Photograph: Paul McCartney
This August, London plays host to a remarkable exhibition that offers an unprecedented glimpse into the explosive rise of The Beatles – not through the eyes of a fan or a professional photographer, but through the camera lens of Paul McCartney himself.
The show, titled Rearview Mirror: Liverpool-London-Paris, opens at the Gagosian gallery on Davies Street on August 28 and presents a rare collection of candid images from December 1963 to February 1964, capturing the band just before they conquered the world.
At just 21 years old, McCartney wielded a 35mm Pentax and documented the whirlwind moments backstage, in quiet reflections, and between performances. These photographs reveal the band during the dizzying days of Beatlemania’s birth – unguarded, unassuming, and often full of youthful innocence.
Here are no staged poses or glossy magazine covers, but authentic slices of life showing the four young men from Liverpool in their raw, unfiltered glory.
Among the images are snapshots from iconic London venues like the Lewisham Odeon, the London Palladium, and the Finsbury Park Astoria.
The exhibition also includes a haunting self-portrait of McCartney captured in a mirror in the attic room of his then-girlfriend Jane Asher’s family home – the very place where he famously dreamed the melody for the classic song “Yesterday.”
Photograph: Paul McCartney
The photographs not only chronicle their rising fame in the UK but hint at the impending global takeover, including scenes from their build-up to the landmark 1964 transatlantic flight to New York. It’s a visual storybook of The Beatles poised on the brink of legendary status.
This exhibition follows McCartney’s photography debut earlier in 2025 at Gagosian in Beverly Hills and runs concurrently with the touring show Paul McCartney Photographs 1963-64: Eyes of the Storm currently on display at the De Young Museum in San Francisco.
Photograph: Paul McCartney
The prints have been carefully remastered from negatives thought lost for over 50 years and are signed by McCartney, who also designed the frames, making this show a unique collector’s opportunity.
More than just photos, the exhibition offers a heartfelt peek at a cultural phenomenon reshaping music and society, captured from the vantage point of one of its central figures. For Beatles fans and photography enthusiasts alike, Rearview Mirror promises a fresh, intimate perspective on the beginnings of a global musical revolution.
The Rearview Mirror: Liverpool-London-Paris exhibition runs from August 28 to October 4, 2025, at Gagosian London.