
Chicago
<p>In the summer of 1965, having graduated two years earlier from the University of Chicago, <a href="http://www.artic.edu/artists/15789/danny-lyon">Danny Lyon</a> traveled on his Triumph motorcycle from his home in Hyde Park to Chicago’s tough Uptown neighborhood. The area had acquired the nickname Hillbilly Heaven for its large number of immigrants from central Appalachia. Over a period of several months, Lyon photographed residents of Uptown’s Clifton Avenue using a Rolleiflex camera borrowed from his close friend and mentor Hugh Edwards, then a photography curator at the Art Institute of Chicago.</p> <p>Lyon gained the trust of several families, resulting in images that depict struggles but also immense community pride: “paradise inside a square,” as the photographer said, referencing the camera’s square format. In 1966 Lyon wrote of the project, “The pictures are not made to disturb people’s consciences but rather to disturb their consciousness. The pictures do not ask you to ‘help’ these people, but something much more difficult; to be briefly and intensely aware of their existence, an existence as real and significant as your own.”</p> <p>Later in his career, Lyon revisited his earlier negatives to create what he calls montages, alluding to the cinematic use of montage as an editing technique. In 1965 he initially got his subjects’ attention with his Triumph motorcycle, seen in the central self-portrait. The contact prints surrounding this image are examples of the prints Lyon gave on return visits to the individuals he had photographed. In 2008 Lyon received a letter from one subject who had remained in contact with “the old gang.” “There are only two groups,” she wrote, “those that made it out and did well and those that were so addicted and are still over there. . . . It was a sad era in America, but some of us made it out.”</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1965
- Dimensions
- Overall, image: 31.4 × 27.9 cm (12 3/8 × 11 in.); 42.9 × 42.9 × 3.2 cm (16 15/16 × 16 15/16 × 1 5/16 in.); Frame: 42.9 × 42.9 × 3.2 cm (16 7/8 × 16 7/8 × 1 1/4 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Danny Lyon
Artist

Photography
Danny Lyon considers himself a photojournalist, and his work, a brand of advocacy journalism; Lyon devotes his career to documenting the demonstrations of social activism in which he has immersed himself. A self-taught photographer, Lyon was first introduced to the medium as a staff photographer for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, photographing civil rights demonstrations against segregation in the American South. His other subjects have included the Chicago Outlaw Motorcycle Club (of which he was part for two years), the Texas prison system, the Occupy movement, and the redevelopment of Lower Manhattan. His work was perhaps most strongly influenced by the 1941 publication Let Us Now Praise Famous Men, featuring text by James Agee and photographs by Walker Evans.
Full artist profile →More
More by Danny Lyon
"Good By from Friends"
1985 · Gelatin silver print
IRT 2, South Bronx, New York City
1979 · Gelatin silver print, No. 30 from the portfolio "Danny Lyon" (1979)
IRT 2, South Bronx, New York City
1979 · Gelatin silver print
IRT 2, South Bronx, New York City
1979 · Gelatin silver print, No. 29 from the portfolio "Danny Lyon" (1979)
IRT 2, South Bronx, New York City
1979 · Gelatin silver print
Bus Stop, Tehauntepec, Oaxaca
1978 · Gelatin silver print, No. 28 from the portfolio "Danny Lyon" (1979)
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Danny Lyon
- Year
- 1965
- Dimensions
- Overall, image: 31.4 × 27.9 cm (12 3/8 × 11 in.); 42.9 × 42.9 × 3.2 cm (16 15/16 × 16 15/16 × 1 5/16 in.); Frame: 42.9 × 42.9 × 3.2 cm (16 7/8 × 16 7/8 × 1 1/4 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1965-031418
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





