-
Claude Gassian recalls: "I once asked Keith to say something about this picture. He wrote to me : 'The Man at Work' " Prices are shown excluding VAT. This is added at checkout where applicable.
-
Claude Gassian recalls: "I had this photo session with Keith in his apartment in New York. I brought a lot of lights, flash and umbrellas – but my favorite picture remains this dark portrait, lit only by the flame of his Zippo lighter." Prices are shown excluding VAT. This is added at checkout where applicable.
-
Prices are shown excluding VAT. This is added at checkout where applicable.
-
Claude Gassian recalls: " This is Mick in March 1971, at The Roundhouse in London, The Stones' Farewell to England show" Prices are shown excluding VAT. This is added at checkout where applicable.
-
Claude Gassian recalls: " At the end of each show in 1975/76, Mick went on stage with four buckets of water. The first three of them were directed into the crowd, and invariably he drenched himself from head to foot with the last bucket." Prices are shown excluding VAT. This is added at checkout where applicable.
-
Prices are shown excluding VAT. This is added at checkout where applicable.
-
Prices are shown for unframed prints in 25 x 25 cm and 50 x 50cm image sizes. Please allow 10 days between order / shipping date. Larger bespoke sizes (up to 150 x 150 cm / 59 x 59 inches approx) can be made to order - if you would like something bespoke please ask for a quote based on your desired size / location.
-
Out of stockThis actual print was the personal property of the late great John Entwistle. In May 2003, Sothebys in London auctioned 386 lots belonging to John Entwistle. The majority of lots consisted of guitars, but lot number one in the auction comprised John’s favourite photographs of The Who, which originally hung on the walls of his home. This portrait by Colin Jones of The Who was one of the photographs in that first lot. It has a removable Sotheby’s sticker on the glass in the front left corner, and a Sotheby’s ticket strung on the reverse. It is in its original wood frame—the one John Entwistle had when he owned it—which has a small scratch on the top section. It is priced in its original frame but could be reframed for an additional £200. There is no visible signature. The image measures 16.5 x 23 inches, and the frame measures 21.5 x 28 inches. British photographer Colin Jones (1936-2021) first photographed the Who in 1965, when this photograph was taken in Wapping Lane, in London’s Surrey Docks - “one of my haunts down in the East End docklands” as Colin recalled later. Colin’s poignant and evocative images of the British working class from the last of the dock workers to the final days of the miners and steel workers are rightly acclaimed. Bill Brandt was a major fan of Colin’s work, which has been shown in major exhibitions in London, Washington and beyond.