'The Linda McCartney Retrospective’ has toured the world, taking on a new life in each location, morphing and connecting to the local milieu. It morphs again here for Ballarat’s International Foto Biennale. The 200 works included are curated from the artist’s vast archive of half a million photographs, by her famous husband Sir Paul McCartney and their daughters, photographer Mary and fashion designer Stella.
The show contains work across 30 years, from her earliest images of rock stars, such as the Beatles and Janis Joplin in the 1960s, through to images of the everyday, self-portraits, experiments with form and commentary on causes dear to her heart, especially animal liberation.
Before meeting Paul McCartney in 1967, Linda Eastman (no relation to the Kodak-Eastman family) already enjoyed a successful career. She was named US Female Photographer of the Year in 1967. In 1968, she became the first female photographer to shoot the cover of Rolling Stone, with an acclaimed portrait of Eric Clapton.
Despite her credentials, she was best known as Paul’s wife rather than an artist in her own right. It is widely reported he often joked that he ruined his wife’s career but, since her death in 1998, Paul has ensured her legacy with books and international retrospectives.
A retrospective of Linda McCartney’s photographs reminds viewers of her direct sense of connection and intimacy with her subjects
This retrospective includes never-before exhibited material, including photographs captured during the McCartney family’s Australian visits for the 1975 Wings and 1993 New World tours.
For local audiences, this provides a connection with images of down-time, press scrums and press conferences (including one with Norman Gunston), landmarks, crew, fans, sunsets and Greenpeace activists. Whether it is the quality of the light or the openness of the faces, these images stand out as quintessentially Australian.
From the shadows
McCartney achieves a direct sense of connection and intimacy with her subjects. The images speak of the moment shared, often unposed and character-revealing.
This idea also occurs in her self-portraits — often mirror reflections — reminding the viewer this is her life and
her experience. Direct quotes are framing banners: “Looking out from deep below my eyes, I capture moments of my life…”
In a video she says: “You’ve got to click on the moment, not before and not after.” This sense gives her work a spontaneity and lightness.
Other images enable fleeting glimpses, such as ‘Mick Jagger 1966’. Looking back, framed by a curtain as he moves through a doorway, he just registers her. I wondered if there is something female about this approach, that women might be able to just “be there” so quietly.
Perhaps this could be related to gender relations, where women are imperceivable, non-threatening, only just there in a man’s world. Alternatively, it could show her ability to step into the shadows, to better observe.
There are also portraits of McCartney taken by others. Two taken by Jim Morrison stand out, particularly one very sensual one on a bed taken in 1967. Both photographs reflect a sense that the tables are turned, and it is she who is being looked at.
Many of McCartney’s family images depict Paul at play with their children. In the photograph ‘Paul and James Los Angeles 1983’, father and son are in a bubble bath and Paul hams up the scene of being sucked under the water with an open-mouthed scream, evocative of Edvard Munch.
In another, ‘Paul and Children East Hampton New York 1975’, he is depicted with them all trailing behind him like the Pied Piper of Hamelin. In ‘Self Portrait with Paul London 1970’, Paul and Linda face the mirror in a bathroom. She holds a camera, slightly angled to him, and he holds an imaginary one.
In all this, you get the sense of his collaboration with her theatrical agenda.
‘The Linda McCartney Retrospective’ and The Ballarat International Foto Biennale in Australia will run until January 9, 2022
The writer is a professor and dean of the School of Media and Communication, RMIT University. Republished from The Conversation
Published in Dawn, EOS, December 5th, 2021
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