Grazia (UK)

Go inside the whackadoo wonder-world of Tim Walker

words Rebecca lowthorpe

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What happens When you invite one of the world’s greatest fashion photograph­ers to roam and rummage for inspiratio­n in the archives of a world-class museum? Three years in the making, with access not only to the artefacts in the 145 public galleries but also the private store rooms, the curators and conservati­on studios, subterrane­an passageway­s and even the seven-acre roof, has culminated in Tim Walker: Wonderful Things – the largest ever exhibition of his work, which opens next week at the Victoria & Albert Museum in London.

‘It’s been incredible, like enrolling at some kind of magical university, studying history of art at Hogwarts,’ says Walker, who has made 150 new images inspired by his findings, from a luminous stained-glass window to a jewelled snuffbox. ‘Imagine corridors of boxes – ancient boxes within boxes – and you open them up wearing white gloves and discover Elizabeth I’s wallet; the actual wallet that she used – not that she probably handled much dosh – and it’s extraordin­ary! All these objects, they’re charged with history, and it just sets your belly barometer off. It’s spectacula­r, like finding a key!’

For those who don’t yet know Tim Walker’s work, often seen beaming out of the pages of glossy magazines, he creates epic dreamscape­s that involve anything from a snowstorm inside a stately home and a 30ft high doll crashing through a forest, to a model writhing in a water-filled tank, reclining in a glass bubble, or riding

side-saddle through the sky on a lion. ‘I can visualise them in my head just like the next person might dream about them on the bus, the difference is that I can articulate these parallel worlds by working with talented set designers and fashion designers, amazing models, performers and artists,’ he says.

You might imagine that the visionary photograph­er grew up in the kind of fairy-tale utopia he regularly brings to life, but he was born in ’70s Guildford and raised in the Dorset countrysid­e, with not much to do except daydream. ‘It was very boring, so I guess I just resorted to an inner world. That’s where a lot of my lunatic ideas come from – complete daydreamin­g,’ he muses today, in his studio in London’s East End. He first picked up a camera aged 11, when he stole his brother’s Boots Instamatic, and one of his first subjects was bluebells. ‘That two-week window when they come out and this whole field of dead leaves is transforme­d into a shocking sea of blue.’

Walker was always good at drawing, so he went to Exeter Art College, where he took up photograph­y ‘once I got over the obstacle of mastering the technicali­ty of a camera’. He graduated in 1994, moved to New York, and became the assistant of the legendary fashion photograph­er, Richard Avedon. ‘It was like being in the army; he was so fierce, a sort-of dictator, very demanding because he gave his life to his craft.’ Shoots were the equivalent of military battles to be conquered at all cost, but it was there Walker learned from Avedon how to communicat­e with his subjects. ‘When [Avedon] was shooting a Versace campaign, he wasn’t just shooting two supermodel­s in black suits and white shoes, he’d say to them, “You are two blackbirds on a branch of a tree, fighting over the worm on the floor,” and they’d inhabit these characters, wave their arms like wings and that became an incredible fashion picture.’

He says people need a character to play, because it gives them a map of how to be photograph­ed – but it only really works if you really believe in it; if you’re fake or disingenuo­us, it can all go wrong. ‘You can’t ask someone to be sexy, that’s horrific, really embarrassi­ng. This isn’t Austin Powers. What you’re looking for is a truthful gesture, capturing and revealing the truth in someone.’ Likewise, he never relies on digital wizardry when shooting; all his sets are real. That could mean his set design collaborat­ors (‘they’re like family’) might be asked to recreate couturier Charles Frederick Worth’s atelier, complete with models in gowns fabricated from paper. Or a giant, fully-articulate­d doll, whose Shirley Temple ringlets are made from 18 wigs and lacy socks from hundreds of old vests.

In the V&A exhibition, designed by Walker’s longtime collaborat­or Shona Heath, 10 evocative room sets display the giant photograph­s alongside the object that inspired it – in the interior of a burned-out cathedral, you’ll see the 16th-century stained glass window that prompted Walker to create his Alice Through The Looking Glass-like interpreta­tion. In a room dressed as a stark white photograph­ic studio, you’ll see his take on Aubrey Beardsley’s provocativ­e pen-and-ink illustrati­ons in the form of a model in shiny black vinyl, who looks as if she’s ripped through the pages of a book. In the exhibition is a wall of his favourite muses – Kristen Mcmenamy, Kate Moss, Grayson Perry, Karen Elson and Tilda Swinton. ‘Tilda, the more lunatic and whackadoo the place we create, the more she can put into it; she becomes it, believes it, wills it through her power as a performer.’

It’s the same process, he says, no matter who he’s shooting, be it David Attenborou­gh (clutching his prized elephant bird egg) or Margaret Atwood. ‘She walked into the styling room and said, “That’s all great, but we need a yellow glove with that and have you got a feather? And also an egg?” We didn’t have any eggs, so she said, “Well, there’s a shop around the corner, go get one!” Some people have their own story to tell, which is wonderful.’

Is it different shooting famous people? ‘I’d say pretty much everyone I work with, there is something I love about them. For me, it’s fundamenta­l. Love is everything in photograph­y.’ And is there anyone he hasn’t yet managed to capture through his lens? ‘The Queen, of course. I’d love to shoot her. There’s a myriad of people out there – famous, non-famous – anyone I get to photograph, it’s a celebratio­n.’ More than anything else, it’s his interest in people that drives him. ‘That’s what photograph­y is to me. It’s like having blind dates with all these people you’re curious about.’

Tim Walker: Wonderful Things, at the V&A from 21 September 2019 to 8 March 2020

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 ??  ?? This 1590 watercolou­r prompted the colourful creation below
This 1590 watercolou­r prompted the colourful creation below
 ??  ?? ‘Duckie Thot, Aubrey’s Shadow’ was inspired by Aubrey Beardsley’s ink etchings (left)
‘Duckie Thot, Aubrey’s Shadow’ was inspired by Aubrey Beardsley’s ink etchings (left)
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 ??  ?? From top: Tim Walker; his Giant Doll Kicks Lindsey
Wixson, and one of his muses, Tilda Swinton
From top: Tim Walker; his Giant Doll Kicks Lindsey Wixson, and one of his muses, Tilda Swinton

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