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Linda McCartney in the frame

The V&A’s new photography centre will showcase the work of Linda McCartney - her photography was over shadowed when she married a Beatle, but is now appreciated as natural and spontaneous

September 13, 2018 13:29
4 min read

When Linda Eastman (later McCartney) became the first woman to shoot a Rolling Stone magazine front cover with a portrait of Eric Clapton in 1968, she could never have imagined that 50 years later her images would hang in the Victoria and Albert Museum, alongside other iconic Jewish photographers and more, recognised as part of the medium's history.

Thirteen works by McCartney will be displayed in the V&A’s new photography centre opening on October 12, selected from a wider gift of 63 photos donated by her family earlier this year.

Taken between the 1960s and 1990s, the images include the Beatles in Brian Epstein’s Belgravia home celebrating the launch of their fabled album, Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band; The Yardbirds seemingly caught unawares on a London street, watching a passer-by and Twiggy off modelling duty during a visit to the McCartney home after Linda and Paul's daughter, Mary was born in 1969.

“In all her work we see freedom of movement, energy, naturalness and spontaneity,” says Susanna Brown, the V&A’s curator of photographs who selected the works on display, adding, “nothing is forced or posed.”