In January 1982, Siouxsie Sioux stepped into Sheila Rock’s Ladbroke Grove studio and into a set of clothes that seemed to understand her before the camera even had its say. The result became one of the defining images of early 80s British style: Siouxsie on the cover of The Face, Nick Logan’s ground-breaking magazine of music, fashion, and metropolitan mischief, caught at a point when post-punk had begun to look outward, eastward, sideways, and everywhere at once.
Now, more than four decades later, Siouxsie: Exposures -1982 returns to that session with the patience of a contact sheet and the charge of a rediscovered relic. Slated for release on 23 June 2026 by Moonboy, the limited-edition monograph will be restricted to 1,323 individually numbered copies, gathering 68 rare and previously unpublished photographs from a shoot that has long held a privileged place in the visual mythology of British post-punk.
The familiar image may have become part of the furniture of subcultural memory, but Rock’s private archive held far more than a single cover. Nearly two hundred photographs from the session remained unseen for over forty years, sealed away from public view while Siouxsie’s influence traveled through decades of goth, post-punk, fashion, performance, and every kid who ever learned that eyeliner could be a weapon, a mask, or a magnificent refusal of plain living.
The seed of the shoot was planted in Japan. In autumn 1981, Rock spent two months traveling through the country, and in Tokyo’s Harajuku district, she encountered theatrically dressed teenagers gathering to dance to their favorite music. The link between Japanese street style and British youth tribes was immediate. Rock saw a current running from Harajuku to Kensington Market, from Tokyo teenagers to the clothes-conscious crowds of King’s Road, Chelsea. Siouxsie, already a severe and singular presence in British music, was the obvious figure to carry that idea into a British post-punk frame.
The session became a collaboration between Rock, Siouxsie, and London designer Lloyd Johnson, whose ‘Rock ’n’Roll Suicide’ collection supplied graphic lines, bold fabrics, and a sense of theatrical precision. Johnson’s clothes met Siouxsie’s poise with the force of flint against steel. Nothing about the styling feels incidental. It belongs to a Britain where club culture, punk fallout, New Romantic excess, and street fashion were cross-pollinating at speed, producing looks that felt assembled from record sleeves, market stalls, imported fantasy, and private nerve.
“When Siouxsie stepped into the clothes, it was like a light bulb came on. If you give an idea to someone who has as much style as Siouxsie, they just run with it.”
Rock understood that charge and captured it with her camera. Since the early 1970s, she has been an essential witness to British subculture, documenting punk, post-punk, New Romantic glamour, and the many unruly forms that gathered at the margins of mainstream taste before being absorbed, softened, and sold back to the world. Her images have always had a special feel for clothes as declarations: the jacket as an argument, the haircut as a manifesto, the stare as social weather.
Siouxsie: Exposures -1982 restores this particular exchange to its fuller shape. Across the restored photographs, the session can be seen as a sequence rather than a frozen emblem. The book offers a close look at a moment when music press photography still carried the risk and romance of invention, when a magazine cover could help define a mood before the culture around it had learned what to call itself.
The volume also includes exclusive new interviews with Sheila Rock and Lloyd Johnson, alongside a review of Siouxsie’s enduring legacy in the post-punk landscape. It is published by Moonboy Ltd, an independent company based in London and Paris, specializing in high-quality limited edition photo books on bands, performers, and creative cultural movements. Moonboy’s previous publications include The Cure Stills with Robert Smith and Paul Cox, New Romantics with Sheila Rock, Looking For Trouble with John Ingledew, 3rd Dimension with Corin Johnson, and Dead Or Alive with Paul Cox and Lynne Burns.
The special edition book is available for order here and features a fine art Giclee print signed by Sheila Rock (a numbered edition of 323 only).
Follow Sheila Rock:








Or via: