Before the world knew Paul McCartney as a cultural icon, he quietly chronicled history with a 35mm Pentax in hand. Between late 1963 and early 1964, his photographs captured the Beatles’ meteoric rise from UK sensations to global superstars. Far from polished studio shots, these images were candid glimpses of a storm—the frenzy of Beatlemania—seen from its calm center. This is what makes Paul McCartney Photography not only art, but cultural archaeology.
The dual presentation of this archive—Eyes of the Storm in institutions like the National Portrait Gallery and Rearview Mirror at Gagosian—has elevated these once-forgotten snapshots to fine art and marketable collectibles. The project illustrates how authenticity, provenance, and storytelling can shape an artistic legacy as powerfully as technical mastery.







