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<p align="center"><br>
<strong><font color="#800000" face="Times New Roman" size="5">Photographer Frank Kuchirchuk Donates Rare <br>
1950s Jazz Photographs to Oberlin<br>
</font></strong></p>
<p align="center"><strong><font color="#800000" face="Times New Roman" size="3"><em>Images of Legends Billie Holiday, Dizzy Gillespie, Charlie Parker, Art Tatum, Stan Getz and More <br><br></em></font></strong></p>
</span><div style="text-align: left;"><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: 10pt;"><font size="2">OBERLIN, OHIO (February 20, 2009) — Frank Kuchirchuk, a retired photographer who took </font><font size="2">live performance</font><font size="2">
photographs of some of the greatest jazz artists during the height of
their careers, has donated his entire collection of jazz images to the <a href="http://new.oberlin.edu/conservatory/" target="_blank">Oberlin Conservatory of Music</a>.
The Frank Kuchirchuk Collection of Jazz Photography contains some 200
images, most of which are negatives that have never been seen by the
public. The collection will be cataloged and archived within Oberlin's <a href="http://www2.oberlin.edu/litoff/" target="_blank">Phyllis Litoff Building</a>,
which is currently under construction and scheduled to open later this
year. A selection of the photographs will be displayed within the
building, which will house Oberlin's <a href="http://new.oberlin.edu/conservatory/departments/jazz-studies/" target="_blank">Jazz Studies Department</a> and its academic programs in music history and music theory.</font></span><br>
<br><span style="font-family: arial,helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: 10pt;"><font size="2">Kuchirchuk,
84, lives at the Ohio Veterans Home in Sandusky. He was moonlighting
from his day job as a photographer for the International News Service
(INS) in the early 1950s when he took the photos, nearly all of them at
Lindsay's Sky Bar, a famous Cleveland nightclub. The images provide a
fascinating glimpse into the performance styles of numerous jazz
legends, among them Dizzy Gillespie, Billie Holiday, Charlie Parker,
Art Tatum, Stan Getz, Lester Young, Coleman Hawkins, and Anita O'Day.
Kuchirchuk's photographs are unique precisely because they capture the
energy of a live performance; they are not portraiture, publicity
stills, or session shots. And one other important factor sets them
apart: most of them have never been printed or published. </font></span><br><br><p><font size="2">Kuchirchuk's
process was inventive, if not cumbersome and painstaking. Because he
wanted to achieve "a theatricality, something extremely dramatic" in
his performance shots, he says that he "began playing around" with
different lighting techniques and effects. "I would sit at home with
the lights down and listen to jazz records. The warmth that I felt in
those performances when I was sitting in my darkened room was what I
wanted to accomplish with my photographs," he says. <br>
<br>
To do this he used flash lighting in multiple locations in addition to
the flash on the camera itself—he set one light up behind the stage for
backlighting, and one or two off to either side of the stage. "I could
unplug the light on the camera to achieve different effects," he says. <font size="2">The flash bulbs that he used had to be replaced after each exposure. To avoid disrupting the performance,</font></font><font size="2"> he had to wait until a set concluded so that he could change out the flash bulbs and take another photo.</font><font size="2"> <br>
<br>
Kuchirchuk photographed the musicians during their performances using a
4 x 5 Speed Graphic press camera—equipment that he says was not
normally used in this context. The camera's large format allowed him to
capture a considerable amount of information in each frame. The 4 x 5
Speed Graphic (the camera of choice for hard-bitten, fedora-wearing
crime photographers of 1940s film noir) contained only one film holder,
meaning it could capture only two images before the camera had to be
reloaded, a process—like switching out the flash bulbs—</font><font size="2">that </font><font size="2">could
take anywhere from 30 to 40 seconds. This sort of winner-take-all
limitation imposed by the camera meant that Kuchirchuk had to compose
his shots with tremendous care.</font><font size="2"><br>
<br>
Kuchirchuk's only national recognition was fleeting: the 1953 <em>Metronome</em><span style="font-style: italic;"> Yearbook</span>
featured his work in a 16-page spread, naming him Photographer of the
Year. The Sky Bar closed in 1954, and Kuchirchuk never took another
