An exhibition of photographs owned by singer Elton John is everything one might expect from a star who has a fascination with image, a love of excess and a very large budget. Understated, it isn’t. The show, which opened last week at London’s Victoria and Albert Museum, includes more than 300 pieces by 140 photographers selected from the vast collection of John and his husband David Furnish.
Covering the period from 1950 to the present day, they include iconic fashion shots by Irving Penn, Richard Avedon and Herb Ritts, portraits of stars including The Beatles, Frank Sinatra, Marilyn Monroe and Chet Baker, and photojournalism capturing moments from the black civil rights movement of the 1960s in the United States to 1980s Aids activism and the September 11 attacks on New York and Washington DC. “It’s a little bit overwhelming sometimes, but it’s just wonderful,” Newell Harbin, director of the couple’s collection, said at a preview on Wednesday. The exhibition is entitled “Fragile Beauty”, a name chosen by John that reflects his ethos, said curator Duncan Forbes, the museum’s head of photography.
“I think key to Elton is the sense of vulnerability and fragility that underpins creative expression and human experience,” Forbes said. “That’s the thing I think runs through the show.” He said John had instructed that the show “should be mischievous and it should be very serious”.
“What we’ve tried to do is create a really absorbing, big show ab.