
Stax Museum to host “The Chaos and the Cosmos: Inside Memphis Music’s Lost Decade, 1977-1986 – Photography by Patricia Rainer” March 9 – July 31, 2018
- Opening Reception: Friday, March 9, 2018
- Stax Museum of American Soul Music
- 6:30 pm to 9:00 pm
- Free Admission
The Stax Museum of American Soul Music announced it will host “The Chaos and the Cosmos: Inside Memphis Music’s Lost Decade, 1977-1986 – Photography by Patricia Rainer.” It is longtime Memphis music photographer Patricia Rainer’s first-ever exhibit and spans the musical environment of post-Stax and –Elvis Memphis of the late 1970s and early 1980s. Included in the exhibit are candid and posed images of icons such as Al Green, Willie Mitchell, Memphis Horns legend Wayne Jackson, Sam Phillips, Jim Dickinson, Furry Lewis, and numerous others.
Rainer’s love affair with music began at an early age in Memphis, when she, as a young teen in the 1960s, became president of the Memphis Chapter of the Beatles Fan Club and was granted the task of giving the Fab Four a key to the city when they performed here at the Mid-South Coliseum in 1966.
She soon found herself immersed in the the cultural epicenters of 1970s Memphis State University (now University of Memphis), Yellow Submarine and Pop Tunes record stores, and other local organizations that prompted her to follow another passion, that of photography and videography.
Rainer graduated Memphis State University Cum Laude and by the time she began graduate school there in 1975, she began taking photographs, shooting video, and working on recording sessions as a production assistant and engineer in the thick of the Memphis music scene. She meticulously organized her developed negatives and contact sheets but rarely made larger prints for anyone to see.
Now, for her first-ever solo exhibit of her photographs, Rainer has compiled a collection of images that bear witness to a critical time when the legacy of Memphis music was uncertain. Beale Street was boarded up, Stax Records had been forced into involuntary bankruptcy, The Peabody Hotel was closed, and city leaders were considering tearing down the Orpheum Theater and Overton Park Shell. Rainer’s photographs capture not only the behind the scenes magic of those times, but also played a role in the process of championing the rediscovery of what Memphis almost lost.
Rainer now lives in Los Angeles where she works with Omnivore Recordings – a leading label for musical re-issues and compilations. Through this work she continues to draw attention to neglected gems from Memphis and many of the artists seen in these photographs are represented in the Omnivore catalog.
The March 9, 2018 opening reception at the Stax includes a book signing by author Robert Gordon for his new book Memphis Rent Party.
For more information, press images, and interviews with Patricia Rainer, please contact Tim Sampson, 901-261-6324, tim.sampson@soulsvillefoundation.org.
Follow the event on the Stax Museum’s Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/events/367018983760109/