Ed Gallucci (born 1947) is an American photographer[1] currently living in South Dakota. He is the first magazine photographer to photograph Bruce Springsteen and 40 covers of Newsweek in the 1970’s thru 1990’s.
After exhibiting his work at Grey Advertising in the late 1970s, Gallucci was encouraged to make the switch from editorial to commercial studio photography. Gallucci Studio Inc. was established in Manhattan and occupied four different addresses between 1978 and 1998. Under these auspices Gallucci shot hundreds of magazine spreads and covers for: Newsweek, Business Week, Fortune, U.S. News & World Report, Discover, Longevity, New York Magazine, PC Magazine, Psychology Today, Science, Video Review, Weight Watchers, and Family Health magazines. Thousands of Gallucci's photographs have appeared on print ads, billboards, book covers, annual reports, catalogs, and brochures. His work appeared internationally in Photo-Graphis for seven consecutive years. From 1979 to 1993, while on assignment with the magazine's cover department, Gallucci's work was published on over 40 Newsweek covers[6]
Exhibits
Photos from Gallucci's Frames Between Fares collection were on exhibit in the O. Winston Link Museum[7] in Roanoke, VA. The show opening was July 25, 2014. Similar to O. Winston Link, Gallucci grew up in Brooklyn, NY and found himself in Southwest Virginia.
Photos from Gallucci's Bruce Springsteen collection were on exhibit (May 26, 2016 through June 19, 2016) at the Grammy Museum[8] as part of the Los Angeles traveling show, documenting the early days of Bruce Springsteen's career.[9] The show opened at the Woody Guthrie Center[10] in Tulsa, Oklahoma in April 2014 and will be displayed in museums throughout the country for two years. Other photographers in the show include, Danny Clinch, Eric Meola, Barry Scheier, Frank Stefanko, Pamela Springsteen.
The Grammy Museum[8]"Bruce Springsteen: A Photographic Journey" traveling show was on exhibit at the Morven Museum and Garden[11] in Princeton, NJ November 18, 2016 - May 21, 2017 which features photos from Ed Gallucci's Bruce Springsteen collection.
Six of Gallucci's photographs have been accepted into the permanent collection of the prestigious Brooklyn Museum of Art.[12]
Gallucci was one of five photographers whose works were featured at a special exhibition, "Thinking Photography: Five Decades at the Kansas City Art Institute" at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art,[13] where his work is also exhibited in the museum's permanent collection.
Monmouth University in Monmouth, NJ hosts a permanent collection featuring 36 of Gallucci's photographs. In 2012, Gallucci and Crawdaddy magazine editor Peter Knobler lectured in conjunction with a special show, "Ed Gallucci - The Crawdaddy Years and Beyond" at Monmouth University's Pollak Gallery.[14][15] The university also featured Gallucci's photographs in "Bruce Springsteen: A Photographic Journey" at its Rechnitz Hall exhibit from September 8 through December 22, 2015.[16]
"The Crawdaddy Years and Beyond” photographs were also exhibited at the Sumter County Cultural Commission in Sumter, SC during the months of April and May 2016.[17]