The Press

Photograph­er captured Dylan as he went electric

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Daniel Kramer

b May 19, 1932 d April 29, 2024

Daniel Kramer, a photograph­er whose strikingly intimate portraits of Bob Dylan captured the singersong­writer during a pivotal year in popular music, tracing his evolution from a cheery, tousle-haired folk act to an enigmatic, sunglass-clad rock star, died on April 29 in Melville, New York. He was 91.

Kramer, a freelance photograph­er, had no idea who Dylan was until he saw him perform The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll on The Steve Allen Show in 1964.

It would take six months of begging and pleading, including calls and letters to Dylan’s manager, Albert Grossman, before he got his chance to photograph the singer.

Invited to come up to Woodstock, New York, for a one-hour shoot in August 1964, Kramer managed to stay for more than five hours, photograph­ing the singer-songwriter at Grossman’s home and at a cafe where Dylan had lunch and played chess. “It was like a courtship,” he recalled. “I guess I passed the test.”

For the next year, Kramer served as Dylan’s unofficial staff photograph­er, taking pictures of the musician at home, in the studio, on the road and in concert. His photograph­s chronicled a period when one of folk music’s most renowned figures set aside his acoustic guitar and embraced a high-voltage sound, horrifying traditiona­lists while charting a new course for blues-based rock.

“There are other great photos of Bob Dylan, of course, but Dan Kramer’s pictures – at a certain place and time, and in the depth that he did it – are unparallel­ed,” said Washington gallery owner Chris Murray, who organised the first exhibition­s of Kramer’s work, in a 2001 interview with American Photo magazine.

Kramer captured his subject on the verge of breakout success. Many of his pictures revealed a playful side of the musician, wearing a top hat and sneering like the Mad Hatter outside Town Hall in Philadelph­ia; pretending to iron the hair of singer-songwriter Joan Baez, his girlfriend at the time; or mugging for the camera with Johnny Cash, who visited him backstage at a show in New Jersey.

Others were more carefully choreograp­hed and helped establish Dylan’s new public image. For the musician’s 1965 album Bringing It All Back Home, his first to incorporat­e electric instrument­s, Kramer orchestrat­ed a cryptic cover photo showing Dylan sitting with a cat in his lap, surrounded by an eclectic mix of books, magazines, albums and artefacts, including a fallout shelter sign. A woman lounged in a red jumpsuit behind him, cigarette in hand. Adding to the mystery was a blurry swirl around the edge of the picture, a double exposure effect that Kramer created by building a rig that allowed him to rotate the camera.

“I wanted it to feel like the universe was moving around him,” Kramer explained.

Fans investigat­ed each detail, asking after the origins of a clown collage on the wall (made by Dylan himself from cut glass) and conspirato­rially wondering whether the mystery woman wasn’t Dylan himself, donning drag. (In fact it was Sally Grossman, his manager’s wife.)

Kramer received a Grammy nomination for the photo, which was credited as a precursor to conceptual album covers like the photo collage used for the Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.

He went on to photograph the cover for Dylan’s acclaimed follow-up album, Highway 61 Revisited, which was released later that year and opened with Like a Rolling Stone, the singer’s first Top 10 hit.

Kramer said that after a year and a day of photograph­ing Dylan, culminatin­g with a rowdy concert at Forest Hills in New York City (some fans booed and shouted “we want the old Dylan” after he played his new electric songs), he and the musician went their separate ways. By his account, he and Dylan remained friendly, although there appeared to be bad blood for a time, as Dylan’s management team unsuccessf­ully sought an injunction to block the release of Kramer’s 1967 photo book called Bob Dylan, published by the Citadel Press. The rift seemed to have healed by 1985, when one of Kramer’s early portraits of Dylan was used for the musician’s Biograph box set.

Kramer continued to work as a freelance photograph­er, taking pictures of subjects that included author Norman Mailer, for Look magazine; former president Harry S Truman, for Holiday; presidents Ronald Reagan and George HW Bush, for Fortune; and Mario Puzo, the author of The Godfather, for the cover of New York. He also found work in the corporate world, taking pictures that appeared in annual reports for Morgan Stanley.

But he maintained a special fondness for his year with Dylan, which he credited with transformi­ng his approach to photograph­y, leading him to take a more open-ended approach to shoots, and with introducin­g him to a joyous new artistic milieu.

While accompanyi­ng Dylan to Woodstock’s Cafe Espresso one night in 1964, he found himself participat­ing in a jam session with a group that included Baez, Peter Yarrow, and Richard and Mimi Fariña. “I played the spoons,” he said, recalling a rare moment when he put aside his camera. “I was so thrilled. It was one of the great nights of my life.”

The oldest of three children, Daniel Kramer was born in Brooklyn on May 19, 1932. His mother had an administra­tive job at what is now Brookdale hospital, and his father was a dockworker and amateur film-maker who inspired Kramer’s interest in photograph­y.

“By age 14, I had a one-boy show at the junior high school,” he told the New York Times. “I became a profession­al when someone offered me $5 to take a photo. I remember feeling embarrasse­d to take so much money for something that came so easily to me.”

Kramer served a stint in the Army’s Military Police Corps and studied at Brooklyn College. He worked as an assistant to Arbus and her then-husband, actor and photograph­er Allan Arbus, before spending three years with Halsman, who taught him how to work with celebritie­s (Kramer once went into the ring with boxer Muhammad Ali for a photo shoot) and to print his own photograph­s. Halsman also enlisted Kramer for projects like the Jump Book, a 1959 collection of portraits showing celebritie­s and statesmen leaping into the air. “One of my jobs was to wash the bottoms of Marilyn Monroe’s feet after each jump,” Kramer recalled.

By 1964, Kramer had a Manhattan studio of his own. He was aided for decades by his wife and collaborat­or, the late Arline Cunningham, a music-industry veteran.

His photos were later featured in exhibition­s in Amsterdam, Havana, London and Los Angeles and were acquired by institutio­ns including the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York. A limited-edition book of his work, Bob Dylan: A Year and a Day, was published by Taschen in 2018.

That success was difficult for Kramer to imagine when he first pitched his Dylan photos in 1964, showing them to an editor at Pageant, a now-defunct national magazine, the year before Dylan rose to superstard­om.

“The editor said, ‘I don’t need another scruffy kid with a guitar,’” he recalled. “But two weeks later, he called me and said, ‘Do you still have those pictures of that guitar player?’ Let’s look at them again. I have a 15-year-old daughter, and she said if I don’t publish them I’m crazy.’”

– The Washington Post

 ?? DANIEL KRAMER/FAHEY/KLEIN GALLERY, LOS ANGELES ?? Daniel Kramer and Bob Dylan in 1965.
DANIEL KRAMER/FAHEY/KLEIN GALLERY, LOS ANGELES Daniel Kramer and Bob Dylan in 1965.

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