Frank Stefanko

Frank Stefanko is a fine art photographer with connections to New Jersey performers Patti Smith and Bruce Springsteen. Stefanko's photographs, taken in the 1960s through the 1980s, reveal the emerging careers of the two artists. Stefanko's friendship with Smith and Springsteen continue to the present day.

Early life

Stefanko was born in Philadelphia in 1946, and has been absorbed by photography since he was given an old box-camera when about seven years of age. Among his early "teachers" and inspirations were stark, black-and-white film noir movies, cinematographers such as James Wong Howe, Fritz Lang, and reality photographers such as Diane Arbus, who shot every-day people in natural settings. Stefanko received fine-art training at Glassboro College (now Rowan University) in Glassboro, New Jersey.

It was at Glassboro State College, in the mid-sixties, that Stefanko met and became friends with Patti Smith. He began photographing her even before Robert Mapplethorpe did. Those Patti Smith photographs led to an introduction to Bruce Springsteen. Springsteen saw the portraits and inquired about the photographer.[1]

Photographing Bruce Springsteen

Stefanko was a resident of Haddonfield, New Jersey, for many years.[2]

"Springsteen hadn't recorded anything in quite a while. The Darkness On The Edge Of Town album that we worked on back in 1978... was kind of like his re-emergence. He had been kind of out of the loop for a few years and was coming back", quotes Stefanko.{Days of Hope and Dreams} The two men spent several days shooting photos in and around Haddonfield, Camden, as well as in Stefanko's home. The album cover of Darkness, which features Springsteen lounging against pale-flowered, Cabbage Rose wall-paper, was taken in Stefanko's bedroom in 1978. The entire E-Street Band came down, and were photographed in the same environs. Springsteen's reaction to those sessions appears in the introduction to Stefanko's book Days of Hope and Dreams: "The pictures were raw....their directness, their toughness, were what I wanted for my music at that time."{Days of Hope and Dreams}

In Springsteen's autobiography, Born to Run, he describes Stefanko's photos as "...stark. He managed to strip away your celebrity, your artifice....They were lovely and true....he naturally intuited the conflicts I was struggling to come to terms with." In September 2016, when Springsteen released his autobiography, he chose Stefanko's 1978 photograph "Corvette Winter" to be on the cover. It depicts Springsteen leaning on the front of his Corvette, with a Haddonfield, New Jersey, home and porch behind him. It seems to depict Springsteen's lyrics: "From your front porch to my front seat, the door is open but the ride ain't free." The Corvette image also appears on the CD Chapter and Verse, and on the Official 2017 calendar.

Stefanko's photographs of Bruce Springsteen also grace the album covers of Darkness on the Edge of Town [3] and The River. Regarding the cover-art for The River, "... the back cover was "not thought out" — given not only Springsteen's penchant for overthinking, but also the thematic ties of Frank Stefanko's store window image, including its depiction of bride(s) and groom, and the first use of the American flag on a Springsteen album."[4]

Stefanko's photos appear in Springsteen's Live 19751985 CD, in Tracks, Greatest Hits, in the book Greetings from E Street by Robert Santelli, American Madness by Julio Blanco, as well as in books by Dave Marsh and in BRUCE, by Peter Carlin.

Stefanko also created the covers for Southside Johnny's Hearts of Stone album,[2] the Shonde's album The Garden, and for Songs of Springsteen, to benefit Radio Station 105.7 "THE HAWK".

Many of Stefanko's photos, including some never before seen, appear in the special edition, remastered thirtieth-anniversary box-set of Darkness and in the documentary The Promise, released in November 2010. Stefanko appears in a brief interview in The Promise.[5]

His images have been shown in the exhibition "Springsteen: Troubadour of the Highway", which toured the US from 2002 to 2004, sponsored by the Frederick R. Weisman Art Museum in Minneapolis. Colleen Sheehy, curator of the production, is quoted as saying, "Frank Stefanko's photographs show a sublime convergence of singer and image at a critical point in Springsteen's career".[6] The "Troubadour" show appeared at the Cranbrook Art Museum, The Experience Music Project, the Newark Museum of Art, and at Monmouth University.[7][8]

Stefanko is among 43 fine-art photographers invited to donate a print to "FOCUS: an auction of the finest photography to benefit City Harvest...." The fund-raiser in 2008, supported City Harvest, a food collection bank in New York City.[9] He has also donated photos which will raise funds to benefit the Food Bank of North Jersey, for relief of Hurricane Sandy.[10]

One-man photographic exhibitions with vintage silver-gel portraits by Stefanko include "Days of Hopes and Dreams: An Intimate Portrait of Bruce Springsteen" (Chris Murray, Director of the Govinda Gallery in Georgetown, DC, said, "The Haddonfield, New Jersey pictures ...are among the best photographs of Springsteen.",[11]) and "The Swamps of Jersey" tour, an installation shown at SNAP Galleries in Birmingham, England and in the Morrison Hotel Galleries in SoHo, New York and LaJolla, California.

