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
- Cary Brunswick
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Some wisdom is best passed down through books
I was visiting a friend out-of-town recently and the subject of providing a "reading list" to young people came up in conversation. He said years ago he had asked a respected acquaintance in Oneonta to compile such a list for his teenage daughter, to help her be better prepared for life, culture, education, politics and people.
Continued ... - Let pragmatism, not politics, determine birth control debate
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- Santorum, Obama both got it wrong on Honduras
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Some wisdom is best passed down through books
- Chuck Pinkey
- Guest Column
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If we don’t develop a sustainable system, who will?
In Otsego County’s local elections last fall, a number of candidates — most of them on the independent Sustainable Otsego line — ran on an anti-fracking, pro-sustainability platform. They recognized that our current way of life — dependent on increasingly scarce, costly and polluting fossil fuels — cannot continue.
Continued ... - Time to get off the bus and on the computer
- Cuomo's Machiavellian maneuvers are a danger
- Home rule laws aren't a radical idea
- Sustainable shouldn't be a dirty word
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If we don’t develop a sustainable system, who will?
- Lisa Miller
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Being a parent is a constant learning process
I am sitting cross-legged on the floor in the dressing room, waiting for Allie's dance number to be called. The cave girl costume has been donned, the jazz shoes double-tied, the hair pulled back, the requisite dab of lipstick applied.
Continued ... - Healthy doesn't have to mean expensive
- A family era ends with close of Potter series
- Independent stores make up for loss of Borders
- Untethered from the cable box
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Being a parent is a constant learning process
- Mark Simonson
- Rick Brockway
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Climbing is one thing, but skydiving?
OUTDOORS COLUMN BY RICK BROCKWAY ... Last week, my friend George and I returned to the Gunks for another rock-climbing adventure. After last week's column, I asked about the rattlesnakes and was told not to worry. Rattlers are usually quite timid and will avoid people as much as possible. It's the copperheads that'll give you trouble. They're aggressive and will stand their ground to defend it. Oh great!!
- Rattlesnakes may be closer than you think, so pay attention
- Spring is here, so fishing should pick up soon
- Sneaky fox may be the next animal looking to horse around
- Pass down the rush of turkey hunting to your kids this weekend
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Climbing is one thing, but skydiving?
- Sam Pollak
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I'm happy with our kids to a certain degree
It was several years ago, and I was in the kitchen, telling my eldest daughter and my then-teenaged son about the person who was taking over as publisher at The Daily Star.
Continued ... - I get by with a little help from my 'friends'
- It’s not easy for a politics junkie to get off the stuff
- The Encyclopaedia Britannica in print, unmourned by me
- Angelo Dundee was always a good man to have in your corner
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I'm happy with our kids to a certain degree
- William Masters
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Time for lawmakers who put needs of society first
Richard Lugar, after six terms as a Republican senator -- known for his middle of the road rationality and his foreign policy finesse -- has been ousted by a Tea Party extremist backed by outside right-wing funding.
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War not worth gambling with lives of soldiers
Are you not tired of our war in Afghanistan? It had a point, once, after 9/11. Bush couldn't distinguish his myopic personal agendas from the nation's needs and let Osama escape, dropping the ball entirely, causing many deaths.
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Titanic was a microcosm of U.S. economic disparity
Haunting reminders of the Titanic tragedy have wafted over us with the centenary of its sinking. The maiden voyage of an impressive, state of the art vessel, was a little like that of the Challenger space shuttle, at the cutting edge of developing technology. But the shuttle carried our pride in science and space exploration, not hundreds and hundreds of people.
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William Masters: Nation stands divided between 'us' and 'them'
In February, Trayvon Martin was shot dead as "suspicious" by a volunteer neighborhood watch man. The case has aroused community reaction in Sanford, Fla., and is still echoing across the country.
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A quarterback can't win the game alone
What is the relationship between democracy and wealth? Democracy is a political system, while wealth relates to economics. We have equal political rights, but we don't all have money. Extreme differences destroy the continuity of community solidarity.
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Time for lawmakers who put needs of society first

