Around the release of Radiohead’s 2011 album The King of Limbs, the intricately shot, black-and-white portrait above became ubiquitous in the band’s press. It was taken by photographer Sebastian Edge, using the 19th century Wet Collodion photographic process, which uses treated glass instead of camera film. Now, the portrait series that produced the shot is going on show in London, the Line of Best Fit reports. It’s part of Edge’s invite-only “Unseen Works” exhibition at Metropolis Studios, which premieres on October 13. Below, watch a short video featuring some of the pictures.

Edge told Best Fit:

In January 2011, I received a call from Radiohead HQ, they’d heard about a photographer that was making pictures with this early Victorian process, with a camera built from Hurricane timber, and wondered if I was still making pictures having disappeared from the music scene for a while. Within a few weeks I arrived at their studio and spent two separate days making the pictures for their King Of Limbs campaign. A day in the woods and a day at their studio. Colin [Greenwood] loved it, being a photographer himself. And after a while I think they realised these weren’t just photos they are works of hard crafted art and as analogue and as hands on as it could possibly get!

Alongside the exhibition, portraits Edge took at the band’s Abingdon studio are on sale for £15,000 ($19,500). Some funds from the exhibition will support Proactiva Open Arms, an NGO that helps saves lives at sea. It’s recently been involved in rescue operations for refugees near the Greek coast.

Read our feature, “Internet Explorers: The Curious Case of Radiohead’s Online Fandom.”

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