Cecil Beaton’s Fashionable World opens July 11, 2026 at the Museum of Photographic Arts at The San Diego Museum of Art and remains on view through January 10, 2027. The exhibition is the first to focus entirely on Beaton’s fashion and portrait photography, bringing together images that helped define the look of twentieth-century style, celebrity and high society.
Cecil Beaton, born in 1904 and active across photography, illustration, writing and costume design, built a career that moved easily between London, Paris, New York and Hollywood. He photographed the “Bright Young Things” of 1920s London, made fashion images for
Vogue and other magazines, documented World War II, and later reshaped royal portraiture for a modern audience. His work also extended into stage and screen, where his costume and set designs for
My Fair Lady brought him an Oscar.
The exhibition gathers portraits of some of the most recognisable figures of the century, including Marilyn Monroe, Audrey Hepburn, Elizabeth Taylor and Marlon Brando, along with Queen Elizabeth II and Princess Margaret. It also includes artists and writers such as Truman Capote, Francis Bacon and Salvador Dalí, showing how closely Beaton moved through the worlds of fashion, theatre, politics and culture. His images often combined elegance with wit, but they also carried a clear sense of performance, something Beaton understood and used with precision.
Organized by The National Portrait Gallery, London, and presented by MOPA@SDMA, the exhibition presents Beaton not just as a photographer of famous faces, but as a visual architect of glamour itself. His portraits often turned social identities into carefully constructed scenes, with lighting, costume and pose all working together to create a sharp and polished public image.
Seen today, Beaton’s work still reads as a record of a world that valued style as much as status. The exhibition places that legacy in full view, from the drawing rooms of interwar London to the postwar image culture of film stars and royals.
Image:
Cecil Beaton, The Second Age of Beauty is Glamour, Checked Suit by Norman Hartnell (detail), 1947. Modern print from original colour transparency. © Condé Nast Archive UK.