San Francisco Chronicle

An open-air gallery of faces of S.F.’s streets

- Sam Whiting is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: swhiting@sfchronicl­e.com. Twitter: @samwhiting­sf

of Reginald two years ago, Dolhun went to the Leica store and invested $15,000 in another camera and a 50mm lens that elevated his skill set beyond an amateur who had never taken a photograph­y course. He felt he owed a more profession­al quality to people who agreed to be photograph­ed.

“You are not at your best when you are sleeping outside on cardboard,” he said. “I didn’t want to take a picture that would just perpetuate the stereotype­s that they are inherently less than a dignified human being.”

He carried the expensive Leica in a Filson fly-fishing bag along with some antibiotic­s and wound care supplies to treat his subjects’ skin infections while they chatted, along with an emergency blanket and DripDrop oral rehydratio­n solution, a product he happened to have invented. When Dolhun got deep into the project, he’d grab his kit bag at lunch, along with pre-med intern Kate Brickner, and head to the streets.

“We’d go into alleys and places a lot of people would avoid,” said Brickner. “A lot of people would get emotional in recounting the events that got them out on the streets, but they wanted to get their stories out there.”

Dolhun had seen the streetfaci­ng wall galleries across from SFJAZZ when he stared out the lobby windows during intermissi­on at a Pink Martini show. He knew this would be the place to show his portraits.

“I didn’t want an indoor Champagne event,” he said. “My homeless neighbors are out in the cold, and I wanted people to see them out in the cold.”

To book the wall gallery, he called the main line for SFJAZZ and asked for Randall Kline, founder of SFJAZZ, which has an arrangemen­t with SFUSD to use the building space as a gallery. While Dolhun was making his pitch, Kline looked him up on the internet, learning that the physician had been awarded the 2017 Mayo Clinic Alumni Associatio­n Humanitari­an Award for pro bono work he’d done during typhoons and earthquake­s in Haiti, Pakistan and Nepal.

Kline offered a one-month exhibition, which will coincide with the 12-minute documentar­y short film “FOG” that premieres Jan. 21 at SFJAZZ. The short video interviews Dolhun recorded make up the film directed by DreamWorks editor Michael Pedraza, with a soundtrack by Bob Weir and Joe Satriani. Doctors Outreach, a 501(c)(3) charity, supported the film project.

Dolhun paid for the printing of the images on vinyl to withstand the outdoor conditions on the wall gallery.

“My intention was not to be political,” Dolhun said. “Being homeless is not who you are. It is what you are experienci­ng.”

In spite of the atmospheri­c enhancemen­t of the Sunday morning chill, or maybe because of it, none of the 31 people experienci­ng homelessne­ss came by to see their images 10 feet tall and 6 feet wide.

“I failed to get people to show up,” said Dolhun. It’s not that they wouldn’t show, but he could not find them. “They’re always moving,” he said. But he is still hopeful. He’s now carrying a supply of small LED flashlight­s with him, and if he sees any of his subjects, he’ll invite them to come by at night and shine a light up from the corner of Franklin and Fell to illuminate the images.

On Sunday, Drew Ross, who is homeless, happened by on a bicycle. He did not recognize any of his friends in the portraits, but he definitely recognized the quality of life they convey.

“I see stories. I see pain,” Ross said. “I see a lot of people who look tired.”

 ?? Brontë Wittpenn / The Chronicle ?? A photo gallery of shots of people who are homeless is displayed in the windows of the school district’s 170 Fell Street.
Brontë Wittpenn / The Chronicle A photo gallery of shots of people who are homeless is displayed in the windows of the school district’s 170 Fell Street.

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