Some of Stefanko's notable Springsteen photographs, along with those taken by Danny Clinch, appeared at Philadelphia's National Constitution Center as part of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's exhibition "From Asbury Park to the Promised Land", in February through September 2012. Springsteen's 1960 Corvette, along with Stefanko's photo of Springsteen posing with that same Corvette, were at the entrance of the exhibition.

Photos by Stefanko, Danny Clinch, Eric Meola (Born to Run), and Pam Springsteen are featured in the Grammy Museum's traveling show Bruce Springsteen, a Photographic Journey, which opened at the Woodie Guthrie Center, in Tulsa, Oklahoma, in April 2014. In 2015, the show toured other venues.[12]

Books

Patti Smith-American Artist has been produced as a fine-art photography book containing some of the “most beautiful portraits of Patti Smith ever taken” according to photographer Bob Gruen. The intimate photographs, along with Stefanko's first-hand accounts, capture the period of cultural change from the mid-1960s to the late 1970s, when a new genre of music was being born. The book chronicles young Smith’s emergence as a writer, painter, singer-songwriter, performer, poet, mystic, and political activist: a true “American Artist”. Smith has said of Stefanko, "good [turnpike] exit, good work, good friend."[13][14]

Days of Hope and Dreams is Stefanko's first book, published in 2003. It is "An intimate Portrait of Bruce Springsteen" in black and white images taken from 1978 to 1982. The book contains recollections and anecdotes of the friendship between the two men. In the book's introduction, Springsteen says: "The cover shot of 'Darkness' was taken in Frank's bedroom, and any exterior shots were taken either in Frank's yard or on the streets of Haddonfield [NJ]. The pictures were raw. Frank had a way of stripping away any celebrity refuse you may have picked up along the way, and finding the you in you....Frank always shot your internal life. He let your external imperfections show. His photos had a purity and poetry...."[15]

Notes

  1. Days of Hope and Dreams
  2. 1 2 Varga, George. "'Frank Stefanko' an exhibit that the Boss is sure to like", The San Diego Union-Tribune, June 12, 2005. Accessed January 24, 2008. "The mostly self-taught photographer was married with two young sons. When Springsteen called, Stefanko asked if he should come to New York. The Boss said he'd prefer to come to Stefanko's home in the sleepy New Jersey town of Haddonfield."
  3. http://www.kshe95.com/musicnews/story.aspx?ID=1287219
  4. quotes art-director, Jimmy Wachtel, for BACKSTREETS magazine, (News April 13, 2016.)
  5. "HBO". Retrieved 16 September 2016.
  6. Troubador museum pamphlet.
  7. Weisman Art Museum, Information about "Springsteen: Troubadour of the Highway"; George Tysh, "Hungry heart: Cranbrook Art Museum gives us Bruce Springsteen in-depth", Metro Times (Detroit), June 18, 2003
  8. "The Boss on Exhibit".
  9. Photographer, Eric Meola (14 November 2012). "Springsteen Photographers for Sandy Relief - Huffington Post". Retrieved 16 September 2016.
  10. Foreword,Days of Hope and Dreams, p. 6.
  11. http://www.joplinindependent.com/display_article.php/todd1396668076 http://nt.gmnews.com/news/2015-09-24/Front_Page/Universitys_gallery_features_Springsteen_images.html
  12. Days of Hope and Dreams, back cover.
  13. Patti Smith American Artist. Insight, c. 2006. ISBN 1-933784-06-7.
  14. Days of Hope and Dreams: An Intimate Portrait of Bruce Springsteen. Watson-Guptill, c. 2003. Insight, 2003. Watson-Guptill, 2003. ISBN 0-8230-8387-X. Second Edition release September, 2011, by Insight Editions. ISBN 1-60887-031-6

Monmouth University 9/27/15; "Bruce Springsteen: a Photographic Journey", Q & A seminar: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BPqGWfOXqpk

South Jersey Magazine Interview (search Stefanko)

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