Miles Aldridge

Miles Aldridge

Biography

Picture by Peter Lindbergh

Biography

Miles Aldridge (b. 1964, London) is a British artist whose vividly saturated, psychologically charged photographs occupy a distinctive space between cinema, painting, and fashion. Drawing on references from film noir, Pop Art, and religious iconography, Aldridge constructs meticulously staged mise-en-scènes that explore themes of the false promise of luxury and the assorted fictions of modern life. These glamorous, frequently eroticised images probe society’s idealised notions of domestic bliss, where sinister undercurrents swirl beneath a flawless surface.

Aldridge studied illustration at Central Saint Martins before beginning his career as an artist, who to this day remains one of the few photographers still shooting on film — developing a highly recognisable visual language rooted in analogue processes, saturated colour, and pre-visualised composition. His creative output encompasses large-scale C-type prints, Polaroids, screenprints, photogravures, and drawings.

Each new photographic narrative is developed by rendering his initial thoughts in ink or pencil sketches. These drawings and storyboards are an essential early stage in his creative process. He believes that ‘fiction and theatricality can be more truthful than documenting reality’ and translates his sketches into meticulously arranged compositions to create images reminiscent of film stills: frames snatched from a broader story. Aldridge notes that many of his favourite moments in cinema are, as he describes, ‘closeups of a woman’s face thinking’, and he shares Hitchcock’s ability to create powerful moments of suspense, turning viewers into voyeurs.

Aldridge has worked extensively with leading international publications such as Vogue Italia, The New York Times, Numéro, The New Yorker, The Face, Vanity Fair, and, in 2024, photographed Elton John for TIME magazine’s “Icon of the Year” cover. Other notable portraits include Viola Davis, Michelle Yeoh, Maisie Williams, Sophie Turner, Donatella Versace, Michael Fassbender, and David Lynch. He has collaborated with artists such as Maurizio Cattelan, Gilbert & George, and Harland Miller. In 2025, he partnered again with Cattelan on ToiletMiles PaperAldridge, a special edition of ToiletPaper Magazine dedicated to his cinematic vision.

Major institutional exhibitions include Virgin Mary. Supermarkets. Popcorn. at Fotografiska (New York, Stockholm, and Berlin), I Only Want You to Love Me at Somerset House (London), and Miles Aldridge Colour Pictures 2000 – 2022 at Hangaram Design Museum (Seoul). Aldridge’s work is held in the permanent collections of The V&A, The National Portrait Gallery, The British Museum, ICP New York, Palais Galliera Musée de la Mode de la Ville de Paris, and Fondation Carmignac, among others.

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’Miles sees a colour coordinated, graphically pure, hard-edged reality.’

’The work is never finished because women forever will be eternally mysterious to me’

David Lynch Miles Aldridge

On Now: Eroticism – Beyond beauty and shame

Limburgs Museum
Venlo, Netherlands

19 April 2025 - 04 January 2026

The exhibition explores the evolving perspectives on eroticism through the ages, from the late Middle Ages to the sexual revolution of the 1960s, and into today’s era of increasing prudishness and sexualization.

Visitors will journey through the tension between concealment and revelation, desire and seduction, love and contemplation. Eroticism – Beyond beauty and shame extends beyond traditional themes of beauty, shame, arousal, and sex; it encapsulates love, lust, and the taboos that intertwine with these elements. By showcasing both classical and contemporary works, the exhibition invites viewers to explore the many layers of eroticism and its evolving, universal significance.

Featuring pieces from regional Limburg collections and internationally renowned works, the exhibition offers a platform for personal interpretation. Each artwork invites reflection on the dynamic and multifaceted nature of eroticism, revealing its role in shaping individual and collective narratives across time and cultures.

