Backstage at the Ballet, an exhibition of photographs by Colin Jones, opened yesterday 11th February with a well-researched and entertaining presentation by Jane Pritchard, Curator of Dance at the Victoria & Albert Museum, on Photographing Dance and Dancers. Pritchard spoke interestingly and informatively about dancer-turned-photographer Colin Jones, the history of dance photography, and Jones’ photo-journalism, focusing on his work with dancers. She drew attention to the wealth of social and historical information in his images, from evidence of the terrible quality of studio floors in the 1960s, to the way in which dancers used to spend their ‘down time’ knitting before there were mobile phones. (more…)
February 13, 2020
Jane Pritchard talk Photographing Dance and Dancers, exhibition opening of Backstage at the Ballet, The North Wall Arts Centre, 11th February–7th March 2020 – Maggie Watson reports
Posted by susiecrow under reviews | Tags: Backstage At The Ballet, Colin Jones, dance photography, Daria Klimentová, Elizabeth Anderton, exhibition, Jane Pritchard, Lesley Collier, Maggie Watson, Margot Fonteyn, Photographing dance and dancers, Rudolf Nureyev, Tamara Rojo, The North Wall Arts Centre, Victoria and Albert Museum, Winifred Edwards |Leave a Comment
April 16, 2019
Darcey Bussell: Evolved – Susie Crow reviews
Posted by susiecrow under reviews | Tags: Annie Leibovitz, Anthony Crickmay, Arthur Elgort, Bill Cooper, Chris Nash, dance photography, Darcey Bussell, Darcey Bussell: Evolved, Hardie Grant Books, Herbie Knott, Janine Limberg, Jason Bell, Jasper Conran, John Swannell, Katherine Jenkins, Kenneth MacMillan, Lord Snowdon, Mario Testino, Reg Wilson, Richard Avedon, Ross MacGibbon, Strictly Come Dancing, The Royal Ballet |1 Comment
This luxurious large scale coffee table book celebrates an icon of British ballet, but within a wider context than life as member of a major company. The young Darcey Bussell shot to stardom at the Royal Ballet when, still a teenager, she was selected by Kenneth MacMillan to create the central role of Princess Rose in his ballet of 1989 The Prince of the Pagodas; after its premiere becoming the company’s youngest principal dancer. Her elegantly long physique and sunny charm coupled with technical clarity, strength and assurance enabled her to shine not only in ballet’s classic 19th century repertoire but also in major works by MacMillan and Ashton, Balanchine and Christopher Wheeldon. She retired from the Royal Ballet at the age of 38 but has managed to make a seamless transition to a wider career as a much loved celebrity, exploring other dance genres in performance and on television, but also as a presenter of dance transmissions and documentaries, and perhaps most famously of late as a judge on Strictly Come Dancing. (more…)
April 9, 2019
Darcey Bussell interviewed by Nick Higham, Sheldonian Theatre, Oxford Literary Festival 30th March 2019 – Maggie Watson reports
Posted by susiecrow under reviews | Tags: Anthony Crickmay, Apollo, Billy Elliot, Carlos Acosta, dance photography, Darcey Bussell, Darcey Bussell: Evolved, Kenneth MacMillan, La Bayadère, Maggie Watson, Manon, Nick Higham, Oxford Literary Festival, Roberto Bolle, Romeo and Juliet, Royal Ballet, Sheldonian Theatre, Strictly Come Dancing, Swan Lake, Sylvia, Viva la Diva |[2] Comments
Nick Higham’s interview with Darcey Bussell in the Sheldonian Theatre was the only dance-related event in this year’s Oxford Literary Festival, and it was sold out. I was sitting right at the top, next to a family with two small girls, who were very anxious about whether they would be able to see. Happily, we turned out to be on the best side of the Gallery, and had a good view of Bussell, who seemed to be channelling her inner Audrey Hepburn, in slacks, pumps and a polka-dot blouse.
