Monument to David Garrick, Esq., 1797
Showing posts with label Camille O'Grady. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Camille O'Grady. Show all posts
May 19, 2019
November 21, 2018
Jim Stewart ~ Perfervid Photographer
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Jim Stewart
1977 CARNIFAIR ~ Dancin' for the Seamen
Leatherneck bar, San Francisco, 1977
Leatherneck, Pillow, a Hungry i
Leatherneck posters
Bay Area Reporter ~ Jim Stewart obit
Bilerico Project ~ Jim Stewart: SoMa Survivor obit
Found San Francisco ~ Folsom Street: The Miracle Mile
Folsom Street Blues: A Memoir of 1970’s SoMa review
BARtab ~ Jim Stewart: Folsom Street Leather
Styrous® ~ Wednesday, November 21, 2018
A month or so ago my friend and photographer Jim Stewart (links below) died just short of his seventy-sixth birthday. I was his model in 1982 for a series of photographs he did for advertisement posters for the Leatherneck Bar (link below), articles in the Bay Area Reporter and he photographed several performances of mine as well.
Jim was born on November 11, 1942. He earned his master's degree at Western Michigan University and documented the Leather Lifestyle in the mid to early 80's with his 2011 memoir, Folsom Street Blues which included many of his photographs.
Styrous® ~ performance - 1977
photo by Jim Stewart
Folsom Street Blues
by Jim Stewart
book cover photo by Jim Stewart
by Jim Stewart
book cover photo by Jim Stewart
He was a columnist for the Bay Area Reporter BARtab section (link below), a Folsom Street leather pioneer, a gay man, the cover model of his award-winning 2011 memoir, "Folsom Street Blues," and a photographer for Drummer magazine (link below). In 1976, he was among the first leather artists to move South of Market to Clementina Street.
According to BARtab editor Jim Provenzano, Stewart contributed to the nightlife section several years ago. He also wrote the section's BARchive gay bar history column in 2013 and 2014, which included many of his historic 1970s gay nightlife photos of South of the Slot bars, Halloween, and the Russian River scene.
While managing a movie theater in 1973, Jim met Jack Fritscher, a writer, who sponsored his move to San Francisco in 1975.
Although our names are not mentioned, Jim and I were subjects in the Fritscher book, Some Dance To Remember.
Fritscher said that as a member of the SOMA Open Studio movement, Jim chronicled the creative epiphanies of the Folsom Street art scene with intimate friends he wrote about such as Tool Box bar founder Chuck Arnett, leather poet Camille O'Grady, whose performance at the Ambush Bar on Harrison Street I recorded in the early 80's . . .
. . . Old Reliable Studio photographer David Hurles and 1974 Oscar streaker Robert Opel who ran naked behind David Niven flashing a peace sign while Niven was introducing Elizabeth Taylor.
As a working carpenter in 1977, Jim built the interior of Fey-Way Studio, at 1287 Howard Street, where founder Opel exhibited his work alongside Robert Mapplethorpe, Tom of Finland, and Rex, in the gallery where Opel was murdered in 1979. I did the sound design for a couple of the exhibition openings at the gallery. Jim appeared in Uncle Bob, the 2010 documentary film about the Opel killing.
Jim wrote fiction for the Jim Moss, Folsom magazine, he shot photos for the Society for Individual Rights and documented the Christo and Jeanne-Claude "Running Fence." He founded his Keyhole Studios in 1976.
Jim's images of Folsom Street sexuality, including his iconic photos shot in the Slot Hotel, appeared in exhibits at bars like the Ambush; in Drummer as early as issue 14, May 1977; and in the 2008 book "Gay San Francisco."
He managed and photographed various Folsom leather bars in San Francisco; Allan Lowery's Leatherneck (links below) and later, at the same location after the Leatherneck closed and it became the Drummer Key Club, at 11th and Folsom streets, which is now the Oasis nightclub.
According to BARtab editor Jim Provenzano, Stewart contributed to the nightlife section several years ago. He also wrote the section's BARchive gay bar history column in 2013 and 2014, which included many of his historic 1970s gay nightlife photos of South of the Slot bars, Halloween, and the Russian River scene.
Tom Hinde - 1979
photo by Jim Stewart
While managing a movie theater in 1973, Jim met Jack Fritscher, a writer, who sponsored his move to San Francisco in 1975.
Jack Fritscher - 1979
photo by Mark Hemry
Although our names are not mentioned, Jim and I were subjects in the Fritscher book, Some Dance To Remember.
Fritscher said that as a member of the SOMA Open Studio movement, Jim chronicled the creative epiphanies of the Folsom Street art scene with intimate friends he wrote about such as Tool Box bar founder Chuck Arnett, leather poet Camille O'Grady, whose performance at the Ambush Bar on Harrison Street I recorded in the early 80's . . .
Camille O'Grady
photo by Glenda Hydler
. . . Old Reliable Studio photographer David Hurles and 1974 Oscar streaker Robert Opel who ran naked behind David Niven flashing a peace sign while Niven was introducing Elizabeth Taylor.
46th Academy Awards - 1974
As a working carpenter in 1977, Jim built the interior of Fey-Way Studio, at 1287 Howard Street, where founder Opel exhibited his work alongside Robert Mapplethorpe, Tom of Finland, and Rex, in the gallery where Opel was murdered in 1979. I did the sound design for a couple of the exhibition openings at the gallery. Jim appeared in Uncle Bob, the 2010 documentary film about the Opel killing.
Jim wrote fiction for the Jim Moss, Folsom magazine, he shot photos for the Society for Individual Rights and documented the Christo and Jeanne-Claude "Running Fence." He founded his Keyhole Studios in 1976.
Jim's images of Folsom Street sexuality, including his iconic photos shot in the Slot Hotel, appeared in exhibits at bars like the Ambush; in Drummer as early as issue 14, May 1977; and in the 2008 book "Gay San Francisco."
He managed and photographed various Folsom leather bars in San Francisco; Allan Lowery's Leatherneck (links below) and later, at the same location after the Leatherneck closed and it became the Drummer Key Club, at 11th and Folsom streets, which is now the Oasis nightclub.
Jim left San Francisco in the 1980s when he was hired as
head of the Chicago Public Library Social Sciences and History
Department.
Jim Stewart died on October 15, 2018, at his home in Ludington, Michigan, where he had retired. The
cause of death was pneumonia two days after he broke his ankle
in a fall. He was 75 years old. He is survived by Kenneth Warner his partner of 35 years; they were married in California in 2008.
Viewfinder links:
Jim Stewart
1977 CARNIFAIR ~ Dancin' for the Seamen
Leatherneck bar, San Francisco, 1977
Leatherneck, Pillow, a Hungry i
Leatherneck posters
Net links:
Bay Area Reporter ~ Jim Stewart obit
Bilerico Project ~ Jim Stewart: SoMa Survivor obit
Found San Francisco ~ Folsom Street: The Miracle Mile
Foreward Reviews ~ Folsom Street Blues review
Lambda Literary Foundation ~Folsom Street Blues: A Memoir of 1970’s SoMa review
BARtab ~ Jim Stewart: Folsom Street Leather
Jim was intense and impassioned
but a sweeter soul never lived!
but a sweeter soul never lived!
Styrous® ~ Wednesday, November 21, 2018
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