NEW YORK, NY.- Elise By Olsen had made a name for herself at 15 as one of the worlds youngest magazine editors, having already produced runs of two print periodicals about culture and fashion from her bedroom in Oslo, Norway. One day in 2015 she received a challenging email: Who are you?
She answered and then came a torrent of emails peppered with links to gallery and store websites, news articles about the fashion industry and warnings about its pitfalls.
Her correspondent turned out to be Steven Mark Klein, a 64-year-old, New York-based hospitality brand consultant and fashion gadfly. For some years, he had run a blog called Not Vogue, which he used as a platform to take the fashion industry to task for being an exploiter of youth and a cynical expression of late-stage capitalism.
At first, Olsen thought he was a troll. He called himself a freelance outlaw.
Klein set out to mentor Olsen, and soon she welcomed his tutelage. Her parents were bemused but supportive. She quit high school and started another magazine called Wallet, which was inspired by Kleins insights.
She learned that he lived alone on New Yorks Lower East Side with an enormous and, it turned out, important collection of fashion ephemera, including fashion magazines, fashion show flyers, catalogs, postcards and look books from designers such as Stella McCartney, Louis Vuitton and A.P.C. decades worth of printed matter that he had saved and meticulously archived.
It was his legacy, and he wanted Olsen to have it.
Klein took his own life Oct. 25, his cousin Andrea Strongwater said. He was 70 and had been in ill health for some time.
His bond with Olsen ensured that his lifes work will live on. His archive is now a museum collection: the International Library of Fashion Research in Oslo, curated by Olsen and funded by private donors and corporate sponsors. Housed in a historic building owned by the National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design and next door to the Nobel Peace Center, the library will open to the public early next year, although the collection is now available online. It is a showcase for Kleins enormous gift 2 tons of printed matter that had filled a shipping container after it was packed up in June 2020.
I dont think you really need a Yoda, Klein wrote Olsen in September, noting her affectionate term for him. The student has surpassed the mentor.
Klein was an unlikely fashion arbiter. His uniform was jeans, sneakers and a T-shirt, although he did have an extremely expensive Patek Philippe watch. And he did not work in the fashion business.
Professionally, he created logos and slogans for hotels and restaurants. But he belonged to no agency. Instead, as an independent consultant, he was a walking encyclopedia and booster of pop culture from the 1970s, when he worked at the venerable Strand bookstore in lower Manhattan; ran his own gallery, briefly, in his Fourth Avenue apartment; and was an occasional assistant to composer Philip Glass.
Hoteliers paid him for that knowledge. They included Larry, Michael and Jason Pomeranc, three brothers who founded the luxury Thompson Hotels brand.
He would come in, on no set schedule, and he spoke in a kind of monologue, Jason Pomeranc said, but there were pearls in there, references to a certain 1950s typeface or industrial architecture or a German haberdashery that seemingly had no connection, but it all came together. Pomeranc and his family now run another hospitality company called Sixty Collective, which Klein helped name.
He helped with our logos and our branding architecture, but what we came to value over the years is that he was a sounding board for us, Pomeranc said. And even though he was a man who lived very much in the past, he had a very good predictive nose for the future.
Steven Mark Klein was born Dec. 16, 1950, to Sam and Hilda (Strongwater) Klein in the Crown Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn. His mother was a homemaker, his father a cabdriver. He grew up on Ocean Parkway in the Brighton Beach section. In 1974 he earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the School of Visual Arts in Manhattan.
One night in 1979 at the Mudd Club, a Tribeca hot spot frequented by artist Keith Haring, fashion designer Betsey Johnson, the Talking Heads and other downtown notables, Klein met Molissa Fenley, a dancer and choreographer, and courted her by asking her to dance, a rare gesture in the club.
They married that year, and he began to market and manage her performances. On a trip to Paris, where Fenley was working for a time in 1982, they were invited to a show of designer Rei Kawakubos line for Comme des Garcons, an infamous event at which Kawakubo presented sweaters pocked with holes, as if chewed by moths or slashed with scissors.
Klein persuaded Kawakubo to make costumes for Fenleys company for a performance called Hemispheres, part of the Next Wave series at the Brooklyn Academy of Music the following year. He asked artist Francesco Clemente to make artwork as well, packets of drawings passed out to the audience. Anna Kisselgoff of The New York Times wrote admiringly of the works awesome strangeness.
It was marvelous, and it was all Stevens idea, Fenley said, adding that it was the beginning of Kleins fascination with the printed matter that might accompany a fashion show. He worked tirelessly on promoting me and my work. And he started me on the practice of gathering ephemera from my career to create an archive.
Their marriage ended in divorce in 1986. Klein is survived by his brother, Neil.
For many years Klein lived in a borrowed apartment in Seward Park, the former union housing cooperative built at midcentury that spreads out below Delancey Street on the Lower East Side. He moved to Carroll Gardens in Brooklyn about a year ago.
He worked on a borrowed Apple computer that dated to 2001, drank only Coca-Cola and liked to hold meetings in The Donut Pub on West 14th Street or at a McDonalds. He seemed to know everyone: scions of Italian luxury brands, underground clothing designers, big-ticket artists.
Lisa Mahar, an artist and designer who created a line of toys for young children called Myland, was a client. Myland was a whole universe, designed to spur creativity and help children learn stackable houses and anthropomorphic cars and tiny characters. Klein was captivated by this child-centered world.
He chose the name, adamant that it be one word, and delivered long discourses on the creative power of children.
He was eternally optimistic about the potential of young people and had great respect for their ideas, Mahar said. He rebelled against anything that might interfere with their ability to think for themselves.
If you are having thoughts of suicide, call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-8255 (TALK). You can find a list of additional resources at SpeakingOfSuicide.com/resources.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.