Higham opened the discussion by talking about her book Darcey Bussell: Evolved, which is a collection of images of Bussell in locations ranging from the top of the Albert Memorial to the London Eye. Higham asked what it is like to be a photographer’s muse, to which Bussell replied that it is part of the job of promoting her art form. (more…)
December 31, 2015
What Lies Beneath: photographs by Rick Guest, book & exhibition January 2016
Posted by susiecrow under What's happening | Tags: Alban Lendorf, dance photography, Edward Watson, exhibition, Federico Bonelli, Hikaru Kobayashi, Hospital Club Gallery, Nehemiah Kish, Olivia Cowley, Rick Guest, Sarah Crompton, Sarah Lamb, Sergei Polunin, Steven McRae, Tamara Rojo, What Lies Beneath, Yuhui Choe, Zenaida Yanowsky |Leave a Comment
Photographer Rick Guest‘s latest publication What Lies Beneath accompanies the exhibition of the same name to be held at the Hospital Club Gallery in January 2016. Featuring an incredible range of companies such as The Royal Ballet, The English National Ballet, The Richard Alston Dance Company, The Dresden Semperoper, The Royal Danish Ballet and Wayne McGregor Random Dance, it includes images of dancers such as Alban Lendorf, Tamara Rojo, Sergei Polunin, Sarah Lamb, Steven McRae, Zenaida Yanowsky, Edward Watson, Olivia Cowley, Nehemiah Kish, Hikaru Kobayashi, Federico Bonelli, and Yuhui Choe. With a foreword by Tamara Rojo, Director and Lead Principal of the English National Ballet and an incisive essay by Sarah Crompton, this book is in a limited first run of 1000 copies, exquisitely printed by PUSH Print, and is in a large format, 300mm x 370mm.
Rick Guest writes:
“I wanted to make a series of portraits of the dancers themselves, as opposed to dancers dancing, to show the character that underpins their performance, to see the determination and sacrifice that it takes to succeed at such a high level. In an art form that deliberately conceals the enormity of effort that goes into its creation, we are not meant to see behind the curtain, but I think that this does a great disservice to the dancers, and that having a sense of what lies beneath both enhances our experience of the performance and leads to a more profound appreciation of the dancer’s essential being. These portraits are at once beautiful and brutal.”
What Lies Beneath is available from 15th December 2105 from rg-books.com
Further work can be viewed at rg-dance.com
Check out information about Rick Guest’s previous book of photographs The Language of the Soul here
Exhibition What Lies Beneath
Dates: 22nd-31st January 2016
Venue: The Hospital Club Gallery, 24 Endell Street, London WC2H 9HQ
December 31, 2015
The Language of the Soul: photographs by Rick Guest
Posted by susiecrow under What's happening | Tags: Christopher Wheeldon, dance photography, Edward Watson, Kevin O'Hare, Liam Scarlett, Marianela Nuñez, Melissa Hamilton, Nehemiah Kish, Olivia Pomp, Rick Guest, Sarah Lamb, Sergei Polunin, Steven McRae, Tamara Rojo, The Hospital Club Gallery, The Language of the Soul, Wayne McGregor, Zenaida Yanowsky |1 Comment
The Language of the Soul by photographer Rick Guest features images from his 2014 Exhibition at The Hospital Club Gallery, as well as many more in the series. Working in collaboration with stylist Olivia Pomp, and featuring such luminary dancers as Edward Watson, Tamara Rojo, Marianela Nuñez, Steven McRae, Sarah Lamb, Sergei Polunin, Zenaida Yanowsky, Nehemiah Kish and Melissa Hamilton, it also includes portraits of Wayne McGregor, Kevin O’Hare, Liam Scarlett and Christopher Wheeldon. With a foreword by Kevin O’Hare, Director of The Royal Ballet, this book is in a limited first run of 1000 copies, exquisitely printed by PUSH Print, and is in a large format, 300mm x 370mm.
Rick Guest writes:
“Ballet as an art form has always been a collaborative medium, whereby composers, orchestras, choreographers, dancers, artists and impresarios have come together to create something new, something greater than the individual elements. With this in mind, I have deliberately turned away from using photography to document dance as it’s staged for the audience, as important as that is. Instead, I have concentrated on the bringing together of three separate disciplines, that of photography, fashion and dance, in an attempt to create something new and singular.
Away from the constraints of stage, role and costume, the dancers are able to demonstrate their breathtaking capabilities in an uninhibited atmosphere, one that ultimately leads to a purer portrait of the dancers themselves. These images aim to illustrate the key tenets of balletic technique; balance, strength and poise. They are lit and photographed to enhance each dancers’ power and beauty, both physical and emotional, and the images are infused with a fashion edge that is at the same time evocative and playful.”
The Language of the Soul is available from the 15th December 2015 from rg-books.com
Further work can be viewed at rg-dance.com
December 31, 2012
Chemistry – new work by Joe Lott in exhibition and performance
Posted by susiecrow under What's happening | Tags: contemporary dance, dance photography, Dulcy Lott, Imran Uppal, Joe Lott Dance, Old Fire Station Gallery, Resolution! 2013, The Place |1 Comment
Something fresh and thought provoking to put in those new 2013 diaries – Oxford based choreographer Joe Lott sends word of her new work Chemistry, which will be performed at The Place in London as part of the annual Resolution! season, but which is also the subject of a photographic exhibition here in Oxford… (more…)