Castro to Christopher Street

Page 1

American Queer 1982-1984

From Castro to Christopher Street by

Nicholas Blair

1


Christopher Street Pier, NYC, 2924.27

2


Fire Island, NY 2713.36

3


After a Rally, Civic Center, SF, 2606.1

4


Fire Island, NY, 2696.3

5


Market Street near Castro, SF, 2583.27

6


Mile Rock Beach, SF. 2871

7


West Village, New York, 2992.15

8


West Village, NY 2986

9


Castro Street, SF. 2626.22

10


Castro Neighborhood, SF, 2611

11


Castro Street, SF. 2626.20

12


Castro Street, SF. 2624.24

13


Castro Street, SF. 2626.27

14


Castro Street, SF. 2626.22

15


Market Street near Castro, SF 2658.

16


Folsom Street Fair, SF. 2978.32

17


Castro Street, SF. 2628.59

18


Castro Street and Market, SF, 2636.28

19


Castro Street, SF 2830.10

20


Folsom Street, SF 2956.4

21


17th and Castro Street, SF, 2636.3

22


Folsom Street, SF, 2914.26 23


24


25


Pride Parade, San Francisco 2627.9

26


Pride Parade, San Francisco 2627.3

27


Pride Parade, San Francisco 260.35

28


Pride Parade, SF 2456.05

29


Street Fair, SF 2446.18

30


Marijuana Legalization Rally, SF 2300.15 31


Pride Parade, San Francisco 2608.8 32


Castro Street, SF 2861.16 33


Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, Pride Parade, San Francisco 2594.04

34


Pride Parade, San Francisco 2600

35


Pride Parade, San Francisco 2437.21

36


Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, Pride Parade, San Francisco 2601.25

37


Pride Parade, San Francisco 2437.1

38


Pride Parade, San Francisco 2456.12

39


Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, Pride Parade, San Francisco 2456.15

