A retrospective of internationally renowned photographer who died in 1996. From an archive of nearly a million exposures spanning 40 years, this exhibition focuses on 120 images to show the changing face of London from the 1950s to the 1990s. Fashion photographs, portraits, advertising commissions and documentary work give a brilliant overview of Donovan's career and the changing face of London.
"The eye that never sleeps" is the phrase used by the
family of Terence Donovan (1936-96), regarded today as
one of Britain's greatest photographers, to describe his
dedication to photography. It has been borrowed for use
as the title of a new major exhibition of Donovan's
photographs. The Museum of London is a most fitting
venue for this, his first retrospective, which displays just a
small part of an archive of almost a million negatives, and
concentrates on Donovan's contribution to the cultural
history of the city he loved. 'Through his London
photographs', writes Simon Thurley, Director of the
Museum of London, Terence Donovan has 'shown the
glamour, the charm, the grit and the seediness of modern
London.'
Born in Stepney in London's East End, Donovan was as
comfortable in the ateliers of Paris couturiers as he was in
the streets east of Aldgate. But it was the chaos of these
streets, the swathes of bombed-out terrain which was
'vital', as photographic historian Val Williams writes, 'to the
construction of a new fashion iconography'. Donovan
photographed men's fashion in a gritty, grimy style years
before it was de rigeur for men's fashion photography. He
took his models to East End tenements or placed them
wreathed in steam high on the platforms of gasometers.
He took them to the bomb-damaged docklands, and
balanced them on the girders of steelworks and iron
bridges, motifs of an age of industry.
Donovan also delighted in the beauty of the female form,
adorned or not. Amongst the array of beautiful women who
appear in the exhibition, Julie Christie stares out intensely
over her naked shoulder. Diana, Princess of Wales, is
glimpsed ostensibly in the background, but her smile forms
the focus of the image; Madonna, every inch the
glamorous star, relaxes in an exclusive London restaurant.
In a long career that started at 15, Donovan was
astonishly prolific. He was a feature film and documentary
maker, he directed some 3000 commercials, produced
music videos, and was an accomplished painter. His work
took him around the world, photographing for Elle and
Marie-Claire in Paris, and Harper's Bazaar in Milan and New
York. But Donovan never let London go. His last published
photograph - of the London-based design team Clements
Riberio - was for Vogue, with whom he had an association
that began in 1961. The intervening years did nothing to
diminish Donovan's technical skill or obscure his unerring
eye.
From grainy documentary work set against bleakly urban
backgrounds, to stylish models in elegant lingerie in
sumptuous surroundings; from portraits chosen for their
connection to the life of London - Terence Stamp, Peter
Blake and Francis Bacon amongst others - to personal
work, lovingly capturing the photographer's wife and
children, the eye that never sleeps shows for the first time
the vast range of this dynamic man, who for nearly 40
years defined the spirit of his times.
Sheffield Galleries and Museum Trust, Graves Art Gallery
Sheffield
Graves Art Gallery
Surrey Street S1 1XZ Sheffield
Opening Times: Monday - Saturday 10am - 5pm