What is it like to be a Rothschild?
The iconic and infamous cover the walls at the Brooklyn Museum’s fine exhibition (on view till January 31, 2010), “Who Shot Rock & Roll.” Yes you will see many old favorites, like John Lennon wearing a New York City sleeveless tee in Bob Gruen’s contact sheet from the familiar 1974 shoot. You will see him again in Richard Avedon’s 1967 formal portraits of the Beatles, their mop hair newly coiffed. And again in Allan Tannenbaum’s shot of John and Yoko in bed, NYC, 1980 just two weeks before he died. The text explains that Lennon liked Tannenbaum’s work: “You really capture Yoko’s beauty.” And that sums up the essence of this show’s raison d’etre as curated by Gail Buckland who also edited the excellent catalogue, to focus on the photographers, how the subject inspired them and the photographic arts . What fascinates is remembering the B-52’s as in George DuBose’s 1978 photograph, or Ike and Tina in Memphis in 1962, as in Ernest C. Withers’ photo that shows Ike’s eagle eye trained on her