

His soft-focus, dreamlike photographs of adolescent girls ignited fierce debates about art, innocence, and exploitation for decades.
David Hamilton built a world through his lens, one suffused with a hazy, romantic light that became his unmistakable signature. Moving from London to Paris, he worked as a graphic designer before his photography, often featuring young women in pastoral or domestic settings, found a massive audience in art books and magazines. His work, championed by some as poetic and evocative, was simultaneously at the white-hot center of a persistent cultural argument about the boundaries of art and the male gaze. Hamilton extended his aesthetic into film, directing features that mirrored his photographic style, ensuring his controversial legacy as a figure who challenged and disturbed conventional notions of beauty and propriety.
1928–1945
Born between the Depression and the end of WWII. Too young to fight, old enough to remember. They became the conformist middle managers of the 1950s — and the civil rights leaders who quietly dismantled Jim Crow.
David was born in 1933, placing them squarely in The Silent Generation. The events that shaped this generation — world wars, depression, and rapid industrialization — shaped the world they entered and the choices available to them.
The biggest hits of 1933
#1 Movie
King Kong
Best Picture
Cavalcade
The world at every milestone
FDR's New Deal launches; Prohibition ends
Kristallnacht and the escalation toward WWII
United Nations holds its first General Assembly
NATO founded; Mao proclaims the People's Republic of China
First color TV broadcast in the US
Brown v. Board of Education desegregates US schools
JFK assassinated in Dallas; Martin Luther King's 'I Have a Dream' speech
US withdraws from Vietnam; Roe v. Wade decided
Internet adopts TCP/IP, creating the modern internet
European Union officially established
US invades Iraq; Human Genome Project completed
Edward Snowden reveals NSA surveillance programs
Donald Trump elected president; Brexit vote
He initially pursued a career as a graphic designer for the French magazine *Elle*.
His photographs were often taken with a simple Pentax camera and achieved their soft focus through nylon stockings stretched over the lens.
The 1971 Donovan song "The Little White Road" was inspired by Hamilton's photography book *The Age of Innocence*.
“I try to capture the beauty of a moment that is already past, the memory of a memory.”