Jan Gabarek: Music History

Jan Gabarek, “Red Wind”, 1996, “Visible World” Album, ECM Records, Münich, Germany

Born at Mysen, Østfol in March of 1947, Jan Garbarek is a Norwegian jazz saxophonist who creates work in the classical and world music genres. The only child of former Polish prisoner of war Czeslaw Garbarek and his wife, Jan Garbarek grew up in Oslo as a stateless resident until the age of seven, at which time he was granted  Norwegian citizenship. In 1968 at the age of twenty-one, Garbarek married Vigdis Garbarek, lecturer and author of the 1994 “The Way to Your Self”. Their daughter is Anja Garbarek, a singer and songwriter who created the soundtrack for French filmmaker Luc Besson’s 2005 fantasy drama “Angel-A”. 

Garbarek began his recording career in the late 1960s with work based on the recordings of American jazz composer and theorist George Russell. In 1969, he composed all the tracks on his “Esoteric Circle” album that featured guitarist Terje Rypdal, bassist Arild Andersen, and drummer Jon Christensen. After recording four more albums in the same style, Garbarek discarded the harsh dissonances of avant-garde jazz and gained wider recognition for his work with pianist and composer Keith Jarrett’s European Quartet. 

Featuring Keith Jarrett, Garbarek, bassist Palle Danielsson and drummer Christensen, the European Quartet produced two albums, the 1974 “Belonging” and 1977 “My Song”, as well as two live recordings, “Personal Mountains” and “Nude Ants”, both in 1979. Garbarek was a featured soloist on Keith Jarret’s works for orchestra, the 1974 “Luminessence: Music for String Orchestra and Saxophone” with the Stuttgart Radio Symphony Orchestra and the 1979 “Arbour Zena” which featured Garbarek and bassist Charlie Haden backed by the Stuttgart Orchestra. 

Jan Garbarek was influenced in his early career by avant-garde jazz saxophonist Albert Ayler’s unorthodox improvisational style. He also draws inspiration from the traditional folk melodies of the Scandinavian region. Garbarek’s textual approach to jazz rejects the traditional notions of improvisation through a thematic approach, as exemplified by the work of Sonny Rollins; he favors a more meandering style that is more sculptural in both form and impact. Among the recordings Gabarek produced in this style is the 1978-79 “Photo with Blue Sky, White Cloud, Wires, Window and a Red Roof” with guitarist Bill Connors, pianist Josh Taylor, double bassist Eberhard Weber and drummer Jon Christensen.

A continuation of his experimental approach to music, Gabarek’s fusion of instrumental and choral sounds into a jazz framework became part of genre known as new-age music. One of these experiments involved setting a collection of Norwegian poet Olav Håkonson Hauge’s poetry to music with Gabarek’s saxophone complimenting a fully mixed choir. This work was performed live several times with the award-winning Grex Vocalis, a twelve-member Norwegian chamber choir formed by musician and conductor Carl Halvor Høgset.

Jan Gabarek’s music expanded in the 1980s with its incorporation of synthesizers and elements of traditional world music. His December 1980 album “Eventyr” featured jazz guitarist John Abercrombie and Brazilian percussionist Naná Vasconcelos who also played the berimbau, a traditional Angolan musical single-stringed bow with gourd resonator. The 1988 album “Legend of the Seven Dreams”, whose melody is based on a traditional Lapp joik of Sámi culture, featured Gabarek on saxophones and flute, Rainer Brüninghaus on electronic keyboards, Eberhard Weber on bass, and Vasconcelos on percussion and vocals.

In the 1990s, Gabarek collaborated with Indian and Pakistani musicians including Indian percussionist Trilok Gurtu, Indian classical flautist and bansuri player Hariprasad Chaurasia, Indian tabla player Ustad Zakir Hussain, and Pakistani vocalist Bade Fateh Ali Khan. During the period when Gregorian chanting was highly popular, Gabarek produced his 1994 “Officium”, a collaboration with the early vocal group Hilliard Ensemble, a British male quartet whose work focused on music from the Medieval and Renaissance periods. One of ECM Records’s best selling albums, “Officium”  and its sequel, “Mnemosyne”, reached the pop charts in several countries. 

In 1999, Jan Gabarek composed the original music score for Israeli director Amos Gitai’s 2000 war drama film “Kippur” which explored the issues of war, politics and human rescue. Gabarek’s 2005 album “In Praise of Dreams”, with Gabarek on saxophones and synthesizers, Kim Kashkashian on viola, and Manu Ktaché on percussion, received a Grammy nomination for Best Contemporary Jazz Album. In 2009, Gabarek released his first live album “Dresden”, a double-album featuring Gabarek, Katché, Brüninghaus and new member Yuri Daniel, a Brazilian bassist. The recording was done in October of 2007 at the Alter Schlachthof in Dresden, Germany.

Notes: The Jan Gabarek Quartet continues to perform throughout the world at many major jazz festivals. In 2024, the quartet will be performing in May at the Zürich’s Kongresshaus, November at the CC Weimarhalle in Weimar and the Elbphillharmonie in Hamburg, Germany, and at Münich’s Prinzregententheater in December. Tickets can be found at Perto.com: https://en.perto.com/artist/jan-garbarek-2445/

“Red Wind” is the first track on the 1996 “Visible World” which featured bassist Eberhard Weber; percussionists Trilok Gurtu, Marilyn Mazur and Manu Katché; and pianist Rainer Brüninghaus. For this album, Gabarek worked in a recording studio where he composed many of the album’s tracks from layers of the musicians’ bass and percussions as well as his soprano and tenor saxophones.

