22 April 1985, “Slave To Love” #bryanferry #slavetolove #boysandgirls
Michael Roberts was a multi-talented artist, writer, editor, stylist and photographer, who worked with BF several times, most notably as director of the 1988 award winning music video for Limbo. He was best known for his original work as fashion director and illustrator for The Sunday Times, Tatler, Vanity Fair, and The New Yorker. His creative genius will be greatly missed by his many friends and collaborators. @michael_roberts_mrjungle @newyorkermag @tatlermagazine @sundaytimesmagazine @vanityfair
Michael Roberts was a multi-talented artist, writer, editor, stylist and photographer, who worked with BF several times, most notably as director of the 1988 award winning music video for Limbo. He was best known for his original work as fashion director and illustrator for The Sunday Times, Tatler, Vanity Fair, and The New Yorker. His creative genius will be greatly missed by his many friends and collaborators. @michael_roberts_mrjungle @newyorkermag @tatlermagazine @sundaytimesmagazine @vanityfair
Michael Roberts was a multi-talented artist, writer, editor, stylist and photographer, who worked with BF several times, most notably as director of the 1988 award winning music video for Limbo. He was best known for his original work as fashion director and illustrator for The Sunday Times, Tatler, Vanity Fair, and The New Yorker. His creative genius will be greatly missed by his many friends and collaborators. @michael_roberts_mrjungle @newyorkermag @tatlermagazine @sundaytimesmagazine @vanityfair
Michael Roberts was a multi-talented artist, writer, editor, stylist and photographer, who worked with BF several times, most notably as director of the 1988 award winning music video for Limbo. He was best known for his original work as fashion director and illustrator for The Sunday Times, Tatler, Vanity Fair, and The New Yorker. His creative genius will be greatly missed by his many friends and collaborators. @michael_roberts_mrjungle @newyorkermag @tatlermagazine @sundaytimesmagazine @vanityfair
“Do the Strand” live from The Old Grey Whistle Test, BBC 1973. Now available on the Roxy Music YouTube channel (link in bio) #roxymusic #roxy50 #dothestrand #foryourpleasure #ogwt #oldgreywhistletest #bbc #liveperformance #archive
50 Years of For Your Pleasure! #roxymusic #roxy50 #foryourpleasure #onthisday
50 Years of For Your Pleasure! #roxymusic #roxy50 #foryourpleasure #onthisday
Roxy Music release their single “More Than This” / “India” on 21 March, 1982 #roxymusic #avalon #morethanthis #india #single #onthisday
Re-Make/Re-Model live from Muzikladen Studios, West Germany, 1973. #roxymusic #remake #remodel #muzikladen #liveperformance #archive
Bryan Ferry on set with director Tim Pope for the ‘Is Your Love Strong Enough’ video. The song was recorded for the soundtrack to the movie ‘Legend’ and was released as a single on 17th March 1986. #bryanferry #soundtrack #legend #ridleyscott
Bryan Ferry on set with director Tim Pope for the ‘Is Your Love Strong Enough’ video. The song was recorded for the soundtrack to the movie ‘Legend’ and was released as a single on 17th March 1986. #bryanferry #soundtrack #legend #ridleyscott
Visit our new Roxy Music playlists on @spotify (link in bio) collecting all the singles and B-sides from the band’s career #roxymusic #bestof #singles #bsides #playlist
Visit our new Roxy Music playlists on @spotify (link in bio) collecting all the singles and B-sides from the band’s career #roxymusic #bestof #singles #bsides #playlist
“Slave to Love”, the first single from Boys and Girls, released this week in 1985 #bryanferry #slavetolove #boysandgirls
“Editions of You” live from Muzikladen Studios, West Germany, 1973. #roxymusic #editions #editionsofyou #foryourpleasure #muzikladen #liveperformance #archive
The digital re-release of the single ‘Goddess of Love’ from Bryan Ferry’s 2002 album Frantic is out today, including B-sides from all previous formats. #bryanferry #frantic #goddessoflove #single #reissue #bsides