jazz photograph. The large-as-life images he had captured on film were
put aside while he concentrated on photo assignments for INS and,
later, United Press International. (One of those assignments included
coverage of the notorious Sam Sheppard murder case and trial in 1954.)<br>
<br>
"I realized that I had a valuable asset in these photos but didn't know
what to do with them until I read about Oberlin," says Kuchirchuk. A</font><font size="2"> November 2007</font><font size="2"> <em>Plain Dealer</em> article </font><font size="2">about
several million dollars in gifts donated to Oberlin for the Phyllis
Litoff Building, inspired him to entrust his collection to Oberlin: "I
thought, 'Hey—everybody knows about Oberlin!'" Kuchirchuk sensed that
Oberlin's reputation as one of the country's top conservatories, as
well as its national profile, would secure for the collection the
protection and the attention that it deserves.<br>
<br> "As
a sometime photographer myself, I was very excited when Frank first
contacted me about his collection," says Associate Dean of the
Conservatory <a href="http://new.oberlin.edu/conservatory/faculty/faculty-detail.dot?id=20957" target="_blank">Michael Lynn</a>,
who is also professor of recorder and baroque flute and curator of
musical instruments. "I have now gotten to know each image thoroughly
during the process of scanning the negatives and doing some minor
restoration. Every photograph Frank took speaks with its own voice,
bringing life to the musicians. You can almost hear the music just by
looking at them."<br>
<br>
"I think this is a tremendous gift," says Professor of African American Music <a href="http://new.oberlin.edu/conservatory/faculty/faculty-detail.dot?id=20949" target="_blank">Wendell Logan</a>,
Chair of Oberlin's Jazz Studies Department. "Typically there are a few
popular photos that reappear in different contexts that we're all
familiar with. His catalog consists of photos that have never been seen
before. For students to see images of the people who actually created
the music that they're learning to play—in various performance
contexts—is a very beneficial thing. These names jump from the page
when you can associate a picture with them. We are certainly indebted
to him for thinking of us."<br>
<br> This spring Oberlin is
planning a special exhibition of selected images from the Kuchirchuk
Collection at a date and venue to be announced. When the <a href="http://new.oberlin.edu/conservatory/news/detail.dot?id=150143" target="_blank">Phyllis Litoff Building</a> opens later this year, the photographs will find their permanent home.<br>
<br>
<strong>About the Oberlin Conservatory of Music</strong><br>
The Oberlin Conservatory of Music, founded in 1865 and situated amid
the intellectual vitality of Oberlin College since 1867, is the oldest
continuously operating conservatory in the United States. Renowned
internationally as a professional music school of the highest caliber
and pronounced a "national treasure" by the <em>Washington Post</em>,
its alumni have gone on to achieve illustrious careers in all aspects
of the serious music world. In reviewing the American premiere of Olga
Neuwirth's opera <em>Lost Highway </em>for the <em>New York Times</em>,
Vivien Schweitzer noted that "Oberlin has produced some of the top
names in contemporary music … Oberlin's rural experimental haven has
resulted in successful music careers in a cutthroat marketplace."
Oberlin offers a premier undergraduate <a href="http://new.oberlin.edu/conservatory/departments/jazz-studies/" target="_blank">jazz studies program</a>, chaired by Professor of African American Music <a href="http://new.oberlin.edu/conservatory/faculty/faculty-detail.dot?id=20949" target="_blank">Wendell Logan</a>,
that prepares students for careers as professional jazz musicians and
for advanced study in jazz. The jazz studies faculty includes composers
and performers who, in addition to teaching lessons and coaching
ensembles, maintain active performing careers throughout the world.
Numerous Oberlin alumni have achieved success in the jazz idiom, among
them keyboardist Ted Baker, pianist and composer Stanley Cowell,
bassist, composer, and arranger Leon Lee Dorsey, pianist, arranger, and
producer Allen Farnham, bassist Ben Jaffe, composer and pianist Jon
Jang, writer, composer, and saxophonist James McBride, and trumpeter,
trombonist, and composer Michael Mossman.<br>
<br>
For more information about Oberlin, please visit <a href="http://new.oberlin.edu/conservatory/" target="_blank">www.oberlin.edu.</a><br>
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