The video features Zen artist Nikolai Jelneronov, a master sumi-e painter. Sumi-e painting is a type of Chinese ink-brush painting that uses washes of black ink. It emerged during the Tang Dynasty (608-907 AD) and overturned China’s earlier and more realistic techniques. Sumi-e painting flourished in China and, later, Japan after its introduction by Zen Buddhists in the fourteenth-century.

Philip Jones

The Artwork of Philip Jones

Born in London in 1933, Philip Jones was an English contemporary painter. An artist between the visionary and nostalgic works of the Neo-Romantics and the second generation of St. Ives Abstractionists, he created subtly-shaded paintings heightened with occasional bursts of color that resided on the periphery of abstraction.

Jones’s paintings were connected to the landscape surrounding his Norfolk home as well as the scenery he observed during his yearly travels. He spent most of his winters overseas at coastal destinations in Malta, India, Namibia, and the Republic of the Gambia. Jones, through a strong sense of connection with the natural world and its elements, became very adept at portraying a particular locale through the use of fluid lines and brushstrokes.

Philip Jones was educated at the historic Malvern College where he trained under post-impressionist painter and etcher Harry Fabian-Ware. In 1953, Jones enrolled at the Slade School of Fine Art where he became acquainted with fellow painters William Turnbull, Victor Willing and Michael Andrews. During his three years at the Slade School, Jones received private tutoring from mural and war artist Sir Walter Thomas Monnington and realist painter Sir William Coldstream, the Slade School’s acting principal. 

Jones had his first exhibition in 1954 at the Royal Society of British Artist Galleries. During his career, his paintings were shown at many of London’s most prestigious  galleries. In 1955, Jones had an exhibition at the Leicester Galleries, well-known for exhibiting the work and developing the careers of major artists. In 1964, there were two exhibitions: the London Group, one of the world’s oldest artist-led organizations, and the Artists‘ International Association in Soho. Jones’s work was shown at Mansard Gallery at Tottenham Court Road in 1967 and, in the next year, at the Contemporary Arts Society exhibition in the Whitechapel Gallery. 

Philip Jones left London in 1979 and relocated to Clermont Hall in Norfolk, a county known for its small chapels, plowed fields, outbuildings and green spaces. The works he painted in Norfolk are known for their palettes of predominately muted browns, soft blues and strong greens that conjure up the countryside’s lush foliage.

Following this period of withdrawal from London’s art scene, Jones resumed presenting his work for exhibitions. For the remaining fifteen years of his life, he entered his work into the annual Royal Academy exhibitions. In 2008, Jones had a solo exhibitions in March-April at London’s Oliver Contemporary and September-October at Madrid’s La Galería Espacio Minimo. Philip Jones passed away on the last day of December in 2008. 

The work of Philip Jones is housed in both private and public collections in the United Kingdom and Europe. The Estate of Philip Jones is represented by Jenna Burlingham Fine Art on George Street, Kingsclere, Hampshire, England. For information on work by Philip Jones, the gallery’s website is located at: https://www.jennaburlingham.com

Second Insert Image: Philip Jones, “Reflections, Calangute”, 2000, Oil on Paper, 58.4 x 76.2 cm, Jenna Burlingham Gallery, Kingsclere, England (Available)

Bottom Insert Image: Philip Jones, “Rocks at Mġarr”, 1999, Oil on Board, 37 x 49 cm, Jenna Burlingham Gallery, Kingsclere, England (Available)

Patrick Anderson: “With a Harsher Cry Birds Bury My Stolen Heart”

Photographers Unknown, My Bird-Wrung Youth

My bird-wrung youth began with the quick naked
voice in the morning, the crooked calling,
and closed in the quiet wave of the falling
wing, dropping down like an eyelid–
O syringing liquid
song on the bough of flight and at night, light falling,
the nested
kiss of the breasted

ones floating out to sleep in a cup of colours:
wren’s flit and dimple, the shadowy wing of the curlew
spent between stone and fern in the hollow,
the barn-raftered swallow and far at sea the rider
gull on the billow
all night, all night kept sleep till steeply
the pillow
threw morning cockcrow

up in a column of straw and blood. In childhood
days opened like that, whistled and winked away,
but now with a harsher cry birds bury
my stolen heart deep in the wild orchard,
and whether they prettily
play with the plucked bud here or marry
a cloud, I
am lost, am emptied

between two sizes of success. For, clocking
past ceiling and dream sailing, they drop down
to pick apart in a nimble and needed rain
my limbs in love with longing, yet till I long
for my twin in the sun
they rise, they almost form, to be born
with a song
in a seventh heaven!

And I alone in the ambivalence
of April’s green and evil see them still
colonizing the intricately small
or flashing off into a wishing distance–
their nearer syllables
peck through the webs of every loosening sense
and in their tall
flight’s my betrayal.

Patrick Anderson, My Bird-Wrung Youth

Born in the village of Ashtead, Surrey, in August of 1915, Patrick John MacAllister Anderson was an English-born Canadian poet, journalist, travel writer and autobiographer. Influenced by the works of Dylan Thomas, T. S. Eliot, and W. H. Auden, his poetic work, which became a major force in shaping Canadian poetry,  was distinctive for its rapid juxtaposition of contrasting images. 

