ANTON CORBIJN

'Anton Corbijn' (pronounced ) (born May 20, 1955) is a photographer from Strijen in the Netherlands. He is also well known for directing music videos, including Depeche Mode's "Personal Jesus" (1989) and Nirvana's "Heart-Shaped Box" (1993).
He is widely acknowledged by the music industry, mainly for being the creative director of the visual output of prominent bands like Depeche Mode and U2, having handled the principal promotion and sleeve photography for both for more than a decade.

Contents
Career
References
Style
Entertainers Corbijn has photographed
Music video filmography
Books by Corbijn
External links

Career


Corbijn began taking photographs during a live concert in 1972. In 1979 he moved to London, England and became a regular photographer for the New Musical Express. His first assignment was Bill Haley, but he became best known for his work with such Post-Punk bands as Joy Division and Public Image Ltd. Later, he began to divide his time between America and England, shooting editorially for Spin, Details, Vogue, and Rolling Stone Magazine.
Corbijn decided to move into directing music videos, more or less accidentally. Palais Schaumburg asked him to do one, which he reluctantly accepted. After seeing ''Video'', Propaganda insisted that Corbijn would direct ''Dr. Mabuse''. After that, David Sylvian, Echo & The Bunnymen and Golden Earring asked for his services. Also the renowned industrial EBM act Front 242 was presented Corbijn's artwork and accepted shooting a video with him, it resulted in a very strange version of "Headhunter" due to Corbijn's rather limited knowledge of the English language at the time[1]. Nevertheless a milestone in Corbijn's career.
In 1994, after directing various music videos, Corbijn directed a short film about Captain Beefheart for the BBC called "Some Yoyo Stuff".
In 2005, Palm Pictures released a DVD collection of Corbijn's music video output as part of the Director's Label series. As well as a 56-page booklet, the DVD also includes outtakes, shorts and documentaries as well as commentaries on various videos from the artists themselves.
On 17 May 2007 Corbijn's first feature film ''Control'' about the life of Joy Division frontman Ian Curtis premiered to rave reviews Cannes Film Festival. [2] The film is based on Deborah Curtis's book ''Touching From A Distance'' about her late husband and the new biography ''Torn Apart'' by Lindsay Reade (Tony Wilson's ex-wife) and Mick Middles. Although shown outside the Palme d'Or competition, Control was the big winner of the Director's Fortnight winning the CICAE Art & Essai prize for best film, the "Regards Jeunes" Prize award for best first or second directed feature film and the Europa Cinemas Label prize for best European film in the sidebar.[3]

References


1. An egg or a head ? Anton Corbijn did not really know.
2. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/6667197.stm
3. http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/news/e3ia1d853f2aa37e6e73370f4cac2254874

Style


Corbijn tends to eschew traditional glamour photography, instead favoring a rawer look, often in black-and-white. His subjects appear to be calm and far removed from everyday life. His photographs show raw emotion. His patented and influential style of black and white imagery with stark contrasts on grainy film (sometimes referred to as "overcooked") has been imitated and copied in such extent that it has become a rock cliché and a vital part of the visual language in the 1990s.

Entertainers Corbijn has photographed




Adam Ant

Aimee Mann

Andrea Corr

Annie Lennox

Anthony Kiedis

The Arcade Fire

Arctic Monkeys

Bauhaus

Beck

Bee Gees

Billy Idol

Björk

Bob Dylan

Bono

Boy George

Brian Eno

Brainstorm

Bruce Cockburn

Bruce Springsteen

Bryan Ferry

Cabaret Voltaire (band)

Cameron Diaz

Captain Beefheart

Christy Turlington

Clint Eastwood

Coldplay

The Cramps

Danny DeVito

David Bowie

David Byrne

David Gahan

David Grohl

Debbie Harry

Dennis Hopper

Depeche Mode

Dwight Yoakam

Eagle-Eye Cherry

Easy-E

Echo & The Bunnymen

Elvis Costello

Foo Fighters

Frank Sinatra

Frank Tovey

Frankie Goes to Hollywood

Front 242

Glenn Danzig

Glenn Close

Grace Jones

Helena Christensen

Henry Rollins

Herbert Grönemeyer

Herman Brood


Ian Curtis

Ian McCulloch

Iggy Pop

The Immaculate Consumptive

Isabella Rossellini

Isaac Hayes

James Brown

Jeff Buckley

Jerry Lee Lewis

Jeffrey Lee Pierce of The Gun Club

Jimmy Page

Jodie Foster

John Lee Hooker

Johnny Cash

Johnny Depp

Johnny Rotten

Jon Bon Jovi

Joseph Arthur

Joy Division

Julian Cope

Lou Reed

Luciano Pavarotti

Kate Bush

Keith Richards

Kraftwerk

Kurt Cobain

Kylie Minogue

LL Cool J

Lene Marlin

Lenny Kravitz

Madness

Mansun

Massive Attack

Marianne Faithfull

Martin Gore

Martin Scorsese

Metallica

Michael Franti

Michael Schumacher

Michael Stipe

Mick Jagger

Miles Davis

Morrissey

Naomi Campbell

Neil Young

Nick Cave

Nicolas Cage

Nirvana

P. J. Harvey


Palais Schaumburg

Paul Oakenfold

Per Gessle

Pet Shop Boys

Pete Townsend

Peter Gabriel

Peter Hammill

Peter Murphy

Propaganda

Quentin Tarantino

R.E.M.

Robert Deniro

Robert Plant

Rolling Stones

Roy Orbison

Rutger Hauer

Saybia

Sean Penn

Simple Minds

Sinéad O'Connor

Siouxsie Sioux

Skin

Skunk Anansie

Son of a Plumber

Sophie Zelmani

Southern Death Cult

Steely Dan

Stephen Dorff

Steven Spielberg

Stevie Wonder

Sting

Takeshi Kitano

The Killers

Therapy?

