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Times Square, New York, 1974 © Neil Libbert, Courtesy Michael Hoppen Gallery |
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8 June – 21 July 2017 |
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We are delighted to announce Neil Libbert’s first major solo exhibition at the Michael Hoppen Gallery. Libbert has been working as a street photographer and photojournalist for nearly 60 years and the exhibition will focus on key works made during his earlier career. This will be the first recent opportunity to explore the full range of Libbert’s talents and will include a number of previously unseen prints such as West Indian Arrivals, Waterloo Station, 1961 or Outside the Blackie Art Centre, Liverpool, 1973. Libbert’s self-effacing charm and modesty have always allowed him to get close to his subjects such as children enthralled in the cinema in Salford in the 1950s or those at the heart of the tension in Harlem during the race riots of the mid-1960s. |
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Outside the Black-E Art Centre, Liverpool, 1973 © Neil Libbert, Courtesy Michael Hoppen Gallery |
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Libbert travelled widely during 1950s and 60s, often working on assignment for The Guardian newspaper, and the photographs he made capture a radically changing world with huge compassion – ranging from the poverty of post-war Manchester to the energy of New York in the late 60s. The majority of works in the exhibition will be vintage prints, made by Libbert at the time that they were taken – these have a particularly rich surface and are often unique. |
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Andy Warhol, TATE Gallery London, 1971 © Neil Libbert, Courtesy Michael Hoppen Gallery |
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Born in Salford, Libbert studied at the Regional College of Art in Manchester before starting to work as a photographer and opening his own studio in the city in 1957. He joined the staff of the Manchester Guardian, and moved to the paper's London office in 1961. He stayed with the Guardian until 1965 before working under contract to The Sunday Times, the New York Times, Granada TV and the Illustrated London News until 1968 when he again became a freelance photographer. |
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Place de la Concorde, Paris, 1957 © Neil Libbert, Courtesy Michael Hoppen Gallery |
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In 1999 he was Nikon News Photographer of the Year and won a World Press Photo Award for his exclusive coverage of the bombings in The Admiral Duncan pub, Soho which made the front page of the Guardian. Libbert still regularly covers performing arts photography for the Observer. |
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Coney Island, New York, 1960 © Neil Libbert, Courtesy Michael Hoppen Gallery |
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PRESS ENQUIRIES press@michaelhoppengallery.com | daisy@dh-pr.com |
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