Skip to content
FREE SHIPPING in France from €100. Europe from €150.
FREE SHIPPING in France from €100. Europe from €150.

Elaine Mayes. Haight-Ashbury Portraits 1967-1968

Sale
Original price €59.00
Current price €45.00

96 pages
Text(s) by Kevin Moore
28.5 x 25.5 cm 
Language: English 
Hardback
Publisher: Damiani
2022

Elaine Mayes was a young photographer living in San Francisco’s lively Haight-Ashbury District during the 1960s. She had photographed the Monterey Pop Festival in 1967 and, later that year, during the waning days of the Summer of Love, embarked on a set of portraits of youth culture in her neighborhood. By that time, the hippie movement had turned from euphoria to harder drugs, and the Haight had become less of a blissed-out haven for young people seeking a better way of life than a halfway house to runaway teens. Mayes shifted from the photojournalistic approach she had applied to musicians and concert-goers in Monterey to making formal portraits of people she met on the street. Choosing casual and familiar settings, such as stoops, doorways, parks, and interiors, Mayes instructed her subjects to look into her square-format camera, to concentrate and be still: she made her exposures as they exhaled. Mayes’ familiarity with her subjects helped her to evade mediatized stereotypes of hippies as radically utopian and casually tragic, presenting instead an understated and unsentimental group portrait of the individual inventors of a fleeting cultural moment. 'Haight-Ashbury Portraits 1967-1968' is the first monograph on one of the decade’s most important bodies of work, presenting more than forty images from Mayes’ extensive series.