Culture

Crosscut Tout: A tour of rock history through the lens of a Northwest treasure

Photographer Jini Dellaccio, now 93, helped document the rise of rock 'n' roll, including the Seattle scene. She will appear Saturday (March 12) at the Northwest Film Forum with filmmakers who are making a movie about her life.

Crosscut Tout: A tour of rock history through the lens of a Northwest treasure
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Ashli Blow

Photographer Jini Dellaccio, now 93, helped document the rise of rock 'n' roll, including the Seattle scene. She will appear Saturday (March 12) at the Northwest Film Forum with filmmakers who are making a movie about her life.

March is Women’s History  Month, and what  better way to celebrate locally than by recognizing and supporting the  art of Jini  Dellaccio, a Northwest  treasure and living piece of music history.

If you grew up listening to  rock 'n' roll in the 1960s and '70s, or you're familiar with Seattle’s rock  history from that period, chances are you’ve been exposed to her work.  During the time when rock music was just beginning to forge its identity,  Dellaccio was a pioneering female photographer in a field dominated  by men. Dellaccio, now 93, held her own as a rock photographer and is responsible  for some of the most recognizable album covers and portraits from that  era.

Her camera has captured iconic  figures ranging from Neil Young to Pete Townshend as well as regional  icons such as The Sonics, The Wailers, and Paul Revere and the Raiders. You know the cover for The Sonics "Boom" record?  That's a Dellaccio shot. If you're too young to recall The  Sonics, or if that particular image isn't ringing a bell, chances are you've seen her work on display at The Crocodile, where a dozen giant-sized  Dellaccio prints hang in the storied Belltown venue's showroom.

A documentary about Dellaccio’s  life and career is in the works, and according to the film’s website it “weaves behind-the-scenes stories  of her stunning photography with Jini’s own reflections on her work.”  You can get an early glimpse of the film Saturday (March 12) when an extended  trailer will be shown at the Northwest Film Forum. The event is free but is aimed at raising money to help complete the project. The filmmakers  will be on hand to discuss the movie and take questions from the audience  — as will Dellaccio, who is attending as the guest of honor.

The movie is being produced  by Five  Star Films and  directed by Karen Whitehead, a UK documentarian who has teamed up with  local filmmaker John Jeffcoat for this project. Jeffcoat is best known  for the film Outsourced, which was adapted into an NBC sitcom, and for the series of "Amplified" documentaries that were released last year as part  of MTV’s $5  Cover: Seattle.

If you go: The Jini Dellaccio  documentary extended trailer premieres at 4 p.m. at the Northwest Film Forum,  1515 12th Ave., on Saturday (March 12). Admission is free, but organizers will be collecting donations to help pay for the film and can only process amounts of $50 and up. Backers also can contribute to the film here.

Ashli Blow

By Ashli Blow

Ashli Blow is a Seattle-based freelance writer who talks with people — in places from urban watersheds to remote wildernesses — about the environment around them. She’s been working in journal