Patrick Anderson was educated at the University of Oxford where he earned both his Bachelor and Master of Arts. In 1938 with a Commonwealth Fellowship, he studied at New York’s Columbia University. While in New York, Anderson met Marguerite ‘Peggy’ Doernbach, who became his wife; together they relocated to Montreal in September of 1940. Anderson taught at Montreal’s Selwyn House School, an English-language independent boys’ school, from 1940 to 1946. After receiving his professorship, he taught at McGill University in Montreal between 1948 and 1950. 

Anderson quickly became part of Montreal’s artistic life and, due to his wife’s interest, became a member of the Labor-Progressive Party. In March of 1942 he, along with poets Francis Reginald Scott, Abraham Moses Klein, and Patricia Kathleen Page, founded Montreal’s literary magazine, “Preview”, a socially and politically committed literary journal inspired by the work of the 1930s English poets. In 1943, critic John Sutherland, owner of the rival magazine “First Statement”, published a review of Anderson’s poetry that suggested homoerotic themes in the writing. Anderson, married at that time to Doernbach, threatened to sue, an action which resulted in Sutherland printing a retraction.

Patrick Anderson was still an influential editor at the “Preview” during its merger with Sutherland’s “First Statement” in 1946. However, he resigned in 1948 when Sutherland viciously attacked poet F. R. Scott’s 1946 collection “Poems”. Anderson had privately published in England two collections of his juvenile poetry: the 1929 “Poems” and the 1932 “On This Side of Nothing”. In 1945, John Sutherland’s First Statement Press published Anderson’s first Canadian chapbook of poems “A Tent for April”. The poems in this collection contain lush, often metaphysical imagery that contained an undertone of sublime sexuality. Anderson’s 1946 “The White Centre” continued the style and themes of his previous volume. The speaker, now in adulthood, looks back on his childhood and also ponders what it means to be Canadian, particularly in a time of war. 

During the post-war years, Anderson returned occasionally to England and continued his connections with several of its literary circles. During his professorship at McGill University’s Dawson College, Anderson’s marriage finally disintegrated and he decided to accept a lectureship at the University of Malaya. Anderson’s poetic account of those years, the 1953 biographical “The Colour as Naked”, opened with poems of his British childhood and youth, continued through his life in Quebec, Malaysia and New York, and ended with the poem “Leaving Canada”, a farewell to his home for a decade. 

Patrick Anderson returned to his home country of England where he remained for the rest of his life, except for a few guest lectures in Canada during the 1970s. He worked as a teacher and entered into a same-sex relationship with Orlando Gearing. During the period between 1955 and 1972, Anderson published five works of prose of which parts of three dealt with his experiences in Canada: the 1955 “Snake Wine: A Singapore Experience”, the 1957 “Search Me, Autobiography-The Black Country, Canada, and Spain”, and “The Character Ball: Chapters of Autobiography” published in 1963.

Literary context, eccentric character and exotic experience were central concerns in Anderson’s prose works. The overtly homosexual experience became an important focus in his later poetry. This interest was further manifested in Anderson’s editing, a collaboration with Alistair Sutherland, of the 1961 “Eros: An Anthology of Male Friendship”, a collection of excerpts from novels, journals, poems and essays on the friendship between men that is sexual in some way. This volume was published by New York’s Arno Press as part of a series entitled “Homosexuality: Lesbians and Gay Men in Society, History and Literature”.

In 1964 and 1969, Patrick Anderson published two travel accounts, “The Smile of Apollo: A Literary Companion to Greek Travel” and “Over the Alps: Reflections on Travel and Travel Writing”, which covered the grand tours of Scottish biographer James Boswell, Lord Byron and author William Beckford. Anderson continued to write poetry even as he wrote his prose and travel works. In 1976, he published “A Visiting Distance—Poems; New Revised and Selected”. Anderson’s final volume of poetry and last published work was the 1977 “Return to Canada: Selected Poems”.

Patrick Anderson died in March of 1979 at the age of sixty-three in the civil parish of Halstead, Essex, England. Despite his published memoirs and travel writing, he treated his sexual identity as a private matter and declined the inclusion of his work in a 1972 anthology of gay- male literature. 

Notes: There was some discrepancy about Patrick Anderson’s same-sex partner in the researched articles; the name of Alistair Sutherland was mentioned in several. For this posting, I am referencing Canadian writer Blaine Marchand’s August 2015 article of an interview with Patricia Kathleen Page, a close early friend of Anderson and a co-founder of the 1942 “Preview” literary journal. She stated in 1976 that Patrick eventually left Doernbach and lived for the rest of his life with Orlando Gearing. The Blaine Marchand article for Plentide Magazine is located at: https://plenitudemagazine.ca/query-project-blaine-marchand/

All twenty-three issues of the “Preview” literary journal from 1942 to 1945 are available to read online or as downloads at the Canadian Modernist Magazines Project’s website at: https://www.modernistmags.ca/mags/preview/

Jimmy Daniels

Carl Van Vechten, “Jimmy Daniels”, July 11th 1940, Gelatin Silver Print, Library of Congress

Born in Laredo, Texas in November of 1907, James Lesley Daniels was an actor, cabaret singer and nightclub host during the Harlem Renaissance that spanned the 1920s and 1930s. He spent his early years in Little Rock, Arkansas, before moving to New York City in the 1920s. Daniels studied at Bird’s Business College in the Bronx and became acquainted with many members of the Harlem Renaissance, particularly jazz and blues singer Alberta Hunter, whom he assisted in her elder years.

After graduating, Jimmy Daniels returned to Little Rock where he became the secretarial assistant to Aldridge E. Bush, the founder and president of Little Rock’s Century Life Insurance Company. Desiring a career in acting, he returned to New York in 1928. Through noted stage actress Katherine Cornell’s stage manager, Daniels was able to get a part in Cornell’s 1930 Broadway hit “Dishonored Lady”. Following this role, Daniels performed in the 1931 ”Savage Rhythm” at Broadway’s Elysee Theater and in productions staged by the Chamberlain-Brown Stock Company in Mount Vernon, New York.

Leaving Broadway theater, Daniels found his first professional singing position at Hot Cha, a Harlem nightclub on 7th Avenue where Billie Holiday often performed. He quickly achieved recognition and soon became part of the European music scene. By the summer of 1933, Daniels was performing in Monaco at Monte Carlo’s Summer Sporting Club. At the end of 1933 and into 1934, he accompanied British jazz pianist Reginald Foresythe at the Ciro’s nightclub in London. 

Jimmy Daniels, upon his return to New York, became the premier entertainer at Marian Cooley’s Sunday night suppers at Le Ruban Bleu, a Parisian-styled nightclub on 56th and Fifth Avenue. In 1935, he sponsored, for three seasons, a series of parties at the Bronze Studio Catering Hall on Lenox Avenue in Harlem. During these parties, Daniels met Herbert Jacoby who convinced him to perform in his Paris nightclub, Reuban Bleu, in 1936 and 1937. Daniels later performed at Jacoby’s newly opened New York City nightclub and, in 1938, sang for a second time at the Parisian club

Established as a singer in both New York and Europe, Daniels opened the Jimmy Daniels’ Nightclub in 1939 at 114 West 116th Street in Harlem. An instant hit, the nightclub attracted a long list of both black and white, gay and straight, notables, including European royals and aristocrats. Among the clientele were British society photographer Olivia Wyndham; actors Burgess Meredith and Diana Barrymore; British art patron Harold Jackman; photographer Carl Van Vechten; sculptor Richmond Barthé; poet Claude McKay; and heavyweight champion Joe Louis. Daniels owned and operated the nightclub until 1942 when he entered military service for World War II. 

Returning to New York, Jimmy Daniels became the host in 1950 at the chic supper club Bon Soir on West 8th Street. Known as a place where everyone was welcome regardless of race or sexual orientation, Bon Soir was a balance of elegant, intimate, risqué and respectable ambiance. As host, singer and emcee, Daniels was a popular figure at Bon Soir for ten years. The club hosted a variety of rising entertainment stars, including Phyllis Diller, Kaye Ballard and Barbara Streisand; the Bon Soir was Streisand’s first New York engagement. Bon Soir actually lost business when Daniels left in 1960 after his ten year stay.

Beginning in 1960, Daniels hosted a series of “supper soirees” at Lower Manhattan’s L’Etang Supper Club. Real estate owner Jimmy Merry hired Daniels at this time to manage the Tiffany Room, now the Ice Palace, in Cherry Grove, Fire Island. He also performed briefly at the Blue Whale Bar in Fire Island Pines. Daniels continued to perform at various New York City parties, festivals and clubs until his death. After suffering a stroke, James Lesley “Jimmy” Daniels died at the age of seventy-six in June of 1984 just a few days after performing at the Kool Jazz Festival’s “Evening of the Music of Harold Arlen” at Carnegie Hall.

Notes: In 1934, Jimmy Daniels met prominent architect Philip Johnson and began a relationship, his first serious one, that lasted from 1934 to 1936. He later met filmmaker Kenneth Macpherson who at that time was married to English heiress and novelist Annie Winifred Ellerman, known by her pen name Bryher. She commissioned sculptor Richmond Barthé, a regular patron of the Jimmy Daniels’ Nightclub, to create a marble bust of Daniels. In the 1950s, Daniels shared a home with award-winning fashion designer Rex Madsen.

The NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project has an 2023 article written by project manager Amanda Davis on the Jimmy Daniels’ Nightclub. The article is located at: https://www.nyclgbtsites.org/site/jimmie-daniels/

On the “Medium” story site, writer Michael Henry Adams has an article on the lives of historic, gay African-American artists and performers, a section of which discusses Jimmy Daniels. The  article also covers the intolerance shown to LBGTQ people despite the apparent advancement in legislation. Michael Adams’s article is located at: https://medium.com/@michaelhenryadams/raising-the-questions-who-is-gay-who-cares-why-it-still-matters-4166a5442ec8

Top Insert Image: Carl Van Vechten, “Jimmy Daniels”, 1933, Color Print, Van Vechten Trust

Second Insert Image: George Platt Lynes, “James Leslie Daniels”, 1937, Duotone Photo Engraving, 22.9 x 27.9 cm, Private Collection

Third Insert Image: Carl Van Vechten, “Jimmy Daniels with Bust by Richmond Barthé”, December 21st 1938, Gelatin Silver Print, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University

Bottom Insert Image: Carl Van Vechten, “Jimmy Daniels”, circa 1933, Color Print, Van Vechten Trust

William Gedney

The Photography of William Gedney

Born at Greenville, New York in October of 1932, William Gale Gedney was an American documentary and street photographer. Intensely dedicated to his work, he was interested in street and night photography, portraiture, creative composition, and the study of human nature. Gedney’s work took him across the United States several times and overseas to England, India, Ireland, France, and the Netherlands. 

