David Bailey UK, 1938
Mick Jagger [Goats Head Soup Album Art Version], 1973
Archival Inkjet on paper, framed
Signed by the artist, on verso
Signed by the artist, on verso
Image: 101 x 148 cm
Sheet: 111 x 158 cm
Sheet: 111 x 158 cm
Edition of 10 plus 2 AP
© David Bailey
David Bailey’s 'Mick Jagger [Goats Head Soup Album Art Version' (1973) holds an important place in the photographer’s oeuvre and in the visual culture of the early 1970s. Emerging from...
David Bailey’s 'Mick Jagger [Goats Head Soup Album Art Version' (1973) holds an important place in the photographer’s oeuvre and in the visual culture of the early 1970s. Emerging from Bailey’s association with Jagger and the Rolling Stones, begun in 1964, the work belongs to a body of images that helped define British rock’s visual identity at a formative moment. Commissioned for 'Goats Head Soup' and art-directed with Ray Lawrence, the portrait is not a simple record of likeness but a carefully constructed image of persona.
Formally, the photograph is notable for its gauze-softened surface and subdued tonal range. Bailey uses diffusion to temper contrast and soften the face, producing an image of unusual atmospheric unity. Jagger appears both present and slightly withheld, his features shaped by light in a way that moves the portrait away from reportage and towards fashion photography. Bailey does not merely depict a musician; he stages his own renown as an image. The result is polished yet intimate, with a fragility that complicates conventional rock portraiture.
Historically, the work sits at the intersection of music, culture, fashion, and postwar photographic modernism. In the 1970s, Bailey worked at the centre of a visual culture in which these worlds increasingly overlapped, and this photograph is emblematic of how power blends these distinctions seamlessly.
This work belongs to one of his most recognisable and enduring strands of musician portraiture and to the sequence of images made with Jagger and the Rolling Stones that defines his contribution to photographic portraiture.
Formally, the photograph is notable for its gauze-softened surface and subdued tonal range. Bailey uses diffusion to temper contrast and soften the face, producing an image of unusual atmospheric unity. Jagger appears both present and slightly withheld, his features shaped by light in a way that moves the portrait away from reportage and towards fashion photography. Bailey does not merely depict a musician; he stages his own renown as an image. The result is polished yet intimate, with a fragility that complicates conventional rock portraiture.
Historically, the work sits at the intersection of music, culture, fashion, and postwar photographic modernism. In the 1970s, Bailey worked at the centre of a visual culture in which these worlds increasingly overlapped, and this photograph is emblematic of how power blends these distinctions seamlessly.
This work belongs to one of his most recognisable and enduring strands of musician portraiture and to the sequence of images made with Jagger and the Rolling Stones that defines his contribution to photographic portraiture.
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