Britain’s National Portrait Gallery, which is providing a fresh perspective with an exhibition of band’s-eye-view images that Paul McCartney captured as the group shot to global fame.
He was a figure in the London cultural scene of the mid-to-late 1960s, and was close to members of the Beatles (particularly Paul McCartney) and the Rolling Stones. In February 2015, the exhibition A Strong Sweet Smell of Incense: A Portrait of Robert Fraser, curated by Brian Clarke, was presented by Pace Gallery at the Royal Academy of Arts in ...
1964: Eyes of the Storm is a book of photographs taken by the English musician Paul McCartney, with an introduction by Jill Lepore.McCartney discovered the photographs in 2020 and approached the National Portrait Gallery in London about hosting an exhibition.
In 1983, Ocean painted Paul McCartney's portrait as part of the first prize in the 1982 Imperial Tobacco Portrait Award with his painting Lord Volvo and his Estate and the following year painted the poet Philip Larkin's portrait, also for the National Portrait Gallery, [4] a work described by the novelist Nick Hornby as "unanswerable".
The personal archive will be displayed for the first time as part of a major exhibition to mark the National Portrait Gallery’s reopening in June. Unseen McCartney photos from Beatles’ early ...
The gallery was reopened by the Princess of Wales on 20 June 2023 and she met Sir Paul McCartney whose photography exhibition was the first major show in the new space and viewed the Portrait of Omai by Sir Joshua Reynolds, which the gallery had just acquired jointly with the Getty Museum in Los Angeles, for £50 million. [28]