With The Beatles: Inside Beatlemania

We were in the city of Sydney last week and dropped by our fave discount bookshop to see if there was any Beatle treasure lurking there. And there was. Stacked on one table where multiple copies of this very beautifully produced large-format hardback:01_Beatles

The book’s full title is LIFE With The Beatles: Inside Beatlemania, and it features hundreds of never-before-seen and rare photographs by Robert Whitaker, who was hired by the Beatles’ manager Brian Epstein to document what was happening to the band for two crazy years between 1964 and 1966.

Typical of LIFE magazine, the book has a wealth of great and unusual images:09_Beatles04_Beatles

A Google search revealed a website for a company called Li’l Robin, the people who actually worked on the design and layout of the book. Their site has more images from inside. It’s very much worth a look. Li’l Robin has also produced a digital version of this book:03_Beatles_iPad-566x379Nice. Amazon has a “Look Inside” if you would like a further peek at the contents.

A Unique Beatles Painting Up for Auction

A unique and rarely-seen painting created by all four Beatles is about to go up for auction in the US.

The Atlantic” Online is reporting:  “While on near lockdown at the Tokyo Hilton in 1966, John, Paul, George, and Ringo painted “Images of a Woman“. The Fab Four were in Japan to play three shows at the famed sumo-wrestling venue Budokan. But local authorities were so overwhelmed by Beatlemania that the Englishmen had to hole up in their hotel whenever they weren’t performing.

According to photographer Robert Whitaker, who was chronicling the tour, Brian Epstein brought the guys a bunch of art supplies to help pass the time. Then Epstein set a large canvas on a table and placed a lamp in the middle. Each member of the group set to work painting a corner—comic strippy for Ringo, psychedelic for John. Whitaker later commented that he “never saw them calmer, more contented than at this time… They’d stop, go and do a concert, and then it was ‘Let’s go back to the picture!'” It was an almost Zen-like respite during one of the most electric world tours in music history.

Before leaving Japan the Beatles signed their names within the blank circle where the lamp had stood. It’s one of the few, if not the only, painting in the world that they made together, and allegedly the only one signed by them all. The boys gave the painting to Tetsusaburo Shimoyama, an entertainment industry executive and chairman of the Beatles fan club in Tokyo. After Shimoyama died, his wife opened a memorabilia shop specializing in Beatles collectables, and she auctioned off “Images of a Woman” in 1989. And then it was gone.”:

More from “The Atlantic”:   Takao Nishino was only 16 when the Beatles performed at Budokan…..Nishino went on to become the owner of a thriving record-store business, and in 1989 he paid about $280,000 (roughly $500,000 today) for “Images of a Woman.” It was a large sum, but Nishino says it wasn’t a worrisome outlay—not enough to bother telling his wife, anyway. “I had a lot of money,” he says, laughing. “It was the bubble.”

Besides, the painting was worth it: “I’d never seen anything like it, especially all those psychedelic colors.” He believes it reveals an uncanny unity: a cohesive image composed by four individuals. “In that sense,” he says, “I suppose it beats ‘A Day in the Life’ as a truly collaborative work.” His favorite part? “Ringo’s corner is just beautiful. George’s is weird. I can’t really understand it.”

For three years, “Images of a Woman” hung on the wall in Nishino’s living room. But after acquiring a number of large Warhol lithographs, there just wasn’t enough wall space for everything. “When I bought it, I had also noticed that it was not well kept,” Nishino says. “Over the long term, the heat and humidity of Japan’s summer was going to be detrimental, so I bought this $5,000 humidity-controlled frame.” Noticing that the family dog, Taro, often escaped the heat by lying under the bed, he figured that would be a good place to store the boxed-up painting.

Over the years, Nishino would lend it out now and then to a Japanese television station for a story, but he would always do so under a pseudonym. “I never intended to keep it such a secret, but I was worried about security,” he says. In 2002, he tried to sell it on eBay, but the deal fell through when it turned out that the buyer was using a stolen ID.

Now, 50 years after the band was first formed, Nishino is parting with the painting for real at a September 14 auction. “Originally, I thought it might be best kept as a piece of Japan’s cultural heritage; it has never left Japanese soil in 46 years. But the Beatles phenomenon was and remains a global one,” he says, so it’s up to fans—and the marketplace—to determine where it ends up next.” (ends)

The thing this story reminds me of is the Robert Whitaker rear-cover image of this album, the Beatles 1966 best-of “A Collection of Beatles Oldies….But Goldies!“:

Here’s a nice close-up:

This photo is clearly the band holed-up in that Japanese hotel room. The most comprehensive coverage of the “Images of A Woman” story (and an accompanying set of amazing photographs of the band actually working on the painting) is at the Sing My Heart blogspot:

The painting, along with other Beatles memorabilia, is up for auction on September 14th through Philip Weiss Auctions in New York. The auction site has many more great photographs.