William Gedney spent his early years in upstate New York. At the age of nineteen, he relocated to New York City and attended Brooklyn’s Pratt Institute where he became interested in photography. Gedney graduated in 1955 with a Bachelor of Arts in Graphic Design. He worked for two years at the global mass-media company Condé Nast Publications before deciding to pursue a freelance career. After several years of freelance work and part-time employment, Gedney was hired in 1961 for the graphic department of Time, Inc. where he primarily did photographic layouts. 

With the money he saved, Gedney traveled in 1964 to Kentucky and ended his journey at a coal-mining town in Perry County. For a period of two weeks, he stayed at the Leatherwood home of Willie and Vivian Cornett and their twelve children. The family was struggling due to Willie Cornett having just recently lost his job at the mines. Gedney photographed the daily activities of the family members during this stay and a later one in 1972. The Corbett Family series eventually contained nine hundred twenty-one images in total. For the following twelve years, Gedney remained in touch with the family and exchanged letters.

In 1966, William Gedney was recommended by photojournalist Walker Evans for a one-year fellowship from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Through this fellowship, Gedney settled in the Haight-Ashbury district of San Francisco where he began photographing its residents and drifters who passed through the neighborhood. Between October 1966 and January 1967, Gedney shot twenty-one hundred 35 mm photographs that chronicled San Fransisco culture. Upon his return to New York, Gedney organized a maquette for a photography book of his stay in San Francisco; however the book was not published in his lifetime.

In 1968, John Szarkowski, photography director of New York’s Museum of Modern Art, curated Gedney’s only solo exhibition in his lifetime, a MOMA show that presented twenty-two images of the Kentucky series and twenty-one of the San Francisco series. Shortly after the exhibition, Gedney was offered teaching positions for photography at the Pratt Institute and Manhattan’s Cooper Union; he would remain a member of both faculties for the rest of his working life. 

In 1969, William Gedney received a two-year Fulbright Fellowship for photography in India. His photographs of India were taken over two extensive stays during this fellowship and during a later trip in 1972. On his initial visit, Gedney lived a year and a half in Varanasi at the home of a local family; in 1972, his four-month visit focused on the city of Calcutta. The big overseas adventure in Gedney’s life was India: though the trip wearied him, Gedney particularly cherished the work from this period.

 In June of 1989, William Gedney died in New York City, at the age of fifty six, of complications from AIDS. He left photographs and writings to his lifelong friend Lee Friedlander and requested that his books and cameras be given to one of India’s colleges. His brother, Richard Gedney, donated them to the Chitrabani Art College in Calcutta. Gedney’s photographs, sketchbooks, diaries and papers are housed in the Rare Book, Manuscript and Special Collections Library of Duke University. Its digital collection contains finished prints and contact sheets created by Gedney between 1955 and 1989.

Margaret Sartor, a photographer, writer, and teacher at the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University, was approached by the university’s Special Collections Library for the curation of an exhibition of Gedney’s work. In 2000, Sartor and English author Geoff Dyer coedited “What Was True: The Photographs and Notebooks of William Gedney”, which quickly sold out.

Notes: William Gedney’s photographic book of his work in San Francisco was published posthumously in February of 2021 by Duke University Press under the title “William Gedney: A Time of Youth-Sam Francisco, 1966-1967”.

An article written by Samanth Subramanian, entitled “William Gedney’s Travels in India” for The New Yorker can be found at: https://www.newyorker.com/culture/photo-booth/william-gedneys-travels-in-india

Author Rebecca Bengal wrote an article entitled “William Gedney’s Timelessly Intimate Photographs of San Francisco in the 1960s” for the June 2021 issue of “Aperture”. This article,  with images and quotes by Gedney’s friends as well as his onetime lover writer Joseph Caldwell, can be found at: https://aperture.org/editorial/william-gedney-timelessly-intimate-photographs-of-san-francisco-in-the-1960s/

The Howard Greenberg Gallery in Manhattan, New York had an exhibition of William Gedney’s work in February to March of 2016. Thumbnail images of the exhibition’s photos can be located at: https://www.howardgreenberg.com/exhibitions/william-gedney-all-facts-eventually-lead-to-mysteries

Second Insert Image: William Gedney, “Cornett Sisters”, 1965, Kentucky Cornett Family Series, Gelatin Silver Print, Duke University

Third Insert Image: William Gedney, “Calcutta”, circa 1980, Gelatin Silver Print, 27.3 x 18.4 cm, Duke University

Bottom Insert Image: William Gedney, “Kentucky, 1972”, Kentucky Cornett Family Series, Gelatin Silver Print, Duke University

Thomas Blackshear II

The Artwork of Thomas Blackshear II

Born in Waco, Texas in November of 1955, Thomas Blackshear II is an African-American illustrator, painter and sculptor. His work as an illustrator and painter is known for its dramatic use of light and inspirational mood. Blackshear’s oeuvre contains work that draws on Black Heritage, Christian, Native American, and Western themes.