TOILETMILES PAPERALDRIDGE

Lyndsey Ingram Gallery
London

24 March - 17 April 2025

Virgin Mary. Supermarkets. Popcorn. Photographs 1999-2020

Fotografiska Museum
Berlin

2 Feb - 12 May 2024

TOILETMILES PAPERALDRIDGE

Sotheby's
London

31 March - 17 April 2025

Miles Aldridge Colour Pictures 2000 – 2022

Hangaram Design Museum
Seoul

4 May - 28 August 2022

High-Gloss

Fahey / Klein Gallery
Los Angeles

27 January - 19 March 2022

Process: Vintage Polaroids and Contact Sheets 1999 – 2018

Lyndsey Ingram Gallery
London

27 July 2021 – 12 September 2021

Virgin Mary. Supermarkets. Popcorn. Photographs 1999–2020

Fotografiska Museum
Stockholm

4 September 2020 – 7 March 2021

Virgin Mary. Supermarkets. Popcorn. Photographs 1999–2020

Fotografiska Museum
New York

7 May 2021 – 10 October 2021

The Taste of Colour

Lumiere Brothers Gallery
Moscow

29 November 2019 – 23 February 2020

Ex Libris

Lyndsey Ingram Gallery, E/AB Fair
New York

24 – 27 October 2019

Screenprints, Polaroids and Drawings

Christophe Guye Galerie
Zurich

28 February – 4 May 2019

This Side of Paradise

Huxley-Parlour Gallery
London

15 November - 15 December 2018

Art History

Reflex Gallery
Amsterdam

7 April – 22 May 2018

(after)

Lyndsey Ingram Gallery
London

24 November 2017 – 5 January 2018

Please return Polaroid

Steven Kasher Gallery
New York

18 November – 23 December 2016

Please Return Polaroid

Lyndsey Ingram Gallery
London

16 – 21 May 2016

The Pure Wonder

Fahey Klein Gallery
Los Angeles

10 October – 17 November 2015

A Dazzling Beauty

OCA
São Paulo

15 October – 2 November 2015

The Age of Pleasure

Christophe Guye Galerie
Zurich

13 March – 24 May 2014

One Black & White and Twenty Four Colour Photographs

Reflex Gallery
Amsterdam

8 March – 24 May 2014

Carousel

Sims Reed Gallery
London

17 September – 3 October 2014

Short Breaths

Brancolini Grimaldi Gallery
London

12 July – 28 September 2013

I Only Want You To Love Me

Steven Kasher Gallery
New York

8 May – 8 June 2013

I Only Want You To Love Me

Somerset House
London

10 July – 29 September 2013

13 Women

Studio for the Arts
Berlin

10 July – 30 September 2010

Pictures for Photographs

Steven Kasher Gallery
New York

28 May – 20 June 2009

Doll Face

Hamiltons Gallery
London

1 April – 10 May 2007

TOILETMILES PAPERALDRIDGE
2025

ToiletMiles PaperAldridge is the third magazine collaboration from Toiletpaper duo Maurizio Cattelan and Pierpaolo Ferrari. British photographer Miles Aldridge has developed an editorial style that is both couture and chromatic but also surreal. He is influenced by the films of Federico Fellini and David Lynch and the photography of Richard Avedon, as well as the album covers and book designs created by his father, Alan Aldridge.

As one of Aldridge’s own inspirations, David Lynch, once said of his work: “Miles sees a colour-coordinated, graphically pure, hard-edged reality.” This latest issue of Toiletpaper sequences a selection of Aldridge’s glamorous and elaborate mise-en-scène images in a palette of vibrant acidic hues.

Published by Damiani Books
Designed by Maurizio Cattelan and Pierpaolo Ferrar

(after)
2017

Published to coincide with Aldridge’s 2017 exhibition at Lyndsey Ingram, this catalogue documents Aldridge’s diverse collaborations with Maurizio Cattelan, Harland Miller and Gilbert & George. Includes preparatory drawings, Polaroids and behind-the-scenes reportage.

