Billy Apple®

Billy Apple Bleaching with Lady Clairol Instant Crème Whip, November 1962

Billy Apple Bleaching with Lady Clairol Instant Crème Whip, November 1962 by Billy Apple®

Artwork Detail

Billy Apple was born Barrie Bates at Auckland in 1935. While studying at London’s Royal College of Art, Bates soon became close friends with fellow students David Hockney, Derek Boshier, Ron Kitaj and Allen Jones.

In 1961, Hockney and Apple (as Barrie Bates) travelled to New York where they bleached their hair as an attention-getting gesture, attracted by the Clairol advertising line that “blondes have more fun; doors open for a blonde.”

Subsequently back at 13 Bath Street, London, on Thursday 22 November 1962 the artist created a new identity as “Billy Apple”, changing both his name and appearance.

Billy Apple Bleaching with Lady Clairol Instant Crème Whip, November 1962 is a self-portrait that marks the moment when Barrie Bates no longer existed and Billy Apple assumed a new identity.

His blonded ‘look’ established that he was a living art object functioning as an artwork. With painter Richard Smith operating the camera, Apple looks at a mirror while seeing himself anew; from a perspective where life has the real potential to become art.

Marco Livingstone wrote in his history of Pop Art that Apple ‘re-invented” himself, to use his own term, in a sense making himself the trademark with which to market his work.’

Title
Billy Apple Bleaching with Lady Clairol Instant Crème Whip, November 1962
Artist/creator
Billy Apple®
Production date
1962
Medium
gold-toned silver gelatin print with screen-printed text
Dimensions
408 x 575 mm
Credit line
Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, purchased 2015
Accession no
2015/20
Other ID
X2014/32 Old Accession Number
Copyright
Copying restrictions apply
Department
New Zealand Art
Display status
Not on display

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