NEW YORK, NY.- Pier 24 Photography made its debut in 2010 on the San Francisco waterfront, the creation of former investment banker Andrew Pilara. Since then, the exhibition space has staged highly regarded photography shows, mostly drawn from the founders wide-ranging collection.
But early this year, unhappy that the San Francisco Port Commission had tripled the rent, Pilara, 81, announced that Pier 24 will close in July 2025. While he will give the majority of its holdings to museums, a sizable portion will be sold to support medical research, education and the arts, through a foundation that he and his wife, Mary Pilara, oversee.
Although the collection is known for its in-depth representation of prominent artists, a significant part of Pilaras collection was created by anonymous photographers. Sothebys will offer up many of these images that Christopher McCall, the Pier 24 director, culled from eBay, flea markets and auctions in the organizations first sale of vernacular photography, online from Sept. 26 to Oct. 3.
The photographers aim was functional, not artistic. About a third of the lots comprise police mug shots, a genre that Pilara embraced early. When I saw mug shots, I said, they are sitting for a portrait, he recalled in a video interview. And, because they sparked an emotional response, they met his essential criterion of whether to buy.
About Face, an exhibition of portraits at Pier 24 in 2012-13, presented a roomful of more than 300 mug shots, as well as photographs by renowned artists, including August Sander, Richard Avedon and Cindy Sherman. It was very popular, Pilara said of the mug shot room. While most of the pictures were arrayed in multiples, along the lines of the typological arrangements of Bernd and Hilla Becher (also represented in the Pier 24 collection), celebrity mobster Charles Lucky Luciano merited a framed diptych of his own. (It is included in the auction.)
The Sothebys sale also features shots of new prisoners at San Quentin in 1935 and grisly crime-scene photos in New York in the 1930s. But much of the selection is more wholesome. Pilara, a longtime baseball fan, acquired an archive of 364 retouched portraits of ballplayers that the Chicago Tribune relinquished as it entered the digital age. (I was a pitcher, Pilara said. Baseball has been my life, and Id never seen press photos like that.) Aesthetically more impressive are a collodion print on iron (a kind of tintype) of Tug Arundel, a catcher who played for the Indianapolis Hoosiers in the 1880s, and a cyanotype of a pitchers arm and hand gripping a baseball.
Also memorable are an assemblage of hand-colored, black-and-white portraits from northeastern Brazil and 40 American tintypes, mostly of children, many embellished with a paintbrush. In one memento, a delicately painted lace bib poignantly evokes the fragility of a baby. But who were the people behind the camera? An undated self-portrait of a practitioner, his camera on a tripod, provides a likeness if not a name.
Pilara particularly sought out scrapbooks with an insight into peoples lives. A photo album kept in the early 20th century by a young woman, Mildred Elizabeth Wheatley, documents her progression from infancy to marriage.
More unexpected is a large collection of photo identification badges, worn by workers entering factories in the 1940s. On the surface, nothing could be less emotionally moving, yet for Pilara, they resonate. My wife of 40 years is from a small town of 900 in Illinois, he explained. She would tell him about the manufacturing plants in her birthplace, and the jobs they provided, that had been lost to other countries, especially China. Im an investor, he said. That really put it on the wall for me.
He has amassed pictures of the San Francisco earthquake and fire of 1906 for similar reasons: He was born and raised in the city. A grouping of 20 snapshots of the catastrophe included in the auction were likely taken by an amateur wandering through the city with one of the inexpensive Kodak cameras that were all the rage at the turn of the century.
Glenstone Museum in Maryland (endowed by Emily and Mitchell Rales) purchased 112 photographs from the Pier 24 collection in March, zeroing in on big names like Diane Arbus, Walker Evans, William Eggleston and Rineke Dijkstra. A sale in May at Sothebys also focused on well-known artists, including Dorothea Lange and Robert Adams, and netted close to $11 million.
But more vernacular and less pricey images cast a light on one of photographys primary purposes documentation. They are represented here in its myriad forms: supervision, publicity, remembrance. Whether artistically distinguished or not, the pictures remind you of the passage of time and the inevitability of extinction. They make you think, mourn and dream.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.