Image 1 of 1
        
        
        
              Depeche Mode at Shepherd's Bush, London, 2 September 1982
16 × 20 in. (41 × 51 cm) print with 12 × 18 in. (30 × 46 cm) image silver gelatin exhibition print.
Edition of 25. Hand-signed by photographer David Corio.
£155 from every sale of this print is donated to mental health charity Rethink Mental Illness (charity number 271028).
“This is Depeche Mode after original member Vince Clarke left the band, and Alan Wilder (on the right) replaced him on keyboards. The band had only been together a couple of years but had already experienced significant chart success in England and mainland Europe and helped to pave the way for the new wave sound that came after punk. It was a sunny afternoon, so I asked them to stand under some trees – I like the soft dappled light falling on them. That day they were particularly excited as they had just got a small video camera and were filming each other throughout the photo shoot. They have always been very interested in images and have made several documentaries of their world tours.” David Corio
Since he was 16 years old, pioneering photographer David Corio has built an unparalleled six-decade music photography archive. Corio has spent almost 50 years in recording studios, backstage dressing rooms and major cultural events, documenting the 20th century’s most groundbreaking musicians.
16 × 20 in. (41 × 51 cm) print with 12 × 18 in. (30 × 46 cm) image silver gelatin exhibition print.
Edition of 25. Hand-signed by photographer David Corio.
£155 from every sale of this print is donated to mental health charity Rethink Mental Illness (charity number 271028).
“This is Depeche Mode after original member Vince Clarke left the band, and Alan Wilder (on the right) replaced him on keyboards. The band had only been together a couple of years but had already experienced significant chart success in England and mainland Europe and helped to pave the way for the new wave sound that came after punk. It was a sunny afternoon, so I asked them to stand under some trees – I like the soft dappled light falling on them. That day they were particularly excited as they had just got a small video camera and were filming each other throughout the photo shoot. They have always been very interested in images and have made several documentaries of their world tours.” David Corio
Since he was 16 years old, pioneering photographer David Corio has built an unparalleled six-decade music photography archive. Corio has spent almost 50 years in recording studios, backstage dressing rooms and major cultural events, documenting the 20th century’s most groundbreaking musicians.