Photographs, quite naturally, are extremely important to Daily Star Chief Photographer Julie Lewis ... but so are words, as I found out in short order 13 years ago when I became her editor.
Whenever they can, newspapers like to run photographs that relate to adjoining stories, but sometimes the reader is presented with photos and captions pertaining to nothing else on the page.
At my previous papers, they were usually referred to as “wild art.” So, that’s what I called one of Julie’s photos.
“Around here,” Ms. Lewis told me in no uncertain terms, “they are called ‘stand-alones.’”
It is altogether fitting and proper that she set me straight on the term, because when it comes down to who is the most important local photographic historian of the past 30 years, Julie Lewis _ well _ stands alone.
The Daily Star has been blessed with several wonderful photographers who have come and gone through the three decades she has been employed here, but Julie is the one constant, her name virtually synonymous with the newspaper that gave her career its start.
On Friday, your Daily Star will include a special section devoted entirely to Julie’s photography.
Between 7 and 9 p.m. on that day, the Greater Oneonta Historical Society will host a free reception at its 183 Main St. building to launch a gallery of Julie’s work that will be on display through Sept. 10.
Everyone is welcome, which is also
altogether fitting and proper, because Julie seemingly knows everybody around the area, and everybody knows her.
One outstanding journalist who knows her very well is former Daily Star Managing Editor Cary Brunswick, who spent more than a quarter-century sharing the same newsroom with Julie.
“Over the decades, Julie probably is best known to readers for her photos capturing area residents’ life experiences,” Cary responded when I emailed him about working with Julie. “Whether during unique tragedies such as floods and fires, or in the seasonal joys that come and go each year, Julie’s camera has been a mirror reflecting people’s lives onto the newspaper page for others to see.”
If there is one thing apart from her outstanding pictures that I admire about Julie, it’s her uncompromising devotion to the highest ethical standards. She is not just a photographer; she is the quintessential photojournalist.
She attributes that quality to one of her early editors here, Gary Grossman, now publisher of The Daily Item in Sunbury, Pa.
“Gary was the one who put the “J” in photojournalist for me,” she says.
I emailed Gary about what he remembers of the neophyte he set on the right path.
“Thirty years, eh?” he said. “Why do I still remember a rookie photographer who had a passion for photography and a willingness to work hard? Julie seemed instinctively to know that mastering her craft was 90 percent hard work. In the time we were together, Julie Lewis just got better and better.
“I don’t know if we truly appreciate what it means to have someone create the visual record of our lives and times,” he said. “Julie’s images of your readers have got to be one awesome body of work.”
They are, indeed.
Thanks in great part to Cary, Gary, former editor Ken Hall, ex-chief photographer and mentor Bruce Endries, among others, the Julie Lewis I inherited 13 years ago was a veteran photographer with a wall full of statewide awards recognizing her work.
Like anything else of quality, Julie isn’t always easy. She has strong opinions, and so do I. Sometimes, they clash a bit.
Several years back, Julie got so angry with me for some decision I have long since forgotten that she actually resigned.
“That’s it,” she said before storming out of the building. “I quit.”
When an employee resigns, it’s customary for an editor to inform the publisher and human resources director, then start going through resumes of prospective replacements.
I, of course, did none of that.
Julie Lewis without The Daily Star?
Preposterous.
The Daily Star without Julie Lewis?
Absurd.
A few hours later, we talked it out, and she was back where she belongs, creating some of the best photographs you ever saw.
Oh, and don’t think this is any kind of a professional eulogy after only 30 years. Julie is just getting started. I fully expect to attend the exhibit and open house celebrating Julie Lewis’ 50th anniversary at the newspaper she loves.
Sam Pollak is the editor of The Daily Star. He can be reached at spollak@thedailystar.com or at (607) 432-1000, ext. 208.
Columns
Memories of a stand-alone photographer
- Big Chuck D'Imperio
-
-
My pal Brucie, savior of Sidney's hospital
Ask any hospital administrators if they've ever heard of a closed hospital in New York state that has ever been re-opened. They will say, "Impossible." In a half century of going through records you can't find any.
