Author Archives: gayhighwaymen

Nutritious and Delicious! “Ice Cream Truck” by Cazwell

Ice Cream Truck written and produced by Cazwell and Chris Bracco, directed by Marco Ovando. Available from Peace Bisquit. Dancers: Avi Vichner, Alex Maravilla, Jimmy Gonzales. Cesar Abreu. Joe Buffa, Johnny Sanford, Eddie Barrena, John Byrne, Geronimo Frias. Make up by Yadim Caranza and icki.

Boulder Daily Camera gets the Picture, but Prop 8 overturn is not a Dunn Deal.

Aidan Dunn and Sheree Red Bornard - AP Photo

Everyone, from legal eagles to the peanut gallery, agree that this will go to the US Supreme Court. Meantime, let the celebration commence! Friend of the site Aidan Dunn shows the back of his head in this shot. From the well-named Boulder Daily Camera out of Colorado. News of the same day: the dismissal of Lt. Choi under DADT. Ironic juxtaposition. The nation watches.

“Sheree Red Bornand, right, hugs Aidan Dunn after hearing the decision in the United States District Court proceedings challenging Proposition 8 outside of the Phillip Burton Federal Building in San Francisco, Wednesday, Aug. 4, 2010. A person close to the case says a federal judge has overturned California’s same-sex marriage ban in a landmark case that could eventually land before the U.S. Supreme Court. Chief U.S. District Judge Vaughn Walker made his ruling Wednesday in a lawsuit filed by two gay couples who claimed the voter-approved ban violated their civil rights.” (via Boulder Daily Camera. AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

Aidan Dunn in USA Today

Update: the back of Aidan’s head gets famouser and gaymouser by the minute. The photo was printed in papers in Mexico, India and other foreign and remote locales. Closer to home, the dubious honor of the front page above the fold of the USA Today.

Obama-Rama! Happy 49th Birthday to an American Icon.

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49 years ago tomorrow Barack Obama was born in Hawaii. 49 years ago today, I was born in California. Being born within 24 hours of the seated president has made for some interesting insights. I know, for instance, that Obama is the first president who does not remember the assassination of John F. Kennedy. At 15 months and change, we were too young. Any older, and we might have memories of the turbulent emotional reactions of those around us. But we were still years from any concept of politics.

Even before he took office, Barack Obama was poised to become the most iconic of American presidents. This promise he has kept. Both his supporters and detractors feed a public that doesn’t seem to get tired of pictures of the most photogenic president since JFK. By now it’s cliché that his was the first “viral” campaign. His face was…is everywhere. TIME magazine photoshopped him into a facsimile of FDR, top-down in a convertible, jaunty cigarette holder in mouth; all rendered in black and white, except for his skin. Perhaps this was intended to emphasize the cut between the historical photographs and the contemporary one. No matter. The first Black president is here literally a “man of color.” His image (almost) alone is printed in CMYK – four color process. During the campaign, Mr. S Leather on Folsom Street sold a poster spoofing Sheppard Fairy’s “Hope” poster. It depicts Obama as a Leatherman, jacket and cap surmounted by the word “Obey.” Political cartoonist Lalo Alcaraz pictured him as George Washington. On-line Photoshop® contests inspire amateur commentators from throughout the political spectrums. His altered photographic image circulates in various formats as Abe Lincoln, Che Guevara, The Marlboro Man, Uncle Sam, The Terminator, St. Francis of Assisi and Run of Run/DMC. This latter, on a t-shirt, features a caption reading: “Run DC.” Running shoes are printed with his likeness. One brand features both his face and a caption stamped into the soles so the wearer can leave messages in the sand. The caption reads: “A Black Man Runs and a Nation is behind Him.” Where will those footsteps lead? How will the new president’s photographic image continue to be deployed in this new world, this new millennium? What is the relation between the man, the representation of the man and the nation he represents? No easy job to be so “in focus” in a world that is increasingly “a picture.”

Ernesto and Alejandro wed in Buenos Aires: Gay Marriage comes to Argentina.