Born to U.S. Air Force pilot Thomas Richman Blackshear and his wife, Thomas Blackshear II spent his early years primarily in Atlanta, Georgia. An artist from his childhood, he was awarded a scholarship from the Art Institute of Chicago. After one year of study at the Chicago Institute, Blackshear transferred to Chicago’s American Academy of Art from which he graduated with a B.F.A. in 1977. 

Blackshear found employment with the Hallmark Card Company in Kansas City, Missouri where he apprenticed under illustrator Mark English, one of the country’s leading illustrators for publications. Blackshear worked briefly as head illustrator for Kansas City’s Godbold/Richter Studio before launching a freelance artist career in 1982. His early work included more than one hundred-forty illustrations for LucasFilms, Anheuser-Busch, Paramount Pictures, Universal Studios, The Walt Disney Company, The National Geographic, and the Milton Bradley Company, among others. 

Through a connection with writer and illustrator Jerry Pinkney in the early 1900s, Thomas Blackshear began work for the United States Postal Service on a series of stamp portraits for its Black Heritage series  His work for this series included five stamps honoring such notables as Chicago-area’s first non-native settler Jean Baptiste Point du Sable (1987), union and civil rights activist Asa Philip Randolph (1989), and journalist and educator Ida Bell Wells-Barnett (1990). Blackshear also completed ten illustrations for the Postal Service’s 1995 Jazz Music series that included, among others, stamps honoring Jelly Roll Morton, Coleman Hawkins, and John Coltrane. 

Blackshear illustrated the Postal Service’s 1990 Golden Era Movie series and its 1997 Classic Movie Monster series. The stamps for the Golden Era series were illustrated as miniature movie posters for such features as “The Wizard of Oz” and “Stagecoach”. For the Classic Movie Monster series, Blackshear created five portrait illustration of the actors in their makeup: Bela Lugosi as Dracula, Lon Chaney as Phantom of the Opera, Lon Chaney Jr. as the Wolf Man, and Boris Karloff as the Mummy and Frankenstein’s monster. He also illustrated a 1999 stamp for James Cagney,  a 2004 stamp for James Baldwin, and a 2010 stamp honoring Mother Teresa.

Well known and highly respected in the religious art world, Thomas Blackshear’s colorful paintings of Christ and other Biblical figures are located in numerous churches throughout the country. In the mid-1990s, he founded the “Ebony Visions” project, a large and varied collection of images and sculptural figurines, both religious and historic, of African American culture. “Ebony Visions” has been rated the number one black-figurine collectible group in the United States for twenty years.

Blackshear has lectured and conducted workshops in Germany and Sweden and also taught at the San Francisco Academy of Art College. Among his many recognitions are the 1988 Gold Medal of the National Society of Illustrators, two Silver Awards in the 1989 San Francisco Society of Illustrators Show, and two Gold Awards in the 1990 Illustrators West Show. In 2006, Blackshear had a solo exhibition through the Vatican in Rome; his painting of Pope John Paul II was unveiled for the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Pope John Paul II Foundation.  

Thomas Blackstone II was inducted into the Society of Illustrators Hall of Fame in 2020. He is represented by Broadmoor Galleries in Colorado Springs, Colorado and Trailside Galleries located in Jackson, Wyoming and Scottsdale ,Arizona.

Second Insert Image: Thomas Blackshear, “Background Cactus”, Date Unknown, Oil on Canvas, 58.4 x 50.8 cm, Inquire

Third Insert Image: Thomas Blackshear II, “Old MacDonald”, Date Unknown, Oil on Canvas, Private Collection

Bottom Insert Image: Thomas Blackshear, “Last Drop Out of His Stetson”, Date Unknown, Oil on Canvas, Inquire

 

Ian Young: “I Was Watching Jimmy—“

Photographers Unknown, I Was Watching Jimmy

At a party of university people
Jimmy and I sat on a bed
that seemed to be floating.
The whisky-drinkers
were making identical comments,
dancing ever so slowly,
and eyeing each other.
One girl had put Christmas ornaments
on her ears,
and a long-haired kid
read poems at the wall.

I was watching Jimmy—
his hands
holding a towel
and a book of Prévert—
his bare legs
and the curve of his prick
under the cut-down jeans.
The people all looked at us,
their mouths open,
and began to fade away
just as our bed drifted out the window.

They were waving good-bye
as I took pictures of Jimmy
with an imaginary camera.

Ian Young, Double Exposure, 1970, Double Exposure, New Books, Trumansburg, New York

Born in January of 1945, Ian Young is a Canadian poet, editor and publisher, literary critic and historian. A graduate of the University of Toronto, he founded the Catalyst Press in 1970, Canada’s first gay publishing company that printed over thirty works of poetry and fiction by Canadian, American and British writers until its closure in 1980. 

Ian Young’s first published collection of poetry was the 1969 chapbook “White Garland: 9 Poems for Richard” published through Cyclops Press. This was followed by the 1970 chapbook “Double Exposure” published by New Books in Trumansberg, New York. The chapbook “Lions in the Stream”, a collection by poets Ian Young and Paul Mariah, was published in 1971 by Catalyst Press, as was the 1972 “Some Green Moths” and the “Invisible Words” in 1974.

Young is best known for his editorial work on the 1973 “The Male Muse: A Gay Anthology” published through Crossing Press. Contributors to this collection of early gay poetry included Oswell Blakeston, Robert Duncan, James Kirkup, James Liddy, and John Wieners, among others. Young also edited the 1976 “The Male Homosexual in Literature: A Bibliography”, a basic guide to English-language works of drama, fiction, poetry and autobiographies concerned with male homosexuality or having male homosexual characters. Works were specifically identified as to author, title, publisher and date with works of primary importance marked for convenience. A second edition was published in 1982. 

As a researcher and historian, Ian Young has published several works. In 1995, he published the “Stonewall Experiment: A Gay Psychohistory”, a study that examines self-identity, motivations, behaviors and the belief systems that had shaped the gay community. The study covered such issues  as poetry, advertising and Hollywood cinema. In collaboration with author John Lauritsen, Young published the 1997 “The AIDS Cult: Essays on the Gay Health Crisis”. His 2012 “Out in Paperback: A Visual History of Gay Pulps” was an examination of gay mass-market paperback cover art and its contribution to the development of gay popular culture.

 In 2013, Young published “Encounters with Authors: Essays on Scott Symons, Robin Hardy, and Norman Elder”, a memoir of those three gay Canadian authors and activists. Scott Symons was a revolutionary fiction author and award-winning journalist who left his privileged life for one in exile; Robin Hardy abandoned a future career as an attorney to advocate for the emerging gay movement; and Norman Elder, an explorer and Olympic equestrian, had his career cut short by then existing laws against homosexuality.  

In 2017, Ian Young published “London Skin and Bones: The Finsbury Park Stories”, a collection of stories about early 1980s Finsbury Park. The stories are centered on that blue-collar London neighborhood of anarchist poets, shop boys, stoned philatelists and gay skinheads who mingled and endured the repressive government during the era of Margaret Thatcher. This collection of interwovern vignettes was published by the imprint Squares & Rebels.

In 2020, a bibliographic supplement to “The Male Homosexual in Literature” was published. It included titles overlooked in the bibliography’s Second Edition, plus works written before the 1981 cut-off date but published later. Included in the supplement were works published for the first time in book form such as the original text of Oscar Wilde’s “The Picture of Dorian Gray”, posthumous works including the diaries of Christopher Isherwood and Joe Orton, unexpurgated editions of James Jones’s “From Here to Eternity”, and newly translated classics such as Marcilio Ficino’s “Alcibiades the Schoolboy”, the letters of Marcus Aurelius and John Henry Mackay’s novel “Fenny Skaller”.

Ian Young’s work has appeared in such periodicals as “The Gay & Lesbian Review”, “Canadian Notes & Queries”, “Rites” and “Continuum”, as well as more than fifty anthologies. He was also a regular columnist for “The Body Politic” from 1975 to 1985. Young is a member of Poets & Writers, a literary organization serving poets, fiction writers, and creative non-fiction writers. It is a source of small presses and literary agents as well as readings and workshops. 

Notes: The imprint Squares & Rebels was created in 2012 by Handtype Press to initially publish books about the LBGTQ experience in the Midwest; however, it has expanded to include books that explore the queer and/or disability experience regardless of region. The Squares & Rebels site is located at: http://www.squaresandrebels.com/books/index.html

Jimmy DeSana

The Photography of Jimmy DeSana

Born in Detroit in November of 1949, Jimmy DeSana was an American artist and a key figure in New York City’s East Village punk art and New Wave scene in the 1970s and 1980s. His work, as a conceptual artist, conveyed that ers’s radical spirit and initiated a new approach to photographing the human body.

Born James Arthur DeSana, DeSana spent his early years in Atlanta, Georgia. His interest in photography began as a teenager through photographing the city’s suburban landscapes and both friends and acquaintances. DeSana studied at the University of Georgia where he he earned his Bachelor of Fine Arts in 1972. For his thesis, he printed the 1972 series “101 Nudes”, a collection of fifty-six halftone black and white photographs of nude and partially nude figures posed inside or just outside houses. The figures, friends as well as himself, were seen from different viewpoints and sometimes only partially. Those partial anatomical views were reminiscent of earlier abstract work created by visual artist Man Ray. 

In 1973, Jimmy DeSana relocated to New York City and settled in the vibrant East Village area of Manhattan. As a street photographer doing commercial assignments for magazines as well as occasional record-album commissions, he shot the musicians who habituated late-night clubs and bars. These portraits included punk and New Wave figures such as Debbie Harry, Billy Idol, Richard Hell, Laurie Anderson and others. This commercial work supported DeSana’s photographic artwork in the studio. He was also active in the new correspondence art movement in which artists mailed their work through chain letters. Mailed out in 1973, DeSana’s nude self-portrait was later featured in a 1974 magazine published by the Canada’s conceptual artist collective, General Idea. 

In 1978, DeSana’s photographs of the human body were shown in Washington D.C. at the “Punk Art” exhibition sponsored by the Washington Project for the Arts. In 1979, he had his first exhibition at the Stefanotti Gallery on West 57th Street in New York City. In the same year, DeSana published his first collection entitled “Submission”. a volume of surreal, queer and humorous images that  situated his life and art within the queer and counterculture experiences. The published volume was created in collaboration with author William S. Burroughs.

In 1980, Jimmy DeSana began to experiment with color photography. His “Suburban” series continued his use of human bodies twisted into androgynous sculptural forms that challenged the viewer. In this series, DeSana began to also photograph commonly found objects in staged surrealistic settings.The images of this exploration of sexuality, gender and consumer issues had almost a nightclub atmosphere with their powerful, almost garish, colors of vibrant greens, pinks and mauves. To create his staged tableaus, DeSana used tungsten lights that imbued the surrealistic scenes with unnatural pigments. 

Shortly after 1985, DeSana was diagnosed with HIV and began to experience its symptoms. Continuing his work, he began the “Remainders” series that marked a move from the human body toward abstracted objects. This series featured everyday objects, such as balloons and aluminum foil, seated in dreamlike atmospheres lit in spectral hues.

Jimmy DeSana died, at the age of forty, from an AIDS-related illness at the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center on the twenty-seventh of July in 1990. He left his estate to photographer and filmmaker Laurie Simmons who, in collaboration with Salon 94 Gallery, managed the estate for nearly a decade. The DeSana estate is currently co-managed by Simmons and New York City’s contemporary P.P.O.W. Gallery, one of Manhattan’s longest-running galleries now based in the city’s Tribeca district.

The photography volume “Jimmy DeSana: Suburban” was published by Del Monico Books/Brooklyn Museum in 2015 and included texts by filmmaker Laurie Simmons as well as art curators Dan Nadel and Elisabeth Sussman. A 2022 edition entitled “Jimmy DeSana: Submission” was published, also by Del Monico, with texts by Simmons, author Drew Sawyer, and Brooklyn Museum director Anne Pasternak. The first museum retrospective of DeSana’s work, curated by Simmons and Drew Sawyer, was held in late 2022 at the Brooklyn Museum.

Notes: All images in the header group, unless noted otherwise, are from the Estate of Jimmy DeSana, P.P.O.W. Gallery, New York

Top Insert Image: Jimmy DeSana, “Smoke: Self-Portrait”, 1985, Gelatin Silver Print, Estate of Jimmy DeSana, P.P.O.W. Gallery, New York

Second Insert Image: Jimmy DeSana, “Cowboy Boots”, 1984, Vintage Cibachrome Print, 48.3 x 32.4 cm, Estate of Jimmy DeSana, P.P.O.W. Gallery, New York

Third Insert Image: Jimmy DeSana, “Cardboard”, 1985, Silver Dye Bleach Print, 48.3 x 32.4 cm, Estate of Jimmy DeSana, P.P.O.W. Gallery, New York

Bottom Insert Image: Jimmy DeSana, Untitled (Self-Portrait with Graduation Cap), 1978, Polaroid Photo, Diego Cortez No Wave Collection, Cornell University

Tomas Clayton

The Artwork of Tomas Clayton

Born in 1957 in Birmingham, Tomas Clayton is an English portrait painter who specializes in oils on masonite works. After his parents’ divorce early in his life, the absence of a father figure had an impact on his life that still to some extent permeates the subject and mood of his work. In the late 1960s, Clayton’s mother remarried and the family moved to Hereford where Clayton was awarded a three year Art Foundation Course at the Hereford Art College. 

Clayton returned to Birmingham where he studied graphic design and illustration at the Ruskin Hall College of Art. After leaving college, he worked as a graphic designer and animator for the British Broadcasting Company and Central Independent Television, now known as ITV Central. Several years later, Clayton became a successful freelance graphic designer and illustrator for several corporations. 

In the late 1970s, Tomas Clayton discovered a cache of vintage photographs that included formal portraits and images of family gatherings taken in the late 1800s to the early 1900s. The presence of all the lost personalities, dressed in their stiff collars and corsets, made a strong impression on the style of Clayton’s later work. Other influences were the many painters and illustrators who had captured his imagination in the early 1970s. Among these were Scottish illustrator and painter Wilson McLean, American illustrator Brad Holland, French illustrator Jean Giraud also known as Moebius, and American graphic artist Paul Davis, a Hall of Fame member of the Society of Illustrators.

Clayton’s portraits have a very distinctive style that is carefully created with great attention to detail. Inspired by the nostalgic portraits and artifacts of the First World War era, he creates highly stylized images of actors and soldiers, as well as average men and women, that blend elements of that period with contemporary imagery. The surface areas of Clayton’s portraits are textural and display a surrealistic effect through his use of monochromatic tones. While the face is central to any portrait, the eyes of Clayton’s subjects become, in many of his works, the major focus. Dates written in Roman numerals occasionally are included in his images..

From 2007 to 2023, Tomas Clayton has shown his work in many group exhibitions including regular presentations at the Royal Portrait Society, New English Art Club and Mall Galleries at Saint James, London. In 2016, Clayton won the Columbia Threadneedle Prize for both his “Après la Guerre (After the War)” and “Chère Capucine (Dear Capucine)”, a portrait of a young man playing his resonator at a Parisian night club.

Tomas Clayton is represented by The Contemporary Fine Art Gallery Eton located upstairs at The Piper Art Bar building in Windsor, Berkshire, United Kingdom. Clayton’s work can be found at: https://www.cfag.co.uk/exhibition_thumbs.php?exhibition_id=319&show_rand=0&show_biog=1

Tomas Clayton’s website, which contains contact information for commissioned work, is located at:  https://www.tomasclayton.co.uk

Top Insert Image: Tomas Clayton, “Her Name Was Magill”, Oil on Masonite, 67 x 85.1 cm, Private Collection

Second Insert Image: Tomas Clayton, “Blue-eyed Boy”, 2012, Oil on Masonite, 81 x 90.1 cm, Private Collection

Bottom Insert Image: Tomas Clayton, “The Serpent”, Oil on Masonite, 65 x 65 cm, Private Collection