Whitaker photo session On 25 March 1966, British photographer
Robert Whitaker hosted a photo session with the Beatles at his studio at 1 The Vale, off
King's Road in
Chelsea. Having spent three months away from the public eye, the band members had expanded their interests and were eager to depart from the formula imposed on them as pop stars, both in their music and in their presentation. Whitaker similarly had ambitions that the photo session should break new ground. He planned a
conceptual art piece titled
A Somnambulant Adventure, which he later described as "a considered disruption of the conventions surrounding orthodox pop star promotional photography". Whitaker conceived the piece as a comment on the Beatles' fame, having accompanied them on their August 1965 US tour and been alarmed at the scenes of
Beatlemania he witnessed then. Whitaker assembled props such as plastic doll parts, trays of meat, white butchers' coats, a hammer and nails, a birdcage, cardboard boxes, and sets of false teeth and eyes. During the shoot, he took several reels of film of the band members interacting with the objects, culminating in a series of photos of the group dressed in the white coats and draped with pieces of meat and body parts from the baby dolls. The band were used to Whitaker's fondness for the surreal and played along. Lennon recalled that they were motivated by "boredom and resentment at having to do
another photo session and
another Beatles thing. We were sick to death of it." Whitaker's concept was also compatible with their own
black humour and their interest in the
avant-garde. apparently hammering nails into
John Lennon's head. Whitaker intended the image to serve as the basis for the right-hand panel of his
triptych. Whitaker intended that
A Somnambulant Adventure would be a
triptych design across two panels of a 12-inch LP cover. Among various comments he later made on the subject, he said the panels would be the inner gatefold spread or, alternatively, the front and back cover. The butcher photo was to appear in the central portion of the triptych or on the back cover. He planned to reduce the image to just "two-and-a-quarter inches square" and set it in the middle of the panel; bejewelled silver halos would be added behind the band members' heads, and the remaining space would be designed as a
Russian religious icon in colours of silver and gold. Whitaker said: "The meat is meant to represent the fans, and the false teeth and the false eyes is the falseness of representing a god-like image as a golden calf." For the front cover, or left-hand portion of the triptych, Whitaker planned to use a photo of the Beatles holding two strings of sausages, symbolising
umbilical cords, that appeared to connect to the belly of a woman whose back was to camera. This photo would be set inside another image, showing a woman's womb, thereby representing the Beatles' birth and emphasising their human qualities. The third part of Whitaker's triptych was a photo of
George Harrison hammering long nails into Lennon's head, suggesting
trepanation. Apparently in a state of transcendence, Lennon's face would be rendered as
wood grain and a horizon would be added in which ocean and sky were reversed. Whitaker credited
Man Ray as a partial inspiration for this idea and said it again emphasised the band's human qualities over their idol status.
Cover images The Beatles submitted photographs from the session for their promotional materials. Contrary to Whitaker's original vision, the band chose the butcher photo as the cover image for
Yesterday and Today, and Lennon and
Paul McCartney insisted that it was the Beatles' statement against war, particularly the
Vietnam War. Capitol president
Alan Livingston was immediately against using the image, but Epstein told him that the Beatles were adamant. In a 2002 interview published in
Mojo magazine, Livingston recalled that his principal contact was with McCartney, who pushed strongly for the photo to be used as the album cover and described it as "our comment on the [Vietnam] war". Capitol's art director was more impressed with the image and prepared it to appear like a painting, with a canvas effect. The cover photo was soon replaced with a picture of the four band members posed around an open
"steamer" trunk. This image was taken by Whitaker at Epstein's
NEMS offices, near
Carnaby Street. Rather than being submitted as an afterthought, the trunk photo had been pasted onto a mock-up LP sleeve and was being considered by Epstein while the Beatles filmed promotional clips for "
Paperback Writer" and "
Rain" at
Chiswick House on 20 May. Lennon later described the replacement as "an awful looking photo of us looking just as deadbeat but supposed to be a happy-go-lucky foursome". Music critic
Tim Riley describes it as "tame" but, due to the Beatles' sullen expressions, still evocative of their will to ridicule the standard band portrait. ==Cover controversy and Operation Retrieve==