Fred Lyon

Fred Lyon (1924–2022) was an American photographer whose cinematic eye captured the mood and architecture of mid‑century San Francisco. After studying graphic design at the ArtCenter School in Los Angeles, he moved north and fell in love with the city’s fog‑shrouded streets and Art Deco landmarks. Lyon’s early work appeared in local magazines, but it was his nighttime cityscapes—lit by neon signs and glinting streetcar rails—that earned him widespread acclaim.

Throughout the 1950s and ’60s, Lyon freelanced for Life, Look, and Holiday, pairing his architectural shots with portraits of artists, writers, and jazz musicians. His series “Night Light” (1956) remains a landmark project, blending long exposures with careful framing to reveal San Francisco’s hidden drama after dark. Lyon also documented post‑war American life through road‑trip portfolios, capturing diners, motels, and roadside billboards with equal elegance.

In later decades, Lyon’s images were exhibited at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and the Center for Creative Photography in Tucson. His prints are held in the collections of the Library of Congress and the Oakland Museum of California. Even into his nineties, he continued photographing the Bay Area’s changing neighborhoods, leaving behind a body of work that feels both timeless and deeply rooted in place.

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