Continued ... - Catching a whiff of 'Vermont Vapor'
- Selections from the virtual mailbag
- Recalling days of 'Doughnut King'
- Opera great's visit still a thrilling memory
-
My pal Brucie, savior of Sidney's hospital
- Cary Brunswick
-
-
We've become our own worst enemies
The past month has been marked by a seeming unprecedented number of man-made tragedies, as distinct from those caused by violent outbursts of the natural world, such as earthquakes, hurricanes and tsunamis.
Continued ... - Plenty of blame to go around for Bangladesh horror
- Obama is going against his word on Social Security
- Reflecting on a Florida trip
- Those magnificent spies in their flying machines
-
We've become our own worst enemies
- Chuck Pinkey
- Guest Column
-
-
The evangelical view of same-sex marriage
The issue of same-sex marriage seems to appear on a daily basis in the media these days.
Continued ... - Manor's fate will be Otsego board's legacy
- A closer look at our economy - Part II
- Use fracking to fill budget gaps
- The kind of people we 'antis' are
-
The evangelical view of same-sex marriage
- Lisa Miller
-
-
A view from above
Fire towers in the Catskill Mountains have always been destination points, built to capture some of the region’s best views. These sentinel stations served an important role for the earliest possible sightings of forest fires in the remote mountain ranges. But the fire towers and those who manned them fulfilled a multitude of other roles as well.
Continued ... - Being a parent is a constant learning process
- Healthy doesn't have to mean expensive
- A family era ends with close of Potter series
- Independent stores make up for loss of Borders
-
A view from above
- Mark Simonson
-
-
Politics, fitness and landmarks dominated local news in May 1968
Area residents mulled over the idea of Gov. Nelson Rockefeller as their next President of the United States. New fitness opportunities emerged for all ages. One area landmark was saved while another was razed. It was only a part of our life and times in May 1968.
Continued ... - Local people sought income in many ways in 1933
- Local windstorm in 1983 caused tense moments
- Disaster, expansions put people to work in May 1913
- Job opportunities abounded in area 45 years ago
-
Politics, fitness and landmarks dominated local news in May 1968
- Rick Brockway
-
-
Kids have sparkle in their eyes
When I was in my teens, old Bill Naatz told me about a stream north of Lake George where a man had panned out enough gold to make his wife a wedding band. It was all rumors, but to his grandson and myself, it sounded like the makings of a great adventure.
- People make the outdoors even better
- Turkey season has ups and downs
- Spring air isn't always the freshest
- Adriondacks keep growing and growing
-
Kids have sparkle in their eyes
- Sam Pollak
-
-
Using time off in the worst way possible
"You don't mean it," I pleaded. "You simply can't mean it!"
Continued ... - Terror lives on, and there's no end in sight
- Remembering the glory of their times
- Column on guns led to a barrage of (mostly) jeers
- No one is coming to take your guns
-
Using time off in the worst way possible
- William Masters
-
-
Schreibman tops Chris Gibson on women's issues
As the time to vote draws near, we need to remember how money can run politics more than we can. Raising funds is a prominent (if not the dominant) task of getting elected. Raising issues is also crucial, but those efforts are subject to distortion and fear-mongering.
- Republicans feelentitled to allthey can garner An entitlement is a legal benefit available from the government to individuals who are within a defined category of recipients, such as needing insurance for unemployment or health services.
-
Romney focuses on self; Obama emphasizes unity
Mitt Romney criticizes President Obama for saying a person's success is rooted in his community, and is not all his alone. Romney belittles this with his belief in individual initiative. He is better at the put-down than the push-up.
-
Romney shows little regard for common man
The Republicans in Congress have voted over and over, 33 times, redundantly and uselessly, to rescind what they call Obamacare.
-
Scouts' gay ban creates problem where none exists
The Boy Scouts of America's "emphatic reaffirmation" of its vow to exclude any and all homosexuals from its hallowed ranks is ill-considered and pathetic, especially in view of its having reviewed the matter for two years.
-
Schreibman tops Chris Gibson on women's issues



