The photos can be seen at 
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/11/27/arts/design/danny-lyon-sncc-photography.html

************************************************************
Even From the Desert, Danny Lyon Still Speaks to the Streets
************************************************************

The indefatigable photographer on the struggles of getting his new film to the 
next generation of activists.

By Rebecca Bengal Nov. 27, 2020

BERNALILLO, N.M. — On Nov. 4, the morning after the election, hope and 
uncertainty mingled in the air outside the adobe house of the photographer and 
filmmaker Danny Lyon. Wind ruffled the branches of the golden cottonwoods he 
planted when he built the place in the early 1970s; it was sunny out. “I’m an 
eternal optimist,” he said. Mr. Lyon wore a Stetson hat, a blue button-down 
shirt, a face mask; green suspenders hitched up his jeans. In some parts of the 
country he has occasionally been mistaken for his University of Chicago 
classmate Bernie Sanders, for whom he stumped in 2019. “I just wave back at 
everybody,” he said.

The previous night, Mr. Lyon and his wife, the artist Nancy Lyon, had parked in 
front of the television to watch the returns. Mr. Lyon is 78, born in Brooklyn 
and raised in Queens by a German Jewish doctor and a Russian Jewish mother who 
nurtured his early interest in the Russian and Spanish revolutