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Cambridge Jones is a British celebrity portrait photographer from Wales. His subjects, in a series of books and exhibitions, include hundreds of well-known actors and musicians.

Cambridge Jones
Born
Oxford, U.K.
EducationChrist Church, Oxford University
OccupationPhotographer
Websitecambridgejones.com

Early life and education

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Jones was adopted at the age of two.[1] He was obsessed with photography from the age of 14, trying to convince famous people to pose for him.[2]

He attended Christ Church college at Oxford University, from 1985[3] to 1988, where he earned a degree in politics, philosophy and economics (PPE).[2]

Early jobs

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Cambridge moved to London, starting work in market research. He established his own company whose speciality was TV focus groups. After this he set up two bars in Soho. After 10 years in London he sold up and moved to a Greek village with his family for a while.[2]

Career

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His first exhibition Face The Music was held in 2004 at The Proud Galleries in London, featured pictures of 100 celebrities who chose and commented on a favourite piece of music which visitors could listen to on a pair of headphones.[2][4]

In 2004 he was commissioned to create a body of work published as a book, Off Stage: 100 Portraits Celebrating the RADA Centenary, to celebrate 100 years of RADA (Royal Academy of Dramatic Art). The photographs include John Hurt, Alan Rickman, Sheila Hancock, Edward Woodward, Sir Ian Holm, Robert Lindsay, Joan Collins, Tom Courtenay, Warren Mitchell, Imelda Staunton, June Whitfield, Richard Briers, Jane Horrocks, Glenda Jackson, Juliet Stevenson, Jonathan Pryce, Kenneth Branagh, Ioan Gruffud, Susannah York, Timothy Spall, Liza Tarbuck, and Michael Kitchen.[5][6]

In 2014, for the exhibition 26 Characters at The Story Museum (at the Story Museum in Oxford), Cambridge photographed 26 authors (one for each letter of the alphabet), including Philip Pullmann, dressed as their favourite book characters. He also interviewed them.[7][8]

In 2007 The Prince's Trust commissioned a work which was published as Inspired By Music in 2009, which was sponsored by Starbucks and on sale in every Starbucks coffee store.[2] It features personal reflections by 36 celebrities as well as four ordinary people helped by The Prince's Trust,[9] about musical lyrics that inspired them. Ozzy Osbourne, Take That members,[2][10] Benedict Cumberbatch, and Damian Lewis are among those featured in the book. There is a foreword was written by Prince Charles and an introduction by Phil Collins,[11] and it contains over 80 photos by Jones.[9]

In 2008 he photographed a number of children for Barnardo's child adoption agency, in an exhibition called "Home Time", aimed at helping to find homes for hundreds of children waiting for adoption. The exhibition was held at the Getty Images Gallery in London.[1]

In 2010 he was commissioned by then Mayor of London Boris Johnson to create an exhibition of celebrity photographs which were intended to motivate Londoners to participate in a new climate change initiative led by him. Featured in the exhibition were Vivienne Westwood, Richard E Grant, Bear Grylls, Rory Bremner, Laura Bailey, Michael Sheen, Adrian Lester, Mariella Frostrup, Jane Horrocks, Emma Thompson, Rowan Williams, and Alan Titchmarsh.[12]

Other notable commissions include those from Nelson Mandela, and his alma mater Christ Church, Oxford.[13][3] Other people photographed by Jones include South African anti-apartheid campaigners Bishop Tutu[14] and Helen Suzman.[15]

Recognition

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His work has been likened to that of famous American portrait photographer Annie Leibovitz.[16][17]

In 2014 he was selected as the BBC's artist in residence and was invited by the BBC to talk on several shows.[8]

