WWD Digital Daily

Setting A Record

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It’s been about 51 years, but Rolling Stone now has a cover shot by a black photograph­er.

Dana Scruggs, a photograph­er based in New York whose profile has been on the rise lately with work for Nike and ESPN magazine, is laying claim to the title of first black person to photograph a cover of Rolling Stone. Scruggs admitted that the title “is sweet and bitterswee­t” in an Instagram post.

“I'm out here making history when a year ago I was on the verge of giving up on being a photograph­er altogether,” Scruggs went on. “Never give up on yourself or your dreams. Ever.”

She could not be reached for further comment.

Rolling Stone, founded by

Jann Wenner as a music and culture publicatio­n that eventually expanded to include politics, long published on a twice-monthly basis — meaning more than 1,000 cover opportunit­ies through the decades — and only recently moved to a monthly magazine format. This is part of some changes happening under Penske Media Corp., which at the tail end of 2017 took a majority stake in the title. PMC is also the parent company of WWD.

Catriona Ni Aolain, who in August joined Rolling Stone as its director of creative content, said she'd been following Scruggs' work for a few years and was “a fan,” but the right opportunit­y to use her didn't come up until Travis Scott was set to be in the magazine.

“She was in my mind for a few things…then Travis came up and I thought she would be a great fit for him,” Aolain said.

She added that her selection of Scruggs was led entirely by her aesthetic and body of work and was not an attempt at a p.r. move or a conscious decision to feature a black photograph­er. Apparently, it even came as a surprise to Aolain that Scruggs would be marking an end to half a century of de facto tradition.

“Maybe I had a feeling she was the first black female photograph­er, but I couldn't quite wrap my head around her being the first black photograph­er,” Aolain said. “I thought there had to be someone, maybe in the Nineties. But even now, as far as I'm aware, she is [the first black photograph­er for a cover].”

Rolling Stone, like plenty of other magazines, has long operated through the use of a handful of photograph­ers kept on contract for all of its shoots, which could go some way to explaining how it's taken a magazine that does not have a reputation for being risk-averse with covers — from a naked John Lennon spooning a clothed Yoko Ono to a just-turned 18-year-old Britney Spears in lingerie holding a teddy bear — so long to tap a black photograph­er for one. The use of contract photograph­ers, which basically means a photograph­er is on call and gets paid a flat monthly wage, is said to be largely coming to an end at the magazine.

It's also worth noting that Rolling Stone is not the only well-known magazine to back itself into a rather small corner of talent, be they high-profile or simply dependable. Vogue only recently had its first black cover photograph­er when the young Tyler Mitchell shot Beyoncé for the September 2018 issue. The fashion magazine is 126 years old, and while there are warring industry narratives of whether Beyoncé required a black photograph­er or Vogue chose to use one of its own accord, there's no denying that some former standbys — Mario Testino and Terry Richardson, among other fashion regulars — have found themselves on the wrong side of the #MeToo movement.

If there's a silver lining to any of it, maybe it's that a dearth of highprofil­e talent means covers, and campaigns for that matter, could get a needed shot of creativity from up-and-comers. — KALI HAYS

 ??  ?? Photograph­er Dana Scruggs discussed her trailblazi­ng cover in a recent Instagram post.
Photograph­er Dana Scruggs discussed her trailblazi­ng cover in a recent Instagram post.

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