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Portrait of Joe by Lewis Morley 1965:

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GAY ICONS - NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY

 

EXHIBITION: GAY ICONS
This exhibition is now closed
National Portrait Gallery, London

Sponsored by Rosé d’Anjou Wines

The first portrait exhibition to celebrate the contribution of gay people and gay icons to history and culture 

60 photographs selected by Waheed Alli, Alan Hollinghurst, Elton John, Jackie Kay, Billie Jean King, Ian McKellen, Chris Smith, Ben Summerskill, Sandi Toksvig and Sarah Waters

An important photography exhibition, Gay Icons, at the National Portrait Gallery (2 July–18 October 2009) will celebrate the contribution of gay people - and the significance of the gay icon - to history and culture. Ten selectors have worked with the Gallery to make their own personal choices of six individuals, their ‘icons’. Not only does this exhibition include many well-known icons, who may or may not be gay themselves, it also reveals some surprises and will encourage a wide audience to think about familiar faces in new ways.

Coinciding with the fortieth anniversary of the Stonewall Riots in New York, this exhibition focuses on portraits of both historical and modern figures. The choices provide a fascinating range of inspiring figures – some very famous, some heroic, others relatively unknown. Each icon is presented with information about their personal, and sometimes public, significance, some of it relating to the sitter but much of it linked to the selectors who have been prepared to share their experiences and feelings in their own exhibition texts.

Themes running through the exhibition include inspiration and how the ‘icons’ have inspired each selector in an extremely personal sense to realise their full potential, human rights, stemming from the specific consideration of sexuality, and how this might lead us to consider parallels between the struggles of different minority groups, re-discovery, or rescuing the reputations of figures who might otherwise have been forgotten or, worse, actively disregarded and surprise at some of the perhaps unexpected choices.   

Sitters include artists Francis Bacon and David Hockney, civil rights campaigner Harvey Milk, writers Quentin Crisp, Joe Orton, Dame Daphne Du Maurier, Patricia Highsmith and Walt Whitman, composer Pyotr Tchaikovsky, musicians k.d. lang, Will Young and Village People, entertainers Ellen DeGeneres, Kenneth Williams and Lily Savage, and Nelson Mandela and Diana, Princess of Wales. Their fascinating stories will be illustrated by sixty photographic portraits including works by Andy Warhol, Linda McCartney, Snowdon, Polly Borland, Fergus Greer, Terry O’Neill and Cecil Beaton.

The exhibition project has been led by Pim Baxter, the National Portrait Gallery’s Deputy Director and Communications and Development Director, Peter Funnell, the Gallery’s Curator, 19th Century Portraits and Head of Research Programmes, and Bernard Horrocks, the Gallery’s Copyright Officer.  

PUBLICATION
A fully illustrated book featuring the 60 striking selected photographs, with an introduction by Sandi Toksvig and an illuminating essay by Richard Dyer, accompanies the exhibition. Special Gallery price £20 (RRP £25) hardback.

 
   
 

Image: © Lewis Morley Archive/National Portrait Gallery, London

  Text © National Portrait Gallery  

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