Michael Joseph (1941-) - Playboy Pool Ladies - resting between takes

03
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17
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08
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Current bid
€ 10
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Kai Brückner
Expert
Selected by Kai Brückner

Over 35 years' experience; former gallery owner and Museum Folkwang curator.

Estimate  € 500 - € 600
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PL
€10
DE
€5
DE
€3

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Description from the seller

Pool Ladies Resting – Clapham Common Pool, London
Photograph taken in the 1980s

Photographer: Michael Joseph
Medium: Original hand-printed warm-toned darkroom photograph
Signature: Signed and titled in ink on the front
Mount: Bespoke mount by professional framer, taped as fitted
Series: From the celebrated Clapham Common Pool Ladies series for the infamous US Playboy TV Interview

At first glance, one could be forgiven for believing this photograph dates from the 1930s, 1940s or perhaps the early post-war years. The bathing caps, modest costumes, elegant poses and timeless atmosphere seem to belong to another era entirely.

Yet this image was made in the mid-1980s.

That delightful tension between appearance and reality is part of its enduring charm.

In Pool Ladies Resting, Michael Joseph captures a moment of pause rather than performance. A line of swimmers gathers along the poolside, suspended somewhere between preparation and relaxation. Some adjust their goggles, others exchange glances or drift into private thought. The discipline of synchronised movement has softened into something more spontaneous, yet a sense of poise, precision and purpose still quietly permeates the scene.

Joseph positions the viewer directly alongside the pool, allowing the eye to glide through a procession of repeating forms - caps, curves, costumes and contours - punctuated by the gentle shimmer of water and reflection. Limbs overlap, lines echo one another, and the numbered starting blocks provide a subtle architectural rhythm. What might have been a simple documentary photograph becomes instead a study in shape, structure and serenity.

The influence of Bill Brandt can be felt throughout. Like Brandt, Joseph understood that the human figure could be simultaneously sculptural and symbolic. Here, bodies become building blocks within a carefully balanced composition, while light, line and negative space are orchestrated with remarkable restraint and sophistication.

What makes this photograph particularly appealing is the contrast it offers with Joseph's more familiar work. Collectors often associate him with exuberant advertising campaigns, sprawling banquet scenes, bustling crowds and controlled chaos. Here, however, we encounter a quieter sensibility. The atmosphere is contemplative rather than cacophonous; intimate rather than extravagant. It is less spectacle than stillness.

There is also a wonderful sense of cinematic nostalgia. The image possesses a period charm that feels almost impossible for a photograph made in the 1980s. It recalls the grace, glamour and gentle geometry of an earlier age, while remaining unmistakably modern in its photographic intelligence.

This is an authentic vintage darkroom print, signed and titled by the photographer. The verso retains its original studio label from Michael Joseph Pictures Ltd, Clapham, together with period tape marks from earlier mounting — small but significant traces of its working life and provenance.

The photograph possesses that rare quality of feeling both formally resolved and emotionally open. It captures not merely a composition, but a pause between movements, a breath between actions, a fleeting human moment preserved forever in silver and light.

A graceful, nostalgic and beautifully balanced work from one of Britain's most inventive post-war photographers.

As always, this one-off historical print will be packed with great care and devotion before being dispatched to its new custodian.

#MichaelJoseph
#PoolLadies
#ClaphamCommon
#VintageDarkroomPrint
#BritishPhotography
#1980sPhotography
#BillBrandtInfluence
#SwimmingPoolSeries
#SilverGelatinPrint
#FineArtPhotography
#VintageStyle
#GraceAndGeometry
#PhotographicHistory
#CollectorPhotography
#OneOffPrint

Seller's Story

My father, Michael Joseph, was a London-based advertising photographer from the mid-1960s to the early 1990s. Over those decades, he produced an extraordinary body of work—his most widely recognised image being the iconic Beggars Banquet gatefold for the Rolling Stones. My ongoing mission is to share and celebrate what we call “the other photos”: the lesser-known but no less compelling images from his archive. These are the works that lived beyond the headlines—test prints, alternative frames from major shoots, and quieter, more personal photographs, all made with his characteristic intensity, discipline, and devotion to craft. Much of their atmosphere comes from the darkroom itself. These are photographs shaped by light, timing, and handwork: intricate group compositions, sculptural still lifes, and moments that invite the viewer to linger and look again. Variety is central to the archive, and I frequently offer unique, one-off pieces that exist nowhere else. I hope you enjoy discovering my father’s work as much as I enjoy sharing it, and that you find here not just an image, but a genuine piece of photographic history. All works are dispatched carefully protected, and packed with devotion and care, appropriate to a one-off historical photographic print. US purchasers please note: Customs and excise charges are paid at source and included in the postage fee. No further charges should be due on delivery, unless regulations change.

