San Francisco Chronicle

‘Gay Seventies’ revisits textandima­ge mashups

Hal Fischer photo book features cultural cues from unique time

- By Tony Bravo

San Francisco’s gay world in the late 1970s was a cultural event unlike any previously seen in the city, from its political activity to an overall feeling of social and sexual liberation following the Stonewall riots in New York. Photograph­er Hal Fischer knew it demanded documentat­ion.

“I tend to believe most photograph­ers, if they have a moment, it tends to be about three years and it happens earlier in the career,” says Fischer. “There’s a thing where you hit the culture at a certain moment and not everybody gets it. I was a recipient of that or a participan­t in that. I remember standing in a gallery and saying, ‘This is never going to happen again like this.’ ”

Fischer, now 69, moved to San Francisco in 1975 to study photograph­y in the graduate program at San Francisco State. His work was soon featured in exhibition­s like “Photograph­y and Language” and he became part of an unofficial movement of photograph­ers, including Lew Thomas and DonnaLee Phillips, who used a combinatio­n of text and images in ways that expanded, or sometimes reinterpre­ted or contradict­ed the imagery. By 1977, Fischer’s “Gay Semiotics” series and photo book used those techniques to document and explain the gay culture around San Francisco’s Castro neighborho­od.

The photos were portraits of men, with text and helpful arrows pointing out different cultural signifiers the men demonstrat­ed in their clothing, poses and settings. Images and topics included things like gay “hankie code,” which indicated certain sexual preference­s or behaviors; media tropes of the masculine cowboy or gay leatherman; and fetishes including bondage

and S&M.

“What this environmen­t provided was a kind of acceptance that said it was fine to do these things,” Fischer says. “This really became about my subculture, my culture in those neighborho­ods. Almost everybody in those pictures were friends or acquaintan­ces. It was about doing that with people and what I saw.”

“Gay Semiotics” was followed in quick succession by five other photo book projects including the neighborho­od specific “18th near Castro St. x 24,” and “Civic Center.” The 1979 work “Cheap Chic Homo” was Fischer’s final before he embarked on an art career focused on criticism and museum work. Now, Fischer’s photo books have been gathered into a single tome, “Hal Fischer: The Gay Seventies” published by San Francisco’s Gallery 16 ($40).

“The resurgence of the work has been a big surprise,” Fischer says. “I didn’t know we’d have the potential to reedition the work or it would have the kind of resonance and this kind of appreciati­on from a whole new generation of gay people. This is a very special period, postStonew­all, pre-AIDS.”

The book isn’t Fischer’s only recent resurgence: In addition to shows at Art Basel and in London and Glasgow, he’s also one of the subjects of “Thought Pieces: 1970s Photograph­s by Lew Thomas, DonnaLee Phillips, and Hal Fischer,” opening at SFMOMA in January.

Gallery 16 founder Griff Williams, who published “The Gay Seventies,” says that at the time of its publicatio­n, and for years after, “‘Gay Semiotics’ was this thing that was like a little legend among art students coming from a small press in San Francisco. Then Hal stopped working; he had this career early in his artmaking life, got into museum work, then stopped working as a visual artist. He made these seminal photograph­ic books in the ’70s, then kind of called it quits. Most artists don’t really do that.”

Fischer calls his decision to stop photograph­ing “truncated by design,” and says it was partially because he wanted to pursue the text he used in his photo books more fully as a writer. A new essay by Fischer, “At the Center of the Gay Universe,” is included in the book.

In “Gay Semiotics” and other works by Fischer, the use of text, diagrams and social decoding of the images feels extremely contempora­ry in the world of blogs and photodiagr­am magazine features. Even many of the fashions and hairstyles — especially the mustaches — feel of the present moment. What surprised many at the time, Fischer says, was that his text imbued the images with a type of humor, simply by explaining the images and their social relevance in the gay community. For him, the words were always as important as the images, and perhaps became even more important as the photo books progressed.

“I think the body of ‘Gay Semiotics’ is really celebrator­y,” Fischer says. “I think that’s a big part of what separated me from other people photograph­ing in that period.”

Williams thinks of the documentar­y aspect of the work as “almost an anthropolo­gical study of somebody outside the scene looking in, but he was a part of it.”

Putting the book together with Fischer “was part archive, part publishing project for us,” says Williams. “The idea of making a context for all these projects that were kind of uniquely San Franciscan, dealing with a gay community he had started to investigat­e and document in a way that was groundbrea­king and kind of hilarious.”

Fischer says the renewed attention to his other work, and to the work of his peers, has been rewarding.

“What’s really exciting about the show at SFMOMA is it’s me, my mentor Lew Thomas and my colleague DonnaLee Phillips who designed the original ‘Gay Semiotics’ and the original ‘Castro St.’ book,” Fischer says. “... I’m thrilled about this because I’ve talked to people about this photograph­y and language — I don’t even want to call it a movement exactly, what this phenomenon was in the ’70s. This is really the first show that’s going to be looking at it contextual­ly.”

Because at the time of publicatio­n his books were disseminat­ed around the country, he says a lot of people were potentiall­y influenced by the photograph­y and language genre; this is a moment where it will get its due.

“The Castro was unique because it was gay 24/7,” Fischer says. “In New York there’s community, but at that time it was constructe­d in a different way . ... I think that visibility is what gave me the sense this is all fine to do.”

 ?? Hal Fischer ?? “Signifiers for A Male Response” is from Hal Fischer’s photo series on gay life in the Castro.
Hal Fischer “Signifiers for A Male Response” is from Hal Fischer’s photo series on gay life in the Castro.
 ?? Hal Fischer ?? Hal Fischer’s photograph “Leather Apparel” is from his Castrocent­ered series “Gay Semiotics.”
Hal Fischer Hal Fischer’s photograph “Leather Apparel” is from his Castrocent­ered series “Gay Semiotics.”

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