Lloyd’s Life Through A Lens

It was hard to imagine that we'd ever be able to smuggle a photograph of the late, great singer/songwriter Nick Drake into the pages of TDN, but thanks to the multi-talented Julian Lloyd, we have been presented with the perfect excuse to do just that.

Lloyd, longtime manager of Staffordstown Stud in Ireland for Kirsten Rausing, retired at the end of last year, and his career in bloodstock was honoured with a Special Recognition Award at the recent ITBA Awards. Perhaps unbeknown to many in the horse world, however, is the fact that this was merely the third or even fourth chapter in the career of Lloyd, who started out working as a local newspaper photographer before moving to London to assist a fashion photographer in the ultra-hip days of the Kings Road in the 1960s. During that time he mixed with musicians and actors before turning his hand to racehorses and training. Those two worlds collided when he trained several winners for rock legend Eric Clapton, but Lloyd retained a love of photography and is about to unveil an exhibition of his work in London in May.

“I'm not a photographer, I'm a farmer with a camera, and this is just what I've accumulated,” says Lloyd modestly of a collection which includes portraits of various members of The Rolling Stones as well as the actor John Hurt. The accompanying portrait of the widely lauded Nick Drake, who died in 1974 at the age of just 26, has achieved iconic status, having been used on the cover of Drake's posthumous album Way To Blue. It was added to the collection of the National Portrait Gallery last year, and Lloyd's work has also featured on an album cover for Clapton's Derek and the Dominos.

“I bought my first camera when I was 15,” Lloyd reflects. “When I left school I worked for a newspaper in Berwick-upon-Tweed, then I went to  London and worked as an assistant to a fashion photographer in Chelsea, Bill King, doing a lot of work for Harper's Bazaar, Vogue, and that sort of stuff. During that time was when I was friends with Nick Drake. When I met my wife we moved to the country and I got interested in horses.”

He continues, “I stopped working at the end of last year and this has always been in the back of the mind. I have gradually been scanning and filing. There are other Nick Drake images that I've had all those years that have never been seen or printed.

“I have a friend who has a shop off the Portobello Road. It's all rather spur-of-the-moment stuff and we're just going to do a pop-up show. But it's not centred on celebrities or musicians, it's really just autobiographical and quite light-hearted. The photos of Ronnie Wood, Keith Richards, Marianne Faithfull and co. are really just incidental. The exhibition is a photographic diary in a way.”

Casting his mind back to the ITBA Awards in February, Lloyd, whose equine passion grew after a time living in a horse-drawn caravan, admits that he was honoured to be recognised by his peers in what has been his 'day job' for almost 50 years, with more than three decades spent at Staffordstown. 

“It was very touching. It came out of the blue and you could have knocked me over,” says Lloyd, who has recently moved to Shropshire.

“My time in Ireland means an enormous amount to me. I'm back in Britain now to be near the children but I was quite broken-hearted about leaving Ireland and I miss it very much. We went there initially for six months for me to do a season with Tim Rogers at Airlie [Stud] and it was 47 years before we left.”

In Swedish-born Kirsten Rausing, an avowed music fan, Lloyd had a kindred spirit in more ways than one. 

He says, “She always claims to have learnt English through Tattersalls catalogues and Bob Dylan lyrics.”

The exhibition Julian Lloyd Photographs 1963-2021 is at 2 Blenheim Crescent, London W11 1NN, and runs from May 11 to 21.

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Julian Lloyd to Retire From Staffordstown, John Oxx Appointed Director

Staffordstown Stud Manager Julian Lloyd, who runs the yearling operation for Lanwades Stud's Kirsten Rausing, will retire at the end of 2021. Lloyd's current role will then be split between retired trainer John Oxx as Director and long-term Stud Groom Paddy Moloney, who will be the new Manager of Staffordstown.

“After 30 years at Staffordstown, with my 75th birthday on the horizon, it is time for my work here to come to a close and for me to change gear for the last couple of furlongs of my allotted span,” said Lloyd. “I have been friends with Kirsten since we first met in 1976 as enthusiastic youngsters with Capt Tim and Sonia Rogers at Airlie Stud, where we both swept the same yards. When Kirsten started this farm in 1991, Stud Groom Paddy Moloney and myself were the first two through the gate and we are still here today. Staffordstown has been a happy family home and place of work.

“It will be a wrench to leave this wonderful farm, now 475 acres of Co Meath's best old permanent pasture. Under Kirsten's beady eye I have no doubt that Staffordstown will continue to rear strong and useful horses from her wonderful band of broodmares. I have never met a better horseman than Paddy Moloney. He knows every inch of the farm and is the right man for the job to succeed me on site.

“The added input of John Oxx will indubitably be a great asset. There is no better-respected or liked man in the business. Paddy and John are fortunate in that they will be working with our long-established 'family' of staff, virtually all of whom have been here for between 10 and 25 years.”

“I am immensely grateful to Julian for all his marvellously dedicated work at Staffordstown for three decades,” said Kirsten Rausing. “We have remained friends and colleagues through times good and bad, and seen some good animals through their weanling to yearling process at Staffordstown. In fact the winners of over 1,800 races (160 of them group or listed winners) have been produced during our 30 years of operating the farm.

“At the end of this year, Julian leaves Staffordstown in the best of hands with Paddy Moloney and his team. I take this opportunity to warmly welcome John Oxx, trainer of 35 Group 1 winners including Sea The Stars and a former Chairman of The Irish National Stud, to the Staffordstown team.”

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