It is with a very heavy heart we report to you, that Jim French, the founder of COLT Studio has passed away in his sleep in his home in Palm Springs, California. He was 84 years old. Even though Mr. French has not been involved with COLT Studio Group since 2003 he will be forever missed and admired for his great body of work.
Jim French is an American illustrator and photographer who created the male erotic photography studio Colt Studio, as well as its two predecessors, Arion Studio and The Luger Studio. French was born on July 14, 1932, and quickly developed a taste for the fine arts. He attended the Philadelphia Museum School of Art from 1950 to 1954 with an eye towards a career in fashion illustration along the lines of J.C. Leyendecker. Following college, he enlisted in the Army, serving for two years and earning an honorable discharge. With photography quickly taking the place of fashion illustration advertising, French became a freelance advertising illustrator.
In his spare time, French began creating romantic homoerotic illustrations under the pseudonym Arion, largely in the period from 1964-65. In early-1966, French's illustrations under the Arion name were first offered via mail order by Arion Studio, based in New York City. It is unknown if this was a solo venture run by French or a precursor to The Luger Studio, but the venture was short-lived, resulting in only one mailing. French's Arion drawings were also offered in 1966 via Ed Wild's Times Square Studio.
In mid-1966, French was approached by an old Army friend Saul Stollman, who was aware of French's Arion drawings, to create a physique studio, again operated out of New York City. The two went into business as The Luger Studio. For this business venture, French adopted a new pseudonym Kurt Luger, and his new illustrations exhibited a more masculine aesthetic, featuring cowboys, leathermen, wrestlers and other similar archetypes. Indeed, the name Luger, sans the superfluous umlaut that French added as an artistic flourish, was selected to evoke the German pistol. The illustrations French produced in this time were largely based on Polaroid reference photos he took of male nude models, and this led him to also venture into photography. The Luger Studio quickly experienced success after being featured on the cover and in the pages of Kris Studios' Mars and other physique magazines. French quickly became suspicious of Stollman's failure to handle the business end of the studio, however, and hired his friend Lou Thomas on August 8, 1967 to look into the business side. By October 1967, Thomas was so frustrated by the mess that he left COLT Studio, and within a month French and Stollman had agreed that Stollman should buy out French and lead Luger forward on his own. Stollman would make a final buyout payment to French in February 1968, but carried on briefly on his own, featuring at least one illustration photo set by himself and a few photographs and 8mm films created by other substandard producers. No further reference to Luger is known beyond 1968.
On December 1, 1967, Jim French and Lou Thomas discussed starting their own studio together and on December 5, 1967, the pair took out a business license to form COLT Studio. Like Luger, COLT Studio was named to evoke the image of a pistol, but very quickly the studio morphed its COLT image into the model of a young stallion. For the COLT venture, French assumed the new pseudonym Rip Colt, with the Rip portion of the name being inspired by the physique photographer Rip Searby. The first several years of the studio saw COLT sticking to the model of releasing French's illustrations under the Rip Colt name, photo sets featuring masculine male models, and eventually 8mm short films, magazines and calendars. For its first six years, COLT Studio was based out of New York City, but French traveled so frequently to Southern California that he eventually relocated COLT to Studio City, California in 1974. Concurrent with this change, French bought out Lou Thomas' share in the company, freeing Thomas to branch out on his own and form Target Studios.
COLT Studio would eventually grow into one of the most successful gay erotic photography studios of its time. The company was famed not only for its stable of male models, but for its long-running magazine brands which included Manpower, COLT Men, Spurs, and COLT Studio Presents, as well as its calendars. Jim French continued to run the company until 2003, when former Falcon Studios director John Rutherford purchased the COLT name and rebranded the company the COLT Studio Group. For a few years after his sale of the company, French continued to privately sell salon prints of his photographs, but he has since settled into a quiet retirement. The COLT Studio Group continues to feature much of French's work on their website.
Read the Advocate's article with Jim's own words HERE.
Bearfuzzlover
June 25, 2017
I am so deeply saddened to hear of the death of Jim French… a legendary photographic artist that turned many of his Classic Beefcake Men of Colt into Icons as Adonis Greek Gods kissed by the sun or Bears to bed down with that made a lasting impression.
Coming from the other side of the Pond, it was only when I was on a “sabbatical” year out staying in my Uncle’s Chelsea Hotel apartment in New York as a then “Twink” in the late 1980’s that I first saw images of Bruno as part of my “adult education” so I have a lot to thank New York for, as well as Jim for “introducing” me to Bruno!
From that moment on as a then teenager, I fell deeply and madly in love with Bruno as my idea of an all-time Bear “Partner for Life” but sadly someone I never knew… despite being only two blocks away at the time yet not knowing Bruno was in New York, otherwise maybe I would have become engaged there and then later married to him and become a US Citizen!
Jim left me with a priceless gift with the images of Bruno without knowing who he was at the time… but soon my “adult education” raced at turbo speed finding out as I could about him… as with the many other Colt models I have since paid tribute to in Bios as Colt Classics… although Bruno will be the one man I have everything to thank Jim for as a dedicated and talented photographic artist, as no one can ever walk in his legendary footsteps, so I have so much to thank him for!
R.I.P. Jim… in spirit you live on as do your many, many Classic Men of Colt!
“… Time can bring you down, time can bend your knees
Time can break your heart, have you begging please, begging please
Beyond the door there’s peace I’m sure
And I know there’ll be no more tears in heaven…”
Eric Clapton – “Tears In Heaven”
Marc