Sir Cecil Beaton (1904- 1980) was a English photographer known primarily for his portraits of celebrated persons, who also worked as an illustrator, a diarist, and an Academy Award-winning costume and set designer.
Beaton's interest in photography began when, as a young boy, he admired portraits of society women and actresses circulated on picture postcards and in Sunday supplements of newspapers. When he got his first camera at age 11, his nurse taught him how to use it and how to process negatives and prints. He costumed and posed his sisters in an attempt to re-create the popular portraits that he loved.
In the 1920s Beaton became a staff photographer for Vanity Fair and Vogue magazines.
During World War II, Beaton served in the British Ministry of Information, covering the fighting in Africa and East Asia. His wartime photographs of the siege of Britain were published in the book Winged Squadrons (1942). After the war Beaton resumed portrait photography, but his style became much less flamboyant. He also broadened his activities, designing costumes and sets for theatre and film. He won Academy Awards for his costume design in Gigi (1958) and for both his costume design and his art direction in My Fair Lady (1964). Beaton was knighted in 1972.
(via Biography.com)
Photographer David Bailey's Documentary on Cecil Beaton
The Glass of FashionBeaton's interest in photography began when, as a young boy, he admired portraits of society women and actresses circulated on picture postcards and in Sunday supplements of newspapers. When he got his first camera at age 11, his nurse taught him how to use it and how to process negatives and prints. He costumed and posed his sisters in an attempt to re-create the popular portraits that he loved.
In the 1920s Beaton became a staff photographer for Vanity Fair and Vogue magazines.
During World War II, Beaton served in the British Ministry of Information, covering the fighting in Africa and East Asia. His wartime photographs of the siege of Britain were published in the book Winged Squadrons (1942). After the war Beaton resumed portrait photography, but his style became much less flamboyant. He also broadened his activities, designing costumes and sets for theatre and film. He won Academy Awards for his costume design in Gigi (1958) and for both his costume design and his art direction in My Fair Lady (1964). Beaton was knighted in 1972.
(via Biography.com)
Mick Jagger
Cecil Beaton shooting Audrey Hepburn for My Fair Lady, for which he was also the costume designer.
Cecil Beaton photographing Keith Richards
Jean Shrimpton by Cecil Beaton, 1964
Mrs Charles James, 716 Madison Avenue, New York 1955
Liz Taylor
Greta Garbo
Audrey Hepburn 1960
Marlon Brando
Gary Cooper
Marlene Dietrich, 1935
Writer Aldous Huxley
Be daring, be different, be impractical, be anything that will assert integrity of purpose and imaginative vision against the play-it-safers, the creatures of the commonplace, the slaves of the ordinary.
~ Cecil Beaton
Dali
Picasso
3 year old Air Raid Victom , 1940
Director/Actor Orson Welles
Opera singer Maria Callas
Ballerina Madame Danilova, 1935
Coco Chanel
Princess Ira Von Furstenberg 1955
Princess Elizabeth by Cecil Beaton, March 1945
Katherine Hepburn
Andy Warhol and Velvet Underground's transsexual muse Candy Darling
Mick Jagger
Model Posing in front of Jackson Pollock painting
Beatons's Camera