Mick Rock is “The Man Who Shot the 70s”, the inimitable
rock photographer who launched his career with an unknown David Bowie
in 1972. From the first photo shoot developed a two year relationship
as Bowie’s official photographer. During this time Rock documented
the rise and descent of Ziggy Stardust, and shot promotional films,
album jackets, posters, artwork, videos like Life on Mars and Space
Oddity and thousands of photographs.
Rock’s career continued to soar with key 70s images like
Lou Reed’s Transformer, Iggy Pop’s Raw Power and Queen’s
Queen II and many of the Sex Pistols’ infamous shots. In
1977, he moved permanently to New York, where he quickly became
involved with the underground music scene pioneered by The Ramones,
Talking Heads and Blondie. His pictures, including The Ramones’ End
of the Century, captured the revolutionary spirit of this groundbreaking
period and made him the one of the most sought-after photographers
in the world.
Recently, Mick Rock has worked with stars
like Kate Moss, Michael Stipe, Johnny Marr, The Yeah Yeah Yeahs
and The Chemical Brothers.
He has produced several highly-acclaimed retrospectives of the
Glam Rock era, including Blood and Glitter- Glam: An Eyewitness
Account and a collaboration with David Bowie, Moonage Daydream;
Raw Power: Iggy and the Stooges and Psychedelic Renegades/Syd Barrett.
His retrospective at Tokyo’s Metropolitan Museum of Photography
in 2003 was hailed as “one of the most exciting exhibitions
of pop culture imagery to ever reach these shores”.
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