The winning combination of Music, Vintage, Festivities & Counterculture.
Music and Vintage attract a vast audience of all ages and demographics. At CameronLife we can provide proven Vintage Music Festival experience exhibitions tailored to fit your requirements, venue/space, duration, and budget – large or small. We provide off-the-shelf or custom curated packages (perhaps in collaboration with your team) plus revenue earning opportunities through sales from a large range of related prints and other merchandise.
Charles Everest’s iconic festival photographs have graced the walls and screens of venues large and small in the UK, around the world, and even at sea! These have been either stand-alone shows (for example Swansea Museum’s exhibition of around 100 framed prints) or as imagery within other exhibitions. Many a film, book, magazine, record sleeve or concert screen have also featured his work. We also have a permanent exhibition at Dimbola Museum on the Isle of Wight.
The 1970 Isle of Wight Festival - often referred to as “The Last Great Event” - eclipsed the 1969 Woodstock Festival in the USA by an estimated 200,000 more attendees and fell at the twilight of the “Hippy” era. In addition to legends like Hendrix and The Who, many other big names like The Doors, Joni Mitchell and Leonard Cohen - who had not appeared at Woodstock - performed at the Isle of Wight instead.
Documentary colour photographs are at the heart of all CameronLife 1970 festival exhibitions. Drawn from our extensive archive, all aspects can be covered; from the pre-planning, site construction, and life backstage, through to the audience experience & artiste performances, and on to the site clear-up. The optional addition of works from the ‘Pop Icons’ series by the renowned Sculptor Guy Portelli - together with other exhibits and audio visuals – add a further dimension.