Elvis At 21: Photographs By Alfred Wertheimer, a new Smithsonian traveling exhibition, will debut at the
In 1956 photojournalist Alfred Wertheimer was hired by RCA Victor to shoot promotional images of a recently signed 21-year-old recording artist, and his instinct to "tag along" with the artist after the assignment resulted in 56 striking images that provide an intimate look at Presley before he was formally crowned the King of Rock and Roll.
Developed collaboratively by the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service, the Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery and the Govinda Gallery, the Elvis At 21 exhibition — sponsored nationally by the History Channel — will travel to museums across the country through 2013 following its premiere at the
Wertheimer had unparalleled access and documented Presley on the road, backstage, in concert, in the recording studio, and at home in Memphis, Tenn. "Colonel" Tom Parker, Presley's manager, restricted contact just a short time later. The photographs document a remarkable time when Presley could sit alone at a drugstore lunch counter.
"Henri Cartier-Bresson was known for photographing what he called the 'decisive moment,' that moment when everything falls into place," said Wertheimer. "But I was more interested in the moments before or after the decisive moment."
Wertheimer was up close to capture a flirtatious encounter with a young woman backstage in
Wertheimer also joined Presley after the recording session as he traveled home to
Elvis At 21 is accompanied by a richly illustrated catalog, titled Elvis 1956, available through Welcome Books.