Pool Ladies Resting – Clapham Common Pool, London
Photograph taken in the 1980s

Photographer: Michael Joseph
Medium: Original hand-printed warm-toned darkroom photograph
Signature: Signed and titled in ink on the front
Mount: Bespoke mount by professional framer, taped as fitted
Series: From the celebrated Clapham Common Pool Ladies series for the infamous US Playboy TV Interview

At first glance, one could be forgiven for believing this photograph dates from the 1930s, 1940s or perhaps the early post-war years. The bathing caps, modest costumes, elegant poses and timeless atmosphere seem to belong to another era entirely.

Yet this image was made in the mid-1980s.

That delightful tension between appearance and reality is part of its enduring charm.

In Pool Ladies Resting, Michael Joseph captures a moment of pause rather than performance. A line of swimmers gathers along the poolside, suspended somewhere between preparation and relaxation. Some adjust their goggles, others exchange glances or drift into private thought. The discipline of synchronised movement has softened into something more spontaneous, yet a sense of poise, precision and purpose still quietly permeates the scene.

Joseph positions the viewer directly alongside the pool, allowing the eye to glide through a procession of repeating forms - caps, curves, costumes and contours - punctuated by the gentle shimmer of water and reflection. Limbs overlap, lines echo one another, and the numbered starting blocks provide a subtle architectural rhythm. What might have been a simple documentary photograph becomes instead a study in shape, structure and serenity.

The influence of Bill Brandt can be felt throughout. Like Brandt, Joseph understood that the human figure could be simultaneously sculptural and symbolic. Here, bodies become building blocks within a carefully balanced composition, while light, line and negative space are orchestrated with remarkable restraint and sophistication.

What makes this photograph particularly appealing is the contrast it offers with Joseph's more familiar work. Collectors often associate him with exuberant advertising campaigns, sprawling banquet scenes, bustling crowds and controlled chaos. Here, however, we encounter a quieter sensibility. The atmosphere is contemplative rather than cacophonous; intimate rather than extravagant. It is less spectacle than stillness.

There is also a wonderful sense of cinematic nostalgia. The image possesses a period charm that feels almost impossible for a photograph made in the 1980s. It recalls the grace, glamour and gentle geometry of an earlier age, while remaining unmistakably modern in its photographic intelligence.

This is an authentic vintage darkroom print, signed and titled by the photographer. The verso retains its original studio label from Michael Joseph Pictures Ltd, Clapham, together with period tape marks from earlier mounting — small but significant traces of its working life and provenance.

The photograph possesses that rare quality of feeling both formally resolved and emotionally open. It captures not merely a composition, but a pause between movements, a breath between actions, a fleeting human moment preserved forever in silver and light.

A graceful, nostalgic and beautifully balanced work from one of Britain's most inventive post-war photographers.

As always, this one-off historical print will be packed with great care and devotion before being dispatched to its new custodian.

#MichaelJoseph
#PoolLadies
#ClaphamCommon
#VintageDarkroomPrint
#BritishPhotography
#1980sPhotography
#BillBrandtInfluence
#SwimmingPoolSeries
#SilverGelatinPrint
#FineArtPhotography
#VintageStyle
#GraceAndGeometry
#PhotographicHistory
#CollectorPhotography
#OneOffPrint

Seller's Story

My father, Michael Joseph, was a London-based advertising photographer from the mid-1960s to the early 1990s. Over those decades, he produced an extraordinary body of work—his most widely recognised image being the iconic Beggars Banquet gatefold for the Rolling Stones. My ongoing mission is to share and celebrate what we call “the other photos”: the lesser-known but no less compelling images from his archive. These are the works that lived beyond the headlines—test prints, alternative frames from major shoots, and quieter, more personal photographs, all made with his characteristic intensity, discipline, and devotion to craft. Much of their atmosphere comes from the darkroom itself. These are photographs shaped by light, timing, and handwork: intricate group compositions, sculptural still lifes, and moments that invite the viewer to linger and look again. Variety is central to the archive, and I frequently offer unique, one-off pieces that exist nowhere else. I hope you enjoy discovering my father’s work as much as I enjoy sharing it, and that you find here not just an image, but a genuine piece of photographic history. All works are dispatched carefully protected, and packed with devotion and care, appropriate to a one-off historical photographic print. US purchasers please note: Customs and excise charges are paid at source and included in the postage fee. No further charges should be due on delivery, unless regulations change.

Details

Date of print
1987
Artist
Michael Joseph (1941-)
Sold by
Owner or reseller
Title of artwork
Playboy Pool Ladies - resting between takes
Condition
Original State
Technique
Gelatin-silver print
Height
38.5 cm
Edition
Playboy US TV Interview unique B & W darkroom print
Width
28.5 cm
Signature
Hand signed
Genre
Fine art photography
FranceVerified
485
Objects sold
100%
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