The Stories Behind Brian Griffin’s Portraits of Seventies and Eighties Rock Stars | The New Yorker

The Stories Behind Brian Griffin’s Portraits of Seventies and Eighties Rock Stars

Iggy Pop tried to intimidate him by urinating at his feet. Siouxsie Sioux never said a word throughout their entire session.

via The New Yorker: https://www.newyorker.com/culture/photo-booth/the-stories-behind-brian-griffins-portraits-of-seventies-and-eighties-rock-stars

In the nineteen-seventies and eighties, the British photographer Brian Griffin became a sought-after star in two seemingly disparate fields: business and rock music. His style suited both clienteles well. His portraits were heavy on contrast, all murky shadows and overwhelming columns of light, strange props, surreal situations, and the stoic, unfazed look on a subject’s face. He brought a bit of whimsy to management journals and corporate brochures, rendering stoic, Thatcher-era captains of industry as characters in a noir film. The rest of Griffin’s time was occupied by a different challenge: how to turn seemingly mythological figures, like Elvis Costello or Iggy Pop, back into everyday people.