Willie Christie

BIOGRAPHY

Willie Christie Biography

Willie Christie was born a while ago. Having left school aged 17, he took a varied route -  Office Clerk in Australia, being arrested at gunpoint in Harlem in 1967, working on Burton & Taylor's yacht Kalizma,  music designer for an early St Laurent Couture show in London and auditioning for the great Fellini ("He is beautiful but not with enough experience") - to his career as a photographer. David Anthony gave him his first job as an assistant and he got the bug which was then embedded by working for the great Clive Arrowsmith.

In 1971 he took the leap from assistant to photographer and a commission from Over 21 Magazine in 1973 opened the doors to a full time career.

During the 70s and early 80s he worked extensively as a photographer with British Vogue, which included working closely with Grace Coddington who had spotted his talent and the late Liz Tilberis. He went on to shoot 12 Vogue covers and many inside spreads with them. His portfolio includes award winning advertising campaigns (L'Oreal and Yves St Laurent), fashion and portrait work for international icons (Cary Grant, Grace Jones, Douglas Fairbanks Jnr, Sir John Mills, Catherine Deneuve...)  and Rock 'n' Roll album covers and portraits (Rolling Stones, Pink Floyd, David Bowie, Bryan Ferry, Lou Reed...).

Willie Christie's work has been showcased in Vision Gallery (Arizona), the Little Black Gallery, selected for the RA's Summer Exhibition 2011 and his Mick Jagger portrait of 1969 was selected for the international tour of Les Recontres D'Arles 2010 exhibition (click to see the guardian vodcast). This exhibition moved to the Da Vinci Museum, Tokyo, May 31st to July 29th, 2013.  He is work is featured in a wide selection of books including; People in Vogue by Robin Derrick & Robin Muir, Wonderful Today by Pattie Boyd, Inside Out: A Personal History of Pink Floyd by Nick Mason and 'A Memoir' by Grace Coddington.

The lure of film pulled him away from photographs in 1982, and he subsequently moved into the realm of writing and directing commercials and music videos, such as Pink Floyd's 'Final Cut' and the first cinema commercial for Medway shoes. Many of his advertisements went on to win awards including Creative Circle, Lion and Clio amongstothers.

In 1998 he adapted and filmed The Whisper, a short story by Anton Chekhov starring Michael Gough, Jamie Glover and fourteen year old Emma Pierson which made it to the BAFTA short list. Other projects have included directing a limited run of Siren by David Williamson at London's Grace Theatre in 2000 .

The launch of Willie’s Limited Edition Collection in 2011 marked the first time the photographer has delved into his personal archives to showcase work that has not been displayed for over three decades. Following a successful pop up show at The Club at The Ivy in September 2011, the collection went on show at The Century Club (in Soho) followed by'Eight' in London's City.

In December, 2011 he held a one-night show in aid of ‘Facing the World’ World’, hasheld several other Private Views at ‘Sophie Birdwood’ and in 2013 hedesigned a BT ArtBox in aid of ChildLine. The box was displayed in a window of Harvey Nichols and stood outside Vogue House for four weeks before being sold to a private buyer.

Two of Willie's Rolling Stones images can be seen in Taschen's recently published & definitive anthology of the Rolling Stones and were both exhibited, alongside David Bailey and others, in their gallery exhibition in Beverly Hills.