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The Who. They were great, I loved these guys. For me they were like cute little ruffians. They made me think of Dickens, of Oliver Twist, Fagins gang. - Art Kane Knowing that John Entwistle and Pete Townshend wore jackets made from flags, Kane decided to wrap them in a Union Jack: actually two, sewn together for the session. Initially they worked in his Carnegie Hall studio shooting on a seamless white background. Subsequently Kane took the group to Morningside Park, near to NYC's Columbia University. Here he had them pose sleeping, against the base of the Karl Schurz monument. He wanted to show them as both irreverent and lovable in a devilish kind of way. The photograph was a homage to a Cartier-Bresson photograph of a vagrant asleep in Trafalgar Square. An underexposure in overcast conditions produced deeply saturated colours, causing the flag to jump out from the dark background.
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"The Who. They were great, I loved these guys. For me they were like cute little ruffians. They made me think of Dickens, of Oliver Twist, Fagins gang." - Art Kane. Knowing that John Entwistle and Pete Townshend wore jackets made from flags, Kane decided to wrap them in a Union Jack: actually two, sewn together for the session. Initially they worked in his Carnegie Hall studio shooting on a seamless white background.
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The Who. They were great, I loved these guys. For me they were like cute little ruffians. They made me think of Dickens, of Oliver Twist, Fagins gang. - Art Kane Pete Townshend always remembered working with Art - in the seventies he admonished another photographer who didn't give them enough instruction: "When Art Kane took our picture, he told us, go there, do this, do that, be asleep, put your head on his shoulder...we like that kind of direction"
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A rare session photograph from 1968, taken by Art Kane in his Carnegie Hall studio
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Jim Marshall: The Who, first US tour, San Francisco CA 1967. An archival photograph in a limited edition of 25 on 20 x 24 inch paper. A stamped, numbered, posthumous estate print issued by the Jim Marshall Estate in one size only with certificate of authenticity. Price is shown for an unframed example excluding VAT.
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Don Paulsen (1940-2005) was a New York based music journalist and photographer in the 1960s and 70s. This portrait of Pete Townshend was taken backstage on the Murray the K show in New York in March 1967, and is titled, signed and numbered on the front under the image by Don Paulsen. The photograph was made from the original negative in the darkroom on 16 x 20 inch paper, and has an image size measuring 12 x 18 inches approximately. It is supplied ready to hang in a slim profile black metal frame, with overall framed dimensions of 20 x 24 inches.
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Limited edition of 250 handmade silver gelatin photographs on 20 x 24 inch paper, signed and numbered on the front by Amalie R Rothschild.