Top instagram2xnew Top subscribe2xnew Subscribe Login

Jane Bown: Play Shadow

Runs between Saturday 1st Nov and Sunday 19th Apr
Sat 10:00-17:00
Sun 11:00-16:00
Wed 10:00-17:00
Thu 10:00-17:00
Fri 10:00-17:00  ·  Newlands House Gallery, Petworth
2017799 1024xdne

Jane Bown: Play Shadow offers an intimate portrait of one of Britains most revered photographers, Jane Bown (19252014), whose quietly powerful black-and-white portraits have become iconic within the canon of twentieth-century photography. The exhibition expands beyond the familiar public image of Bowns work to reveal the deeply personal vision and consistent philosophy that guided her practice: a belief in simplicity, natural light, and the decisive presence of a good face.

Bowns mastery lay in her ability to work quickly, intuitively, and with minimal equipment, most famously, her Olympus OM-1 and either an 85mm for close up portraits or a 55mm lens when she wanted context for the sitter. Her reliance on natural light, often soft and north-facing, created striking chiaroscuro effects that gave her portraits psychological depth and subtle drama. Play Shadowgestures both to the technical precision with which Bown orchestrated light and to the emotional resonance and mystery she was able to draw out of her subjects, often within moments of meeting them.

Recognised for photographing cultural icons from Samuel Beckett to Queen Elizabeth II, Bown was nonetheless uninterested in celebrity. Her images stripped away artifice, offering instead an honest, often vulnerable glimpse into the human behind the persona. A photograph of Anthony Blunt, taken before the public revelation of his espionage, has since been seen as eerily prescient, light and shadow working not just as aesthetic choices but as metaphors for truth and concealment.

Bown also photographed some of the most influential artists of the twentieth century, including Henry Moore, Paula Rego, David Hockney, and Francis Bacon. This exhibition will feature not only Bowns portraits of these figures but also selected works by the artists themselves, creating a dynamic conversation between sitter and maker, photograph and artwork.

Website Tickets

© 2026 Chichester Living powered by Rapport