Published by Lyndsey Ingram, London
Designed by Lucy Harbut
Text by Michael Bracewell
Softcover

(after Cattelan)
2016

Artist’s book documenting Aldridge’s project with Maurizio Cattelan shot during one night at La Monnaie de Paris. Contains extensive behind-the-scenes reportage as well as visual references and preparatory drawings used in the staging of the photographs.

Self-published, London
Designed by Ard – Chuard & Nørregaard
Text by Michael Bracewell
Softcover

Please return Polaroid
2016

Drawn from over 20 years of Aldridge’s archive, this book contains a personal selection of the artist’s Polaroids, giving an intimate insight into his working practice, as well as providing an overview of his projects spanning the past two decades.

Published by Steidl, Göttingen
Designed by Miles Aldridge & Gerhard Steidl
Text by Michael Bracewell

One Black & White and Nineteen Colour Photographs
2014

Published to coincide with Aldridge’s 2015 exhibition at Reflex Gallery, Amsterdam. A single silver gelatin black and white print is contrasted with an array of colour images printed purposefully off-key to create a hallucinatory palette.

Published by Reflex Editions, Amsterdam
Designed by Graphic Thought Facility
Softcover

I Only Want You To Love Me
2013

Published to coincide with Aldridge’s 2013 retrospective at Somerset House, London. This concise monograph features over 130 works, including Home Works, Immaculée and many other iconic images as well as a broad selection of preparatory drawings.

Published by Rizzoli, New York
Text by Glenn O’Brien
Hardcover with acetate dust jacket

I Only Want You To Love Me: Special Edition
2013

Published to coincide with Aldridge’s 2013 retrospective at Somerset House, London. This concise monograph features over 130 works, including Home Works, Immaculée and many other iconic images as well as a broad selection of preparatory drawings. Issued in an edition of 200 each with a signed unique Polaroid print.

Published by Rizzoli, New York
Designed by Graphic Thought Facility
Text by Glenn O’Brien

Please Please return Polaroid
2023

Please Please return Polaroid is Miles Aldridge’s ongoing love letter to Polaroid, a process once integral to the craft of many photographers but now more or less extinct, apart from the rare and out-of-date material traded on eBay for exorbitant prices. The sequel to Aldridge’s Please Return Polaroid of 2016, this book presents new and vintage Polaroids from his more than 20-year archive in a seemingly random sequence shaped by a dreamlike logic and surprising juxtapositions.

Published by Steidl, Göttingen
Designed by Miles Aldridge and Gerhard Steidl
Clothbound hardcover with a tipped-in photo

Córdoba
2022

Published by Louis Vuitton the Fashion Eye Collection evokes cities, regions or countries through the eyes of photographers. Here Aldridge revisits his initial impressions of Córdoba with his Leica camera, inspired by the life and writings of Federico García Lorca.

Published by Louis Vuitton, Parise
Designed by Lords of Designe
Text by Sylvie Lécalliere
Hardcover

Other Pictures
2013

A selection of personal photographs which document Aldridge’s family life from 1994 to 2011. Unlike Aldridge’s more well-known works all the pictures in this collection were shot on a 35mm Leica with available light.

Published by Steidl, Göttingen
Designed by Miles Aldridge and Gerhard Steidl
Clothbound hardcover with a tipped-in photo, housed in a slipcase

Pictures for Photographs
2009

Aldridge’s first book published with Gerhard Steidl. A large-scale, luxury monograph with the first half of the book dedicated to the copious sketchbooks of drawings made by Aldridge in preparation for his photographs. The second half features a compendium of his best known photographs.

Published by Steidl, Göttingen
Designed by Miles Aldridge and Gerhard Steidl
Clothbound hardcover with a tipped-in photo and foil embossing, housed in a slipcase

Acid Candy
2008

Published to coincide with Aldridge’s 2008 exhibition at the Reflex Gallery, Amsterdam. The title refers to the hard-boiled sweets Aldridge had as a child, but also refer to the acid-hued colours of his photographs.

