
OHIO graduate, eminent photographerās work featured in Rock and Roll Hall of Fameās social justice exhibit
The photography of 51ĀŅĀ× graduate Chuck Stewart is on display for the first time ever at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in a new social justice exhibit
Story by Kirsten Thomas, BSJ '23 | September 20, 2020
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The photography of the late Chuck Stewart, BFA ā49, has graced the covers of more than 2,000 albums and appeared in numerous documentaries and museums around the worldāand now, for the first time, is on display at Clevelandās Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
In response to the social justice movement sweeping the nation and the Black Lives Matter protests, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame has debuted āItās Been Said All Along: Voices of Rage, Hope & Empowerment.ā The exhibit showcases artists and moments in which music has been used as a medium of change, drawing attention to the power artists and their music have to give voice to the feelings and experiences of those who are oppressed and to provide encouragement and empowerment.
The exhibit, which opened in July and will remain on display for a year, includes artifacts from some of the Hall of Fameās inductees as well as images captured by influential Black photographers, including 51ĀŅĀ× College of Fine Arts alumnus Chuck Stewart. āItās Been Said All Alongā features photographs Chuck Stewart took of James Brown, Ray Charles, Nat King Cole and Gil Scott-Heron over the course of his 70-year career.

The Rock and Roll Hall of Fameās āItās Been Said All Along: Voices of Rage, Hope & Empowermentā social justice exhibit opened in July and features the photography of 51ĀŅĀ× College of Fine Arts alumnus Chuck Stewart.

The Rock and Roll Hall of Fameās āItās Been Said All Along: Voices of Rage, Hope & Empowermentā exhibit is open for both in-person and virtual viewing.

Chuck Stewart, BFA ā49, captured this image of James Brown during a 1966 recording session in New York City. Ā© Chuck Stewart Photography, LLC/Fireball Entertainment Group

Known as the āGenius of Soul,ā Ray Charles was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1986. This photo, taken by Chuck Stewart, BFA ā49, is on display in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fameās new āItās Been Said All Along: Voices of Rage, Hope & Empowerment.ā Ā© Chuck Stewart Photography, LLC/Fireball Entertainment Group

This photo of Gil Scott-Heron was taken by Chuck Stewart, BFA ā49, and is featured in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fameās āItās Been Said All Along: Voices of Rage, Hope & Empowerment.ā Ā© Chuck Stewart Photography, LLC/Fireball Entertainment Group

This photo of Nat King Cole was taken in 1958 by Chuck Stewart, BFA ā49, and is featured in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fameās āItās Been Said All Along: Voices of Rage, Hope & Empowerment.ā Ā© Chuck Stewart Photography, LLC/Fireball Entertainment Group
āKnowing Chuck, he never would have thought that his pictures would have a place in an exhibit such as this for a time such as this because he didnāt document anything of the civil rights movement back in the ā50s and ā60s,ā Kim Stewart said of her father-in-law who passed away in 2017. āHe took these phenomenal, iconic images that are now fitting in different platforms outside of just music. Now, itās also the message.ā
The exhibit shines a spotlight on Black artists who have triumphed over obstacles and, in the process, contributed to a more just and equal society. Chuck Stewart can easily be counted among those artists.
When he enrolled at 51ĀŅĀ× in 1945, Chuck Stewart was one of only a handful of Black students on campus, taking classes in what was the only collegiate level degree-granting photography program in the nation that would accept Black students. He used his photography skills to document life at the University, serving three years on the staff of the Athena Yearbook as a photographer and darkroom manager.

This picture of Chuck Stewart, BFA ā49, was featured in the 1947 Athena Yearbook, where he served as the darkroom manager. Photo courtesy of the Mahn Center for Archives and Special Collections
While at 51ĀŅĀ×, Chuck Stewart developed what would become a lifelong friendship with fellow Bobcat Herman Leonard, BFA ā47, HON ā09. Over the course of the next 60 years, the two contributed in significant ways to each otherās success as photographers whose work documenting the worldās jazz icons made them legends in their field. Both have been honored with having their individual work accepted in the photography collection at the Smithsonian Institution.
āThey were best friends,ā Kim Stewart said of her father-in-law and Leonard. āHerman was Chuckās best man. Herman is the godfather of Chuckās first daughter. They became literally the best of friends and partners and colleaguesāand considered themselves brothers.ā
While Chuck Stewartās professional legacy largely revolves around jazzāthe ābread and butterā of his career as Kim Stewart described itāthe approximately 800,000 negatives in his collection include everything from sports and Hollywood celebrities to musicians from other genres, including the Beatles, Led Zeppelin and Bob Dylan.
Regardless of the subject, he always strived to have his work stand out from that of other photographers.
ā... If you say Count Basie, there must be a thousand photographers that have photographed him,ā Chuck Stewart said in 2016 interview with New Jerseyās WBGO. āWell, I wanted my pictures to say, āThis is a picture Chuck Stewart took of Count Basie.āā

Chuck Stewart, BFA ā49, speaks at the Smithsonianās Warner Theater at a 2014 event celebrating the 50th anniversary of John Coltraneās recording of āA Love Supreme,ā which Stewart captured in photos. Photo by Jeff Malet
Chuck Stewartās work has been featured in countless books and magazines and exhibited at notable venues that include the Grammy Museum, the National Endowment for the Arts and the Smithsonian, where in 2014 he was honored 50 years after shooting photos of John Coltraneās recording of āA Love Supreme.ā His work can also be seen in numerous documentaries, including āChasing Trane: The John Coltrane Documentaryā; āQuincy,ā highlighting the career of Quincy Jones; and āWhat Happened, Miss Simone?ā about Nina Simone. At the moment, Kim Stewart is collecting some of Chuck Stewartās photos for inclusion in an upcoming documentary about Gil Scott-Heron.
āHe documented history, culture and so much with his pictures,ā Kim Stewart said. āFor the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, which I look at as one of the top musical institutions, to say we want to use Chuckās pictures, I think that says a lot. They could have gotten any photographer and any African American photographer, and I just feel honored that they chose Chuck Stewartās because of what those images reflectāof the subjects and of Chuckās work. ā¦ Itās beautiful because itās with a purpose.ā
The Rock and Roll Hall of Fameās āItās Been Said All Along: Voices of Rage, Hope & Empowermentā exhibit is open for both in-person and virtual viewing.
Read more about the life and legacy of Chuck Stewart
Top image: Chuck Stewart, BFA ā49, is pictured in front of some of the thousands of album covers that feature his photography.
Photo by Chuck Stewart/:copyright: Chuck Stewart Photography