Travis

Trent Reznor

Tom Jones

Tom Waits

Tricky

U2

Van Morrison

Vanessa Paradis

Wilco

Willem Dafoe

William Gibson

William S. Burroughs

Xmal Deutschland

Zucchero

ZZ Top

Music video filmography



★ "Hockey," Palais Schaumburg (1983)

★ "Beat Box," Art of Noise (1984)

★ "Dr. Mabuse," Propaganda (1984)

★ "Red Guitar," David Sylvian (1984)

★ "Seven Seas," Echo & the Bunnymen (1984)

★ "The Ink in the Well," David Sylvian (1984)

★ "Pride (In the Name of Love)" (third version), U2 (1984)

★ "Bring on the Dancing Horses," Echo & the Bunnymen (1985)

★ "Quiet Eyes," Golden Earring (1986)

★ "A Question of Time," Depeche Mode (1986)

★ "Bedbugs and Ballyhoo," Echo & the Bunnymen (1987)

★ "Strangelove," Depeche Mode (1987)

★ "Pimpf," Depeche Mode (1987)

★ "The Game," Echo & the Bunnymen (1987)

★ "Never Let Me Down Again," Depeche Mode (1987)

★ "Lips Like Sugar" (first version), Echo & the Bunnymen (1987)

★ "Behind the Wheel," Depeche Mode (1987)

★ "Welcome to Paradise," Front 242

★ "My Secret Place," Joni Mitchell with Peter Gabriel (1988)

★ "Blueprint," Rainbirds (1988)

★ "Atmosphere," Joy Division (1988)

★ "Headhunter," Front 242 (1988)

★ "Faith and Healing," Ian McCulloch (1989)

★ "Sea of Time," Rainbirds (1989)

★ "White City of Light," Rainbirds (1989)

★ "Personal Jesus," Depeche Mode (1989)

★ "Killer Wolf," Danzig (1990)

★ "Enjoy the Silence" (first version), Depeche Mode (1990)

★ "Policy of Truth," Depeche Mode (1990)

★ "World in My Eyes," Depeche Mode (1990)

★ "May This Be Your Last Sorrow," Banderas (1990)

★ "Clean," Depeche Mode (1991)

★ "Marie," Herbert Grönemeyer (1991)

★ "Two Faces," Rainbirds (1991)

★ "Tragedy (For You)," Front 242 (1991)

★ "Halo," Depeche Mode (1991)

★ "Front By Front," Front 242 (1992)

★ "Hail Hail Rock 'n' Roll," Garland Jeffreys (1992)

★ "Lover Lover Lover," Ian McCulloch (1992)

★ "One" (original version), U2 (1992)

★ "Straight To You," Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds (1992)

★ "Dirty Black Summer," Danzig (1992)

★ "Do I Have to Say the Words?", Bryan Adams (1992)

★ "I Feel You," Depeche Mode (1993)

★ "Walking In My Shoes," Depeche Mode (1993)

★ "Condemnation" (first version), Depeche Mode (1993)

★ "Heart-Shaped Box," Nirvana (1993), winner MTV Video Music Award for Best Alternative Video

★ "Delia's Gone," Johnny Cash (1994)

★ "Mockingbirds," Grant Lee Buffalo (1994)

★ "In Your Room," Depeche Mode (1994)

★ "Liar," Henry Rollins (1994)

★ "Love & Tears," Naomi Campbell (1994)

★ "Have You Ever Really Loved A Woman?", Bryan Adams (1995)

★ "My Friends (song) (first version)," Red Hot Chili Peppers (1995)

★ "Hero of the Day," Metallica (1996)

★ "Mama Said," Metallica (1996)

★ "Barrel of a Gun," Depeche Mode (1997)

★ "It's No Good," Depeche Mode (1997)

★ "Useless," Depeche Mode (1997)

★ "Please" (first version), U2 (1997)

★ "Bleibt Alles Anders," Herbert Grönemeyer (1998)

★ "Fanatisch," Herbert Grönemeyer (1998)

★ "Goddess on a Hiway" (second version), Mercury Rev (1998)

★ "Salvation," Roxette (1999)

★ "Opus 40" (first version), Mercury Rev (1999)

★ "Stars," Roxette (1999)

★ "Chemical" (first version), Joseph Arthur (2000)

★ "In The Sun," Joseph Arthur (2000)

★ "Invalid Litter Dept.," At the Drive-In (2001)

★ "Freelove" (second version), Depeche Mode (2001)

★ "Mensch," Herbert Grönemeyer (2002)

★ "Electrical Storm", U2 (2002)

★ "Re-Offender," Travis (2003)

★ "Zum Meer," Herbert Grönemeyer (2003)

★ "All These Things That I've Done" (second version) The Killers (2005)

★ "Talk", Coldplay (2005)

★ "Suffer Well," Depeche Mode (2005)

Books by Corbijn



★ Famouz (1989)

★ Strangers (1990)

★ Allegro (1991)

★ Grönemeyer, Photographien von Anton Corbijn (1993)

★ Star Trak (1996)

★ 33 Still Lives (1999)

★ Stripping Girls (2000, with Marlene Dumas)

★ Werk (2000)

★ A. Somebody, Strijen, Holland (2002)

★ Everybody Hurts (2003)

★ U2 & I (2005)

External links



Official Site

Anton Corbijn biography

Anton Corbijn biography, exhibitions, most known photos

IMDB Entry

Director videography

Hellenic Violation > Anton Corbijn

Control - 2006 Ian Curtis Movie Dir Anton Corbijn

- Review of ''Control'' from the 2007 Toronto Film Festival

Director's Label info

CNN interview with Anton Corbijn

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