Published by Reflex Editions, Amsterdam
Designed by Alex Daniels
Text by Glenn O’Brien
Hardcover with a dust jacket

The Cabinet
2006

Exhibition catalogue for Aldridge’s first show at the Reflex gallery, Amsterdam. Features 50 prints including many early works not published elsewhere.


Published by Reflex Editions, Amsterdam
Designed by Alex Daniels
Text by J.G Ballard and Marilyn Manson
Hardcover

Wallpaper*: As Photo London turns 10, seven photographers tell us the story behind their portraits
2025

Miles Aldridge

‘My portrait of Cara Delevingne was shot in The Victory, a pub on Vyner Street in East London. I had created a series of preparatory drawings and spent a weekend with my assistant scouting pubs across East London and the Isle of Dogs until we found the perfect setting. The landlady agreed to rent the pub for the shoot, with the only condition being that one of her regulars couldn’t be turned away. The taps were made available for props, and many drinks were consumed by the crew over the course of the day. The image was inspired by my years living in East London in the 1980s, when pubs often featured cabaret singers or strippers and formed a unique social fabric. Cara brought the right energy to embody that atmosphere. I chose it for the London Lives exhibition because it speaks to the theatricality and rawness of London’s social spaces – the eccentric beauty of its everyday rituals.’

Published by Wallpaper*
Words by Orla Brennan

CNN Style: You only have your eyes to trust: Miles Aldridge on shooting film in the digital age
2025

“I like the rigor and tension of looking through the lens and seeing the picture,” said Miles Aldridge. From his studio inside an industrial building in North London, there is an assortment of framed, large-scale works of art — some hung on the walls, others neatly lined up on the floor. The British illustrator-turned-photographer, whose lens has captured numerous stars including Elton John, Donatella Versace and Kate Moss, is recounting his pivot into camerawork and the beauty of shooting with film.The unpredictable nature of film photography has been a powerful motivator for Aldridge across his extensive career, spanning around three decades. “At that point, you only have your eyes to trust,” said Aldridge, of the process when shooting with film.

Published by CNN Style
Words by Kati Chitrakorn

5'Eleven": Point of View: Miles Aldridge
2024

It’s not often you get to experience the works of a creative who has significantly influenced your taste and inspiration in photography – and discuss them in real-time with the creator themselves. It’s a calm Friday afternoon, and Artist and Photographer Miles Aldridge is absorbed in his latest project. Surrounding me, vibrant characters in acidic hues from his extensive catalogue of work gaze out through the quietude. In one frame, a multi-hued domestic setting barely contains a woman reminiscent of Elizabeth Taylor. Clad in a wipe-clean dress, she silently screams over a half-grapefruit crowned with a glacé cherry. Known as Actress #6, she’s just one of many faces whose familiar presence feels oddly recognisable. Like a character from a forgotten noir film, perhaps it’s the backdrop of domesticity that creates this impression – or simply the result of years spent admiring these images in awe. Now, finally standing among them, they feel like old friends.

Published by 5'Eleven"
Words by Leigh Manyard

ES Magazine: How Photographer Miles Aldridge brought fashion to the front room
2023

There is something quite endearing about harking back to one’s formative years for inspiration. Take Andy Warhol’s famous pop-art depictions of Campbell’s soup – which he ate every night for dinner – or Edvard Munch’s macabre paintings, which stem from the ghost stories his father read to him as a child. More recently, it’s British fashion photographer Miles Aldridge taking inspiration from his younger years.

Published by Evening Standard Magazine
Words by By Soraya Gaied Chortane

The Guardian: Miles Aldridge’s psychedelic dreamworld – in pictures
2022

Viewers beware! These acid-drenched mise-en-scénes have a glamorous, film noir quality yet often contain sinister undercurrents. Miles Aldridge rose to prominence in the mid-90s with his arresting, highly stylised photographs referencing film noir, art history and pop culture. The images are glamorous, yet probe society’s idealised notions of domestic bliss, where sinister undercurrents swirl beneath a flawless surface.

Published by The Guardian
Words by Mee-Lai Stone