Exhibitions

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Talking Pictures

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Talking Pictures toured the world from 2010. It featured famous people of Welsh descent, including Anthony Hopkins, Matthew Rhys, Michael Sheen, Sian Phillips, Eddie Izzard, Rhys Ifans, Jonathan Pryce, Terry Jones, Damian Lewis, Helen McCrory, Robert Plant, Owen Sheers, Bonnie Tyler, Shirley Bassey, Emma Griffiths, David Gray, and Bryn Terfel.[17] The exhibition locations included the Wales Millennium Centre in Cardiff;[18] Canary Wharf lobby, London (16 September-1 October 2010);[19] New York Public Library for the Performing Arts in the Lincoln Center (23 September – 27 November 2010); Chateau Marmont (early 2011); and the Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery (March 2011).[17][16][20] It was also organised by the Welsh Assembly Government to show at the British Embassy in Washington, DC; in Doha, Qatar; the British Consulate in New York; and at the Contemporary Art Gallery in Chicago.[citation needed] The exhibition was mounted at Canolfan Y Celfyddydau in Aberystwyth from 2 February 2013 to 13 March 2013 by the Welsh Assembly.[21]

Other exhibitions

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His work has been exhibited in galleries around the world, including:

  • London - The Proud Galleries (Face The Music, 2004) [4]
  • Bologna, Italy – Portraits of Jack White and The White Stripes[22][8]
  • London – The Mall Galleries ‘Face Time’ with The Art Room 2014 (Bill Nighy)[23]
  • London – Mayor of London Buildings (Environmental Portraits for Boris Johnson)[24]
  • Oxford – 26 Characters at The Story Museum (2014)[25][7][8]
  • London – BAFTA portraits (Portraits from the RADA Centenary Collection used in BAFTA Awards)
  • Moscow – Red Square State Museum (House of Photography) (Royal Power, Politics & Hollywood by Cambridge Jones)[26]
  • London – Saatchi Gallery (Katherine Jenkins Portrait for Great Ormond Street) (Organised by GOSH)
  • London – Getty Images Gallery (The RADA Centenary Portraits)[27]
  • Brighton – Persona at the Theatre Royal (Persona Portraits)[28]
  • Nashville – Country Music Hall of Fame (Country Couture Exhibition from The Manuel Series)[29]
  • Nashville – Tinney Contemporary Gallery (The Image Makers : Manuel & Cambridge)[30]

Books

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  • Off Stage: 100 Portraits Celebrating the RADA Centenary, 2005 (ISBN 095468432X) with a foreword by Sir Richard Attenborough[5]
  • Christ Church – A Portrait of The House, 2007 (ISBN 1903942462)
  • Inspired By Music (for the Prince's Trust), 2009 (ISBN 1907149015)
  • Face The Music Printed by The Proud Gallery as a one-off catalogue
  • 26 Characters (ISBN 978-0-9569918-1-2)
  • Super Power Agency (ISBN 9 781838 256807)
  • Fashion & Style in Photography Moscow House of Photography 2011 (ISBN 978-5-93977-062-0)
  • Cambridge Jones Showreel[31]
  • A Wider Sky (2005): Collaboration with composer Adrian Munsey & Cambridge Jones using photography & music[citation needed]

References

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  1. ^ a b "Photographs for Charity by Cambridge Jones at Getty Images Gallery in London". Artdaily. Retrieved 19 May 2023.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Hartford, Maggie (16 July 2009). "Inspired by music". Oxford Mail. Retrieved 20 May 2023.
  3. ^ a b "Editorial (etc.)" (PDF). Christ Church Matters (18). Oxford University. 2006. Michaelmas Term 2006... In our Portrait, old member articles have been added to commissioned pieces by Christ Church experts in specific areas and brought alive by fascinating illustrations, including specially commissioned photography by Cambridge Jones (1985), to make a book that we hope you will treasure.
  4. ^ a b "Observer Music Monthly: Sound in vision: Does the Prime Minister's favourite song involve a plea to God for mercy?". The Observer. 15 August 2004. ProQuest 250497563.
  5. ^ a b "Off Stage: 100 Portraits Celebrating the RADA Centenary, by Cambridge Jones [blurb]". LensCulture. Retrieved 19 May 2023. With a foreword by Lord Attenborough, the book includes an introduction by the Observer writer Miranda Sawyer, as well as interviews with all the actors.
  6. ^ Jones, Cambridge (2005). Off stage : 100 portraits celebrating the RADA centenary. Retrieved 19 May 2023 – via Internet Archive.
  7. ^ a b Jones, Cambridge (6 March 2014). "Character reference - Interview with photographer Cambridge Jones". Oxford Mail (Interview). Interviewed by MacAlister, Katherine. Retrieved 19 May 2023.
  8. ^ a b c d BBC Radio 2 1 of 3 on YouTube 23 June 2014. "Cambridge Jones as BBC Radio2 Artist In Residence (1 of 3 progs) talking about his latest book & 3 current exhibitions: The Story Museum in Oxford, The Art Room in The Mall Galleries, London, and Jack White exhibition in Bologna, Italy."
  9. ^ a b Collins, Phil; Charles, Prince; Jones, Cambridge (26 November 2009). "Inspired by Music". Blurb. Retrieved 20 May 2023.
  10. ^ Jones, Cambridge; Prince's Trust (2009). Inspired by Music. Shoehorn. ISBN 978-1-907149-01-6. Retrieved 20 May 2023.
  11. ^ "Inspired by Music". Damian Lewis. 1 July 2009. Retrieved 20 May 2023.
  12. ^ London SE1 website team (9 February 2010). "Boris Johnson opens climate change City Hall photo exhibition". London SE1. Retrieved 20 May 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  13. ^ "Portfolios". Cambridge Jones Photography. Retrieved 20 May 2023.
  14. ^ Gelder, Sarah van (11 January 2022). "Desmond Tutu and the Power of Apology". YES! Magazine. Retrieved 20 May 2023.
  15. ^ Tran, Mark (1 January 2009). "Helen Suzman, South African anti-apartheid campaigner, dies at 91". The Guardian. Retrieved 20 May 2023.
  16. ^ a b Jones, Cambridge. "Celebrity Portraits From Britain's Answer to Annie Leibovitz on Exhibit at the Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery, Barnsdall Art Park March 3 - April 24, 2011". PR Newswire.
  17. ^ a b c Blank, Matthew (22 September 2010). "Photo call: Jonathan Pryce, Michael Sheen, Eddie Izzard, Anthony Hopkins Featured in Cambridge Jones Photo Exhibit in NYC". Playbill. Retrieved 19 May 2023. Cambridge Jones' "Talking Pictures" appears at The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts through Nov. 27. The exhibit will launch in early 2011 at the Chateau Marmont before moving to The Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery March 3.
  18. ^ "Talking Pictures by Cambridge Jones". BBC Wales.
  19. ^ "Cambridge Jones: Talking Pictures". New Exhibitions. 1 October 2010. Retrieved 19 May 2023.
  20. ^ "Wales is where the heart is - Soundcheck". WNYC Studios. 20 September 2010. Retrieved 17 May 2023. Talking Pictures: Portraits, by Cambridge Jones, opens at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, Dorothy and Lewis B. Cullman Center, Plaza LeveOLobby at Lincoln Center on Thursday, September 23
  21. ^ "Cambridge Jones: Talking Pictures". Aberystwyth Arts Centre.
  22. ^ "Jack White / White Stripes: American Roots". Arte.
  23. ^ "Face Time". Meer. 6 June 2014.
  24. ^ London SE1 website team (9 February 2010). "Boris Johnson opens climate change City Hall photo exhibition". London SE1. Retrieved 17 May 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  25. ^ "Authors dress up as their favourite characters". BBC. 29 June 2014.
  26. ^ "Fashion and Style in Photography Festival Kicks off in Moscow". Haute Living. 16 March 2011.
  27. ^ "Royal Academy Of Dramatic Art Centenary Portraits Photos and Premium High Res Pictures – Getty Images". www.gettyimages.co.uk.
  28. ^ "PHILIPPA STANTON – 64 SANDGATE". Archived from the original on 8 May 2023.
  29. ^ Sound, That Nashville (31 March 2009). "That Nashville Sound: Country Music Hall Of Fame Readies New Exhibit".
  30. ^ Hines, Emily Bartlett (30 October 2008). "Cambridge Jones' The Image Makers at Tinney Contemporary". Nashville Scene.
  31. ^ Cambridge Jones – Show reel
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