The Art, Music and Recreation Center and the San Francisco History
Center are pleased to bring you this film screening and book signing.
Fred Lyon: Living Through the Lens, directed by Michael
House, is an intimate exposé of San Francisco photographer Fred Lyon,
who is still going strong after seven decades behind the camera. Though
Lyon is one of America’s leading advertising, interior design,
architectural, food, wine, and travel photographers, he is best known
for his mood-soaked street photography of San Francisco in the ’40s and
’50s.
This film takes the viewer inside the world of Lyon, exploring his
immense archive of San Francisco images, the film also goes into what it
takes to make a living from photography, revealing the story of this
prolific, innovative artist. Photographer Fred Lyon has been called “San
Francisco’s Brassai”. He’s also been compared to Cartier-Bresson,
Atget, and Andre Kertez, but all with a San Francisco twist. Fred
happily admits his debt to those icons.
Now 90, his nonstop career reaches back to the early 1940s and
embraces news, fashion, architecture, advertising, wine and food. These
days find him combing his picture files for galleries, publishers and
print collectors. (An exhibit of his work opens at the Harvey Milk Photo Center on November 8 and runs through January 10, 2015.)
Photographer Fred Lyon will be on hand before and after the film screening to sign copies of his newest monograph - San Francisco: Portrait of a City
RSVP and share this event on Facebook
Main, Koret Auditorium, Thursday, October 2, 6:00-8:00 PM
Tuesday, September 30, 2014
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