Expanding on Roger's answer a bit, with some code.
A string is always encoded in some format, and to read it you need to know that encoding (especially when using binary reader). In many cases, it's plain ASCII and you can use Encoding.ASCII.GetString to parse it if you get unexpected results (weird characters etc.) then try another encoding.
To parse the image you need to use an image parser. .NET has several as part of their GUI namespaces. In the sample below I'm using the one from System.Drawing (windows forms) but similar ones exists in WPF and there are many third party libraries out there.
using (var reader = new BinaryReader(File.Open(someFile, FileMode.Open))
{
// assuming your string is in plain ASCII encoding:
var myString = System.Text.Encoding.ASCII.GetString(reader.ReadBytes(30));
// The rest of the bytes is image data, use an image library to process it
var myImage = System.Drawing.Image.FromStream(reader.BaseStream);
}
Now MSDN has a caution about using the BaseStream in conjunction with BinaryReader but I believe in the above case you should be safe since you're not using the stream after the image. But keep an eye out for problems. If it fails, you can always read the bytes into a new byte[] and create a new MemoryStream from those bytes.
EDIT:
You indicated in your comment your string is EBCDIC which unfortunately means you cannot use any of the built in Encodings to decode it. A quick google search revealed a post by Jon Skeet on a EBCDIC .NET Encoding class that may get you started. It will essentially give you ebcdicEncoding.GetString(...);