Snow and frigid temperatures didn't stop
thousands of screaming teenagers from crowding into the Washington
Coliseum in the nation's capital for the Beatles first live concert on
American soil.
And not having a flash didn't stop photographer Mike Mitchell, then
just 18 years old, from using his unrestricted access to document that
historic February night in 1964 using only the dim light in the arena.
Ghostly shadows and streams of light filled some negatives.
With the help of modern technology and close to 1,000 hours in front of
the computer screen, Mitchell was able to peel back decades of grunge
and transform those old negatives into a rare, artful look at one of pop
culture's defining moments.
Mitchell's portraits of the Beatles are the centerpiece of a
monthlong exhibition at the David Anthony Fine Art gallery in Taos – the
first time the prints have been exhibited since being unveiled in 2011
at a Christie's auction in New York City. The gallery started hanging
the first of the framed prints a week ago in preparation for Friday's
opening.
"Just amazing," gallery owner David Mapes said as he looked around
the room at the large black and white prints and wondered aloud what it
must have been like to be in Mitchell's shoes that night.
Mapes pointed to a photograph of the four band members, their backs
to the camera with a thin ribbon of light outlining their silhouettes.
When he first saw it, he said he teared up. He knew he had to find a way
to share it with others.
"It brought back memories of that time. I was a teenager and it was
so much about love and everything was optimistic feeling," he said.
It didn't take long from the time the Beatles released their debut
album in 1963 to go from a little British bar band to an international
sensation. The Beatles' reach eventually stretched beyond music and
haircuts to religion and politics.
"The Beatles came to represent some of the yearnings for peace and
hope and equality and a larger social justice. In the United States and
throughout the world, their personalities became as important as the
music," said Norman Markowitz, a history professor at Rutgers
University.
For
Paul Vance, who teaches a class on the Beatles at Winona State
University in Minnesota, the band was the reason he pursued music. He
was 11 years old when the Beatles first came to the U.S.
The Beatles had good timing, he said, having arrived at a time when
America was still heartbroken over the assassination of then-President
John F. Kennedy and young people were looking for meaning in their
lives.
"Much has been said and written about it," Vance said of the Beatles'
influence. "It's a very significant point that the world after the
Beatles was a radically different place than the world before the
Beatles, and they did influence and change so many aspects of not just
American life, but life everywhere."
Mitchell can't predict what role his photographs will play as
historians and music fans continue to examine the evolution of American
pop culture. Still, those moments captured by his camera that February
night tell a grainy story of four young men who seemed to be having the
time of their lives.
Mitchell remembers how hot it was inside the coliseum. The crowd was
deafening but the resonating bass beats were unmistakable. He said the
Beatles were "on fire" that night.
"They were really juiced. It was obvious at the time that they were
really, really, really into it and I think the pictures really benefit
from that," he said.
Mitchell said his goal was simple. He wanted to make great portraits
of the Beatles while discovering a little more about who they really
were.
With no flash, he was forced to wait for the perfect time to snap
that shutter. His photographs immortalized the important details of the
moment in a bath of light while the rest faded into darkness. It was the
concert that marked the beginning of his fascination with light.
"I think that was the first time in my life that I had to really look
more deeply at light and take my queues from what the light was doing,"
he said. "I learned to sort of feel from the light."
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