40


Pride Parade, San Francisco 2444.31 41


Pride Parade, San Francisco 2437.42

42


Pride Parade, San Francisco 2601.16

43


Pride Parade, San Francisco 2602.2

44


Pride Parade, San Francisco 2602.22

45


Castro Street Fair, San Francisco 2631

46


Castro Street Fair, San Francisco 2630.8

47


Pride Parade, SF 2437.29 48


Pride Parade, SF 2601.10

49


Castro Street, SF 2841

50


51


Halloween, San Francisco 2813.22

52


Street Fair, San Francisco 2630.10

53


Castro Street, San Francisco 1841.20

54


Street Fair , San Francisco 2829

55


Street Fair, San Francisco 2422.25 56


Street Fair, San Francisco 2957 57


Folsom Street Fair, San Francisco 2957.2

58


Tricycle Race, Castro Street, SF 2583.21

59


Castro Street, San Francisco 2822.38

60


Folsom Street Fair, San Francisco 2990.4

61


Civic Center Rally, San Francisco 2606.16

62


Folsom Street Fair, SF 2938

63


Castro Neighborhood, SF 2827.9

64


Street Fair, SF 2628.36 65


Castro and Market Street, SF 2856.3

66


Castro Street, SF 2626.3

67


Castro Street Fair, SF 2631.30

68


Castro Neighborhood, SF 2593

69


Pride Day, SF 2601.23 70


Castro and Market Street, SF 2348 71


Garage Sale, Castro Street, SF 2684

72


Softball Game, SF 2589.28

73


Softball Game, SF 2612.31 74


Castro Street, SF 2531 75


Crossing Castro Street, SF 2457.1

76


Castro Street, San Francisco 2670.15

77


Castro Street, SF 2575.1

78


West Village, NY 2497.4

79


Castro Street, SF 2629.17

80


Crossing Castro Street, SF 2567.29

81


Castro Street, SF 2626

82


83


Gathering for Pride Parade, West Villiage, NY 2987.4

84


Gathering for Pride Parade, West Villiage, NY 2926.11

85


Pride, NY 2993.6

86


Pride, NY 2993,15

87


Mayor Koch with a veteran of Stonewall, Pride Parade, New York 2987.2

88


Pride Parade, NY 2993.12

89


Pride Parade, NY 2987.6

90


Pride Parade, NY 2987.37

91


Pride, NY 2996.42

92


Pride Parade NY 2926.43

93


Pride Parade NY 2926.12

94


Pride Parade NY 2987.8

95


Pride, NY 2993,21 96


Protesters, Pride Parade, NY 2926.34

97


Christopher Street, NY 2987.39 98


After Pride, Christopher Street, NY 2992.36

99


Christopher Street, NY 2992.36

100


Christopher Street, NY 2992.35

101


102

Christopher Street, NY 2992.17


103


Christopher Street Pier, NY

104


105


Christopher Street Pier, NY 2773

106


Christopher Street and Twelth Avenue, NY 2417.31

107


Christopher Street Pier, NY 2773.15A

108


Provincetown, Mass 2754.29

109


Christopher Street Pier, NY 2714.23

110


Christopher Street Pier, NY 2415.18

111


Twelth Avenue and Christopher Street, NY 2418.2

112


Christopher Street

Pier, NY 2421.8

113


By the Christopher Street Pier, 2442.20

114


Folsom Street, SF 2990.13

115


Twelth Avenue near Christopher Street, NY 2438.39

116


Christopher Street, NY 2428.24

117


Twelth Avenue near Christopher Street, NY 2773.43

118


Christopher Street, NY 2418.08

119


Twelth Avenue Parj, NY 2773.43

120


Christopher Street Pier, NY 2447.23

121


Christopher Street Pier, NY 2429.18

122


Christopher Street Pier, NY 2447.22

123


Castro and Market Street, SF 2558.29

124


Christopher Street Neighborhood, NY 2992.1

125


Halloween, NY 1207

126


127


Halloween, NY 2763.32

128


Halloween, NY 5071

129


Halloween, SF 2454.19

130


Halloween, SF 2454.7

131


Halloween, NY 2807.25

132


Halloween, NY 2807.14

133


Halloween, NY 2805.25

134


Halloween, SF 2810.1

135


Halloween, SF 2813.32A 136


Halloween, SF 2814.10 137


Halloween, NY 3889

138


Halloween, NY 3815.16

139


Halloween, SF 2454.20

140


Halloween, SF 2454.25

141


Halloween, NY 3863.20

142


Halloween, NY 2807.31

143


Castro Street, 2575.23

144


Christopher Street, NY 2992.6

145


Castro Street Area, SF 3577.25

146


Castro Fair, SF 2669.3

147


Castro Street, SF

148


149


Castro Street, SF 2664.30

150


Castro and 17th Street, SF 2651.4

151


Aids Rally, SF 2592.22

152


Aids Rally, SF 2574.17

153


Aids Rally, SF 2574.6

154


Aids Rally, SF 2574.37

155


Aids Rally, SF 2574.11

156


Aids Rally, SF 2574.15

157


158

Aids Rally, SF 2574.2


159


Provincetown, MA

160


161


Provincetown, MA 2783.10

162


Provincetown, MA 2764.9

163


Provincetown, MA 2783.11

164


Provincetown, MA 2754.12

165


Christopher Street Pier, NY 2924.14

166


Provincetown, MA 2754.26

167


Mile Rock Beach, SF. 2871.2

168


Point Reye, CA 2548.26

169


Softball Game, SF 2584.39

170


In The Castro, SF 2626.3

171


After Pride, NY 2996.3

172


Twelth Avenue and Christopher Street, NY 2718.16

173


Christopher Street Pier, NY 2714.7

174


Christopher Street Pier, NY 234.5

175


Twelth Avenue, NY 2967.16

176


Twelth Avenue Park, NY 2410.3

177


Christopher Street Pier, NYC. 2428.26

178


Christopher Street Pier, NYC, 2718.26

179


180

Christopher Street Pier, NY 2449.12


181


182

About the Photographs

In 1974 I dropped out of high school in New York City and hit the road. Fifteen months later, after hitchhiking as far as Buenos Aires, I landed in San Francisco where I joined my brother in a small arts commune called the Modern Lovers. I was carrying Ad Reinhardt’s Leica rangefinder camera, lent to me by his daughter, Anna, who I knew in high school, when I had taken a few classes with the photographer Melissa Shook. Pretty soon I was cruising around photographing with a friend of my brother name Larry Bair, who owned a car, and who invited me to sit in on classes with Hank Wessel at the San Francisco Art Institute. We photographed throughout the San Francisco Bay area, and even as far south as Santa Cruz and Los Angeles. I learned the technique of pre focusing the camera and smoothly photographing a subject to keep the action as candid and unobtrusive as possible. No focusing or fiddling with a zoom lens. As a teenager my father Vachel had shown me the Cartier-Bresson book “The Decisive Moment,” which made a deep impression, and now studying with Hank and Larry I was perfecting a method that required softly focusing my eyes while observing my surroundings, and then photographing with a 35mm lens because that had a very similar field of view as the human eye, and hence most accurately represented what I had been looking at. Photographing became about observing: people, light and the environment. Then in the darkroom I discovered how 3 dimensional color reality changed when converted into a two dimensional black and white image and how the print allowed close scrutiny of a frozen moment, sometimes also suggest a back story, like a still from a film. In San Francisco the gay scene was unfolding around me. My first Halloween parade was on Polk Street, and a definite eye opener. I had never witnessed anything similar in New York. It wasn’t, however, until I returned from a year long photography trip to India and Europe that I began spending more time photographing in the gay


neighborhoods. I had decided to put together a portfolio of some romantically themed photographs, mostly of couples taken in Paris. It soon became obvious that there were no pictures of gay couples, a glaring omission in a place like San Francisco. At first I was simply interested in photographing for that portfolio, but the more time I spent in gay neighborhoods the more interesting they became. Of course there was the obvious Mardi Gras type of atmosphere, perhaps an expression of a new found freedom, but there were quiet moments, and the interesting mingling of new and established cultures. Mirror dressing was big. It was unpredictable and full of surprises. There were often groups of people hanging out and watching life go on about them, similar to the way I was, just without a camera. Eventually I realized part of what they were observing was me. It was a scene that I became a part of. In early 1982 I made contact with the national gay magazine the Advocate and the French magazine Gay Hebdo Pai, both of whom published portfolios of my work. Additionally editors at the local Bay Area Reporter published a weekly photograph of mine for 9 months in 1983. New York was my hometown, and I was often there visiting family, so it was only natural that I also started photographing there. The Christopher Street pier was fantastic, especially in the late afternoon light, looking out over the Hudson River, with a derelict freighter by its side. I also visited Fire Island, and Provincetown, Massachusetts. Photographing had become an observational meditation for me, a kind of Zen practice where if done correctly I would quiet my mind and just observe. The Gay neighborhoods were just one area of many where I spent time. Sadly this was also when the aids epidemic hit, taking with it scores of people including my good friend and mentor Larry Bair. In 1985 I left San Francisco when I landed a job photographing and traveling with a film team covering the famine in Ethiopia. This led to more travel assignments and soon I moved permanently to New York City. I hope these images express, with a clear vision, a time and place full of potential and importance. 183


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.