Mark Lancaster exhibition now on a The Redfern Gallery, Cork Street, London. Mark was an influential artist who studied at the school of Fine Art, Newcastle University. He was a close friend of Bryan’s for many years. As the exhibition’s curator Ian Massey writes: Lancaster’s name is wedded to the mythology of the 1960s and 1970s, his story interwoven with those of some of the most renowned cultural figures of the era. Lancaster inhabited many worlds, and the extensive list of his friends and collaborators includes such luminaries as the artists Richard Hamilton, David Hockney, Jasper Johns and Andy Warhol, and the dancer and choreographer Merce Cunningham. Active for three decades from the early 1960s onwards, Lancaster worked most often in series, each group of paintings informed, conceptually and stylistically, by those that preceded them. Over the years, his work gradually changed, from the highly controlled hard-edged abstraction of his earliest work as a professional artist, to gestural paintings in which there is a constant negotiation between the abstract and the figurative. This first posthumous exhibition includes works from each of the artist’s major series of paintings. It reveals him as a significant artist of great intelligence and sensitivity. #richardhamilton #davidhockney #jasperjohns #redferngallery #andywarhol
Mark Lancaster exhibition now on a The Redfern Gallery, Cork Street, London. Mark was an influential artist who studied at the school of Fine Art, Newcastle University. He was a close friend of Bryan’s for many years. As the exhibition’s curator Ian Massey writes: Lancaster’s name is wedded to the mythology of the 1960s and 1970s, his story interwoven with those of some of the most renowned cultural figures of the era. Lancaster inhabited many worlds, and the extensive list of his friends and collaborators includes such luminaries as the artists Richard Hamilton, David Hockney, Jasper Johns and Andy Warhol, and the dancer and choreographer Merce Cunningham. Active for three decades from the early 1960s onwards, Lancaster worked most often in series, each group of paintings informed, conceptually and stylistically, by those that preceded them. Over the years, his work gradually changed, from the highly controlled hard-edged abstraction of his earliest work as a professional artist, to gestural paintings in which there is a constant negotiation between the abstract and the figurative. This first posthumous exhibition includes works from each of the artist’s major series of paintings. It reveals him as a significant artist of great intelligence and sensitivity. #richardhamilton #davidhockney #jasperjohns #redferngallery #andywarhol
Mark Lancaster exhibition now on a The Redfern Gallery, Cork Street, London. Mark was an influential artist who studied at the school of Fine Art, Newcastle University. He was a close friend of Bryan’s for many years. As the exhibition’s curator Ian Massey writes: Lancaster’s name is wedded to the mythology of the 1960s and 1970s, his story interwoven with those of some of the most renowned cultural figures of the era. Lancaster inhabited many worlds, and the extensive list of his friends and collaborators includes such luminaries as the artists Richard Hamilton, David Hockney, Jasper Johns and Andy Warhol, and the dancer and choreographer Merce Cunningham. Active for three decades from the early 1960s onwards, Lancaster worked most often in series, each group of paintings informed, conceptually and stylistically, by those that preceded them. Over the years, his work gradually changed, from the highly controlled hard-edged abstraction of his earliest work as a professional artist, to gestural paintings in which there is a constant negotiation between the abstract and the figurative. This first posthumous exhibition includes works from each of the artist’s major series of paintings. It reveals him as a significant artist of great intelligence and sensitivity. #richardhamilton #davidhockney #jasperjohns #redferngallery #andywarhol
Mark Lancaster exhibition now on a The Redfern Gallery, Cork Street, London. Mark was an influential artist who studied at the school of Fine Art, Newcastle University. He was a close friend of Bryan’s for many years. As the exhibition’s curator Ian Massey writes: Lancaster’s name is wedded to the mythology of the 1960s and 1970s, his story interwoven with those of some of the most renowned cultural figures of the era. Lancaster inhabited many worlds, and the extensive list of his friends and collaborators includes such luminaries as the artists Richard Hamilton, David Hockney, Jasper Johns and Andy Warhol, and the dancer and choreographer Merce Cunningham. Active for three decades from the early 1960s onwards, Lancaster worked most often in series, each group of paintings informed, conceptually and stylistically, by those that preceded them. Over the years, his work gradually changed, from the highly controlled hard-edged abstraction of his earliest work as a professional artist, to gestural paintings in which there is a constant negotiation between the abstract and the figurative. This first posthumous exhibition includes works from each of the artist’s major series of paintings. It reveals him as a significant artist of great intelligence and sensitivity. #richardhamilton #davidhockney #jasperjohns #redferngallery #andywarhol
