“An image can capture more than a moment, but a feeling and an emotion. Harnessing the power of immortality through a lens. The image and woman you see here is...
“An image can capture more than a moment, but a feeling and an emotion. Harnessing the power of immortality through a lens. The image and woman you see here is not the same as the woman or the image she portrays today, and yet her image exists forever - a femme fatale. Both a haunting for herself and a shrine for who she is remembered as. This image itself replicated over and over, evolving, and ever changing. Her image massively reproduced, a by-product of society for society” - Russell Young. “They may call me a sinner, but I am at peace with myself” - Brigitte Bardot. O’Neill captured this image of Bardot in 1971 in Spain while shooting on the set of the Western Comedy The Legend of Frenchie King, directed by Christian-Jaque. The shot, depicting a windswept Bardot with a cigar hanging loosely from her parted lips, is considered to be one of O’Neill’s most iconic photographs; and is part of the National Portrait Gallery’s permanent collection in London. A result of the last frame O’Neill had left on set, the image’s composition culminated in a spontaneous moment of energy. ‘I noticed that when the wind gusted there was the potential for a great picture. When the time came, I only had one frame left – one shot at it. But suddenly the wind swept her hair across her face, and it was a knock-out’ -O’Neill. However, it is the close-up shot of Bardot that remains ingrained in the public’s memory. Bardot’s strands of hair partially obscuring her eyes; paired with the monochrome palette emphasizing the tones and shadows of her delicate face propel her portrait into a quintessential O’Neill image.