Tony Ray-Jones
Blackpool, 1968
Gelatin silver print, mounted
20 x 13.5 cms
7 13/16 x 5 5/16 ins
7 13/16 x 5 5/16 ins
13680
£ 1,200.00
Provenance
Donated by the Hyman Collection. All profits go to the Centre for British Photography.
Printed 1975. Mounted on cardboard, numbered X in Roman numerals, also numbered from the edition of 125 on the mount. Image 20 x 13.5 cms Mount 45.7 x 35.6 cms...
Printed 1975.
Mounted on cardboard, numbered X in Roman numerals, also numbered from the edition of 125 on the mount.
Image 20 x 13.5 cms
Mount 45.7 x 35.6 cms
'Tony Ray-Jones' blind-stamp on the mount.
Also two stamps verso (one signed by printer John Benton-Harris and the other by the Photographic Collections Ltd, publisher).
James Hyman is pleased to present an online exhibition of some of Tony Ray-Jones most celebrated photographs. These black and white darkroom prints were made shortly after Ray-Jones premature death and provide an over-view of many of his most famous images. They were printed by his friend John Benton-Harris for a special portfolio in 1975.
Tony Ray-Jones (1941-1972) remains one of the most influential and best-loved British photographers of the last half century.he diedyoung and his photographic career spanned just over a decade, Ray-Jones produced a richly diverse body of work that celebrated the melodramatic nature of the human character- synthesizing a personalized mélange of compassion, curiosity and irony.
Viewed from the perspective of 2020, Ray-Jones presents a worldis both familiar and almost un-recognisable. As Ray-Jones, himself,to Creative Camera in 1968:
"I have tried to show the sadness and the humour in a gentle madness that prevails in a people. The situations are sometimes ambiguous and unreal, and the juxtaposition of elements seemingly unrelated... This, I hope helps to create a feeling of fantasy. Photography can be a mirror and reflect life as it is, but I also think that perhaps it is possible to walk, like Alice, through a Looking-Glass, and find another kind of world with the camera."works are for sale.
Mounted on cardboard, numbered X in Roman numerals, also numbered from the edition of 125 on the mount.
Image 20 x 13.5 cms
Mount 45.7 x 35.6 cms
'Tony Ray-Jones' blind-stamp on the mount.
Also two stamps verso (one signed by printer John Benton-Harris and the other by the Photographic Collections Ltd, publisher).
James Hyman is pleased to present an online exhibition of some of Tony Ray-Jones most celebrated photographs. These black and white darkroom prints were made shortly after Ray-Jones premature death and provide an over-view of many of his most famous images. They were printed by his friend John Benton-Harris for a special portfolio in 1975.
Tony Ray-Jones (1941-1972) remains one of the most influential and best-loved British photographers of the last half century.he diedyoung and his photographic career spanned just over a decade, Ray-Jones produced a richly diverse body of work that celebrated the melodramatic nature of the human character- synthesizing a personalized mélange of compassion, curiosity and irony.
Viewed from the perspective of 2020, Ray-Jones presents a worldis both familiar and almost un-recognisable. As Ray-Jones, himself,to Creative Camera in 1968:
"I have tried to show the sadness and the humour in a gentle madness that prevails in a people. The situations are sometimes ambiguous and unreal, and the juxtaposition of elements seemingly unrelated... This, I hope helps to create a feeling of fantasy. Photography can be a mirror and reflect life as it is, but I also think that perhaps it is possible to walk, like Alice, through a Looking-Glass, and find another kind of world with the camera."works are for sale.