Mark Lancaster exhibition now on a The Redfern Gallery, Cork Street, London. Mark was an influential artist who studied at the school of Fine Art, Newcastle University. He was a close friend of Bryan’s for many years. As the exhibition’s curator Ian Massey writes: Lancaster’s name is wedded to the mythology of the 1960s and 1970s, his story interwoven with those of some of the most renowned cultural figures of the era. Lancaster inhabited many worlds, and the extensive list of his friends and collaborators includes such luminaries as the artists Richard Hamilton, David Hockney, Jasper Johns and Andy Warhol, and the dancer and choreographer Merce Cunningham. Active for three decades from the early 1960s onwards, Lancaster worked most often in series, each group of paintings informed, conceptually and stylistically, by those that preceded them. Over the years, his work gradually changed, from the highly controlled hard-edged abstraction of his earliest work as a professional artist, to gestural paintings in which there is a constant negotiation between the abstract and the figurative. This first posthumous exhibition includes works from each of the artist’s major series of paintings. It reveals him as a significant artist of great intelligence and sensitivity. #richardhamilton #davidhockney #jasperjohns #redferngallery #andywarhol
Mark Lancaster exhibition now on a The Redfern Gallery, Cork Street, London. Mark was an influential artist who studied at the school of Fine Art, Newcastle University. He was a close friend of Bryan’s for many years. As the exhibition’s curator Ian Massey writes: Lancaster’s name is wedded to the mythology of the 1960s and 1970s, his story interwoven with those of some of the most renowned cultural figures of the era. Lancaster inhabited many worlds, and the extensive list of his friends and collaborators includes such luminaries as the artists Richard Hamilton, David Hockney, Jasper Johns and Andy Warhol, and the dancer and choreographer Merce Cunningham. Active for three decades from the early 1960s onwards, Lancaster worked most often in series, each group of paintings informed, conceptually and stylistically, by those that preceded them. Over the years, his work gradually changed, from the highly controlled hard-edged abstraction of his earliest work as a professional artist, to gestural paintings in which there is a constant negotiation between the abstract and the figurative. This first posthumous exhibition includes works from each of the artist’s major series of paintings. It reveals him as a significant artist of great intelligence and sensitivity. #richardhamilton #davidhockney #jasperjohns #redferngallery #andywarhol
Mark Lancaster exhibition now on a The Redfern Gallery, Cork Street, London. Mark was an influential artist who studied at the school of Fine Art, Newcastle University. He was a close friend of Bryan’s for many years. As the exhibition’s curator Ian Massey writes: Lancaster’s name is wedded to the mythology of the 1960s and 1970s, his story interwoven with those of some of the most renowned cultural figures of the era. Lancaster inhabited many worlds, and the extensive list of his friends and collaborators includes such luminaries as the artists Richard Hamilton, David Hockney, Jasper Johns and Andy Warhol, and the dancer and choreographer Merce Cunningham. Active for three decades from the early 1960s onwards, Lancaster worked most often in series, each group of paintings informed, conceptually and stylistically, by those that preceded them. Over the years, his work gradually changed, from the highly controlled hard-edged abstraction of his earliest work as a professional artist, to gestural paintings in which there is a constant negotiation between the abstract and the figurative. This first posthumous exhibition includes works from each of the artist’s major series of paintings. It reveals him as a significant artist of great intelligence and sensitivity. #richardhamilton #davidhockney #jasperjohns #redferngallery #andywarhol