


David Bowie with guitar at Adrian Belew video shoot, Edinburgh, 1990 (signed print, edition of 25, previously unseen) by Lawrence Watson
David Bowie with guitar at Adrian Belew video shoot, Edinburgh, 1990
20 x 16 in. (51 × 41 cm) print with 18 × 12 in. (46 × 30.5 cm) image silver gelatin exhibition print.
Edition of 25, hand-signed by photographer Lawrence Watson.
£155 from every sale of this print is donated to mental health charity Rethink Mental Illness (charity number 271028).
This signed, limited edition, exhibition-grade print captures David Bowie at a music video shoot for Adrian Belew in 1990 in a previously unseen image. Belew was Bowie’s guitarist for the acclaimed Lodger album and is widely loved for his long run as a King Crimson member.
“We were at an old warehouse in Edinburgh on set for the video shoot of Adrian Belew’s new single, which Julian Temple was directing. Adrian was Frank Zappa’s guitarist until David Bowie poached him for his own band, something that Zappa remained bitter about. David knew that if he appeared in Adrian’s video it would get far more plays on MTV, so this was him helping out his guitarist.” Lawrence Watson
Lawrence Watson’s portraits of music royalty have visually defined our favourite musicians for decades. For Print Matters, Lawrence shares an exclusive collection of limited edition, signed prints of his globally renowned work.
Print Matters exclusively represents the Lawrence Watson archive, please contact Print Matters with any image usage requests.
David Bowie with guitar at Adrian Belew video shoot, Edinburgh, 1990
20 x 16 in. (51 × 41 cm) print with 18 × 12 in. (46 × 30.5 cm) image silver gelatin exhibition print.
Edition of 25, hand-signed by photographer Lawrence Watson.
£155 from every sale of this print is donated to mental health charity Rethink Mental Illness (charity number 271028).
This signed, limited edition, exhibition-grade print captures David Bowie at a music video shoot for Adrian Belew in 1990 in a previously unseen image. Belew was Bowie’s guitarist for the acclaimed Lodger album and is widely loved for his long run as a King Crimson member.
“We were at an old warehouse in Edinburgh on set for the video shoot of Adrian Belew’s new single, which Julian Temple was directing. Adrian was Frank Zappa’s guitarist until David Bowie poached him for his own band, something that Zappa remained bitter about. David knew that if he appeared in Adrian’s video it would get far more plays on MTV, so this was him helping out his guitarist.” Lawrence Watson
Lawrence Watson’s portraits of music royalty have visually defined our favourite musicians for decades. For Print Matters, Lawrence shares an exclusive collection of limited edition, signed prints of his globally renowned work.
Print Matters exclusively represents the Lawrence Watson archive, please contact Print Matters with any image usage requests.
David Bowie with guitar at Adrian Belew video shoot, Edinburgh, 1990
20 x 16 in. (51 × 41 cm) print with 18 × 12 in. (46 × 30.5 cm) image silver gelatin exhibition print.
Edition of 25, hand-signed by photographer Lawrence Watson.
£155 from every sale of this print is donated to mental health charity Rethink Mental Illness (charity number 271028).
This signed, limited edition, exhibition-grade print captures David Bowie at a music video shoot for Adrian Belew in 1990 in a previously unseen image. Belew was Bowie’s guitarist for the acclaimed Lodger album and is widely loved for his long run as a King Crimson member.
“We were at an old warehouse in Edinburgh on set for the video shoot of Adrian Belew’s new single, which Julian Temple was directing. Adrian was Frank Zappa’s guitarist until David Bowie poached him for his own band, something that Zappa remained bitter about. David knew that if he appeared in Adrian’s video it would get far more plays on MTV, so this was him helping out his guitarist.” Lawrence Watson
Lawrence Watson’s portraits of music royalty have visually defined our favourite musicians for decades. For Print Matters, Lawrence shares an exclusive collection of limited edition, signed prints of his globally renowned work.
Print Matters exclusively represents the Lawrence Watson archive, please contact Print Matters with any image usage requests.
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