The Linda McCartney Retrospective: From the Light, on view at Fenimore Art Museum from May 23 to September 7, offers a wide look at a photographer whose work moved easily between music, family life and public advocacy. The exhibition places McCartney’s images of musicians, nature and private moments in one frame, showing how she built a career on instinct, access and close observation.
Born Linda Louise Eastman in Scarsdale, New York, McCartney studied art history and took some photography classes before shaping her own approach behind the camera. She began in the magazine world, worked at
Town & Country, and then moved into music photography, where her pictures of the Rolling Stones, Jimi Hendrix, Aretha Franklin and the Beatles brought her wider recognition. Her photograph of Mick Jagger on the Hudson helped establish her as a serious photographer, and her Eric Clapton cover image for
Rolling Stone made her the first woman to appear on that magazine’s cover with a photograph.
The exhibition also shows the private side of her work. McCartney photographed Paul McCartney, their children and the places they traveled, often turning family life into a visual diary. Music remained central to her life as well, from her marriage to Paul in 1969 to her years performing with Wings and her own musical contribution to “Seaside Woman,” released under the name Suzy and the Red Stripes. The pictures in the show reflect that mix of public and private identity.
McCartney’s later years also included a strong public role in animal rights and vegetarian advocacy. She wrote cookbooks, launched a vegetarian food line and worked with animal welfare groups, turning personal belief into public action. The exhibition presents that broader legacy alongside the photographs, giving a fuller picture of an artist whose work was closely tied to the people and causes she cared about most.
By focusing on both the famous and the intimate,
The Linda McCartney Retrospective: From the Light shows how her photography stayed grounded in everyday life even as her name became part of popular culture.
Image:
My Love. London © 1978 Paul McCartney under exclusive licence to MPL Archive LLP. Photographer: Linda McCartney