Guido Harari is one of the most renowned Italian photographers and still one of the best kept secrets on the international scene

  • Guido Harari: Leonard Cohen

    £ 845£ 2,536
    As serious and quiet as you may expect him to be, Leonard Cohen has a great sense of humour and lots of self-irony. We did several great shoots and there was very rarely any need for me to direct me as he'd always come up with funny ideas. He knew I wouldnt go just for straight or formal poses. This is one of my favorites.
  • Two of my favourite artists of all time and longtime friends too. I wanted to shoot them together with the most intimate and direct approach. This photo was taken during their only tour together in 2002. It was shot in a corridor backstage, after the concert, at 1.30am, when I had lost any hope this would ever happen. Another one of my favorite images.
  • Guido Harari: Siouxsie Sioux

    £ 787£ 2,362
    The Eighties, oh my. Siouxsie was on tour with a band that featured none other than Robert Smith. Audiences got wild every time the concert lights (barely nonexistent) would briefly hit him. On the day of the shoot Robert was nowhere to be found, so I let Siouxsie stick to her reptile and sensuous Theda Bara routine.
  • Guido Harari: Joni Mitchell

    £ 787£ 2,362
    At the end of an unheard-of full day of shooting, Joni showed me the huge living room in her Bel Air house. She had just been shot by Herb Ritts for an all star Gap campaign and she hadnt resisted painting over the posters. So I asked her to dress up exactly like in Ritts photo and proceeded to shoot her from above. She stopped me, grabbed a few brushes and started doing wild things with them. Years later she laughed, saying her husband had noticed she had her jeans fly open!
  • Guido Harari: Patti Smith

    £ 787£ 2,362
    1996 was the year when Patti Smith made her big comeback with Gone Again after a long and painful period of personal losses. She was adorable in the company of her bandmates, her kids and longtime friends Tom Verlaine and Michael Stipe. She accepted to be photographed and was very appreciative of our photographs.
  • I knew David very well, but I had never had a real opportunity to shoot Fripp. This was in a hotel room in Milano in between press interviews. Fripp surprised everybody in the room, including David, when he started recollecting the quite infamous anecdote about Agnetha of ABBA. Yes, the one you hear in the movie Priscilla. I'll say no more.
  • This is Marley when his Uprising tour hit Italy and he played to a record-breaking 100,000 people in Milano's Stadio Meazza. He was as sweet and quiet as ever, followed everywhere by his colorful tribe of friends, musicians, wife and kids. I never realized until recently that his famous dreadlocks do not show in this photo, making it even more intimate.
  • Guido Harari: Frank Zappa

    £ 787£ 2,362
    Zappa has always been one of my heroes and in 1982 I set out to put him on the cover of the prestigious Uomo Vogue magazine. No mean feat as 1982 was the year that Armani and Italian fashion exploded worldwide and FZ was not exactly what youd expect on Vogue. He lay down on dozens of music parts for orchestra that he was very proud of (at the time no orchestra had ever played any of his music, with the exception maybe of Pierre Boulez). The title of the one hes holding says it all: Zappa The Perfect Stranger.
  • TOM WAITS in the kitchen, Santa Rosa, California, 1999 Guido Harari recalls: “In 1999 Tom was promoting a new record, “Mule Variations”, but wouldn’t move from his headquarters in California. So he had press and photographers flown in from all over the world to Santa Rosa. The tiny Chinese restaurant seemed like his natural hangout and he didn’t seem inclined to even go outside the door to be photographed. Suddenly he grabbed the owner’s apron in a frenzy and dragged me in the kitchen, where he proceeded to fool around with pots and pans, pretending he was some kind of demented chef. My motor drive was smoking from action and this shot captures the zaniness of it all.”
  • Guido Harari: Tom Waits running

    £ 787£ 2,362
    Guido Harari recalls: This is one of my favorite photographs. It was taken in Place des Vosges, in Paris, in 1992, while Tom was promoting his Bone Machine album. I had already used my time as granted by his record company and was having a coffee chatting with a French photographer friend. When his time came to shoot Tom, my friend invited me to attend the sitting. This was still the age of analogue photography and, once he finished his roll of film, he had to stop and reload his camera. Restless and provocative as ever, Tom tore down the photographers backdrop and, using it as a cape, he started running up and down this courtyard. The guy was so shocked that he couldn't capture this unexpected moment of madness, but I did instead. I started running with Tom, chasing and teasing him all along and managed to get this shot within a couple of rolls of film. Tom loved the shot. I don't know about the other guy!
  • Guido Harari shares the background to this beautiful photograph: "In 1989, Crosby was clean and on the go with his second solo album, Oh Yes I Can. I always had been attracted by his face and this was my chance in a lifetime to capture his newfound serenity. He and Graham Nash, a true expert in photography, fell in love with this image and a few years later it appeared on Crosby's Thousand Roads album cover. Twenty-five years later Crosby agreed to co-sign a very limited edition of 15 fine art prints, which makes this image even more special to me." Note that a regular version is available, signed by Guido Harari alone, in a range of sizes, here. Archival limited edition pigment print on 16 x 23 inch paper, signed and numbered on the front by Guido Harari and David Crosby. Image size 11 x 21 inches approximately. Edition of 15.
  • Guido Harari: Bob Marley smoke

    £ 787£ 2,362
    This is the morning after a wild gig at Hammersmith Odeon on the Rastaman Vibration tour. Besides taking pictures, I did interview Marley for the Italian press and had a really hard time getting through his thick Jamaican patois. However I was mesmerized by the man and his traveling family, as well as the heavy smell of Jamaican cuisine and ganja.

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