Bowie by O’Neill

‘I was lucky enough to receive the call to photograph David Bowie. And I was smart enough to know to say yes.’ – Terry O’Neill Iconic Images, along with media and publishing specialists Red Engine, announce the publication of BOWIE BY O’NEILL, a unique 500-copy limited edition luxury publication of Terry O’Neill’s photography archive of … Read the full article

Limited-Edition Luxury

This collection of some of jazz’s most seminal musicians photographed by legendary photographer Ted Williams is assembled here in a limited-edition luxury box. The set includes portraits of Miles Davis, Duke Ellington, Dizzy Gillespie, Louis Armstrong, Stan Getz, Sonny Rollins, Sarah Vaughan, Art Farmer & Benny Golson of the Jazztet, Thelonius Monk and a glorious … Read the full article

Muhammad Ali (1942-2016)

Muhammad Ali, Dublin, 1972 As Terry O’Neill remembers: It was the start of summer 1972 and Muhammad Ali was in Dublin training for a fight against Alvin Lewis. I flew over to take photographs and interview him for the Daily Express. I was doing some interviews at the time for the papers and they ran … Read the full article

Terry O’Neill: Icons

On display at AMO Arena Museo Opera in Verona, more than 60 of the most famous works by the legendary British photographer Terry O’Neill, who from the early ‘60s has dedicated his career to capturing the most famous personalities of his time with his camera transforming them in to icons. The exhibition, curated by Cristina … Read the full article

Steve Miller to be inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame

Steve Miller was a mainstay of the San Francisco music scene that upended American culture in the late 60s. Miller perfected a psychedelic blues sound that drew on the deepest sources of American roots music and simultaneously articulated a compelling vision of what music – and, indeed, society – could be in the years to come.

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Breaking Stones 1963 – 1965: A Band on the Brink of Superstardom.

This evocative new book captures the youth, the times and the spirit of The Rolling Stones’ formative early years, 1963-1965. Terry O’Neill, aged just 25, had a few years’ experience photographing musicians and knew that this group had the same magic as another British phenomenon that just recently started to chart, The Beatles.

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