Jack Robinson
Jack Robinson didn’t chase fame — but it found him.
From the heart of the Mississippi Delta to the cover of Life Magazine and the pages of Vogue, Jack Robinson saw the world through a lens of rare clarity and elegance. In the golden era of rock and pop culture, he captured its most iconic figures at their most real.
During the 1960s and early ’70s, Robinson photographed Tina Turner, Joni Mitchell, Elton John, Leonard Cohen, The Who, Sonny & Cher, and many more — at a time when these legends were shaping the very sound and style of a generation.
Then, at the peak of his career, he vanished.
In 1972, disillusioned with the fashion world, Robinson left New York, returned to Memphis, and never accepted another professional assignment. After his death in 1997, a stunning discovery was made: hundreds of boxes in his modest apartment, meticulously labeled and organized — contact sheets, negatives, and prints featuring the biggest names in music, fashion, and film. A hidden archive. A forgotten legacy. Until now.
Owning a Jack Robinson print means owning an authentic piece of music history — a rare, intimate look into the raw elegance of a lost era. Each image is a Limited Edition, Archival Pigment Print, Estate Stamped — a timeless document from a man who was quietly one of the greatest visual storytellers of his time.