Ernesto y Alejandro

Ernesto Rodriguez Larrese and Alejandro Vanelli celebrate with friends in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Friday, July 30, 2010. Larrese and Vanelli are the first gay couple to marry at the Argentine capital under a new law that makes Argentina the first country in Latin America to legalize same-sex marriage. [AP Photo]

Eric Robinson shoots wet plate Photography at Dore / Up Your Alley Fair

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Photographer Eric Robinson set up his view camera and portable darkroom on 1oth and Folsom to take wet plate photographs at the Dore / Up Your Alley street fair in San Francisco. 19th century processes meet 21st century subject matter. He is in California working on a project that he began in Illinois. Click here for more on Eric. More later. [photoevent: July 25th, 2010]

Sights seen at Scene Site: Dore / Up Your Alley San Francisco Street Fair

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Lots to look at as always at this year’s Dore/Up Your Alley Street Fair.  Boys and men from the sublime to the ridiculous, Leathermen from the Old, New and Avant Guards, Uniform Buffs, Rubber Fetishists, Sadists and masochists, subs and Doms, Bondage Freaks, Dragsters, Masters, slaves, Merchants and Peddlers, Porn Stars, Activists in droves, a smattering of Tourists, and an assortment of more exotic permutations of perversion including furries, superheroes, cartoon characters and other kinks apparently generated in front of the television on some Saturday morning long ago. Photoevent: July 25th, 2010.

Street Art seen at Dore / Up Your Alley Fair

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New street Art seen during Dore weekend in San Francisco. South of Market. SOMA. Photo-event July 25th, 2010.

The 15 Association at Dore / Up Your Alley Leather Street Fair.

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San Francisco’s 15 Association enjoyed a day at the Dore, or Up Your Alley street fair. The 15 Association is a social and sexual fraternity for men who engage in BDSM. Booth space was generously provided by Stop Aids, which has been working to prevent HIV transmission among all gay and bisexual men in San Francisco through multicultural, community-based organizing since 1985. Photoevent: July 25th, 2010, SOMA, San Francisco, CA. c. gayhighwaymen

19th c. Technology 21st c. Subject Matter: Artisanal Photographer Eric Robinson to shoot SF Leather

Eric Robinson takes the techniques of photography back to its roots. He works in wet plate collodion processes, producing one of a kind plates on glass. Using a traditional view camera, he cuts an anachronistic figure while exposing the plates. No shutter, he lifts a sliding door on the camera to expose the plate and counts. One, two, three…twenty-nine, thirty seconds or more. A portraitist, his subjects experience a taste of the early sitter’s experience. It is important to stay still. The help of devices may be sought. Portraiture at its best is a collaborative process, an agreement between the photographer and the model. What began in the midwest as a series of portraits by a graduate student of his professor and his partner has become the focus of a cross-country road-trip to document a lifestyle, a subculture, and the extended family of a friend and rogue scholar. On the road somewhere in Nevada as of this posting, Eric should be arriving in San Francisco sometime late Friday, in time for many of the festivities associated with the Dore (Up Your) Alley street fair. Read more about Eric at the HomoGenii site. The photos in the slide show below were taken during a shoot in April, 2010 in Carbondale, Illinois, where the photographer is taking an MFA in Mass Communication and Media Arts at Southern Illinois University. His undergraduate degree is in Chemistry.

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Sights seen at Mendocino’s Rattlesnake Creek, Hole-in-the-Wall swim Site.

Warm weather lured us up U.S. 101 to the Hole-in-the-Wall swim site on Mendocino’s Rattlesnake Creek. Right off the highway, down a neatly hidden, meandering trail, it hides in plain sight. If you didn’t know it was there, you wouldn’t know it was there. We took the half-naked otter handyman of Timbers (not to be confused with the half-naked muscle-bear handyman of Sunfair) and his monkey-man hobby photographer boyfriend. Down the trail to the water and the picturesque rock formations that give the place its name: the cool hole already hosted a half dozen hippies, a few cute naked nature boys, a woman-and-kid or two and some dogs. [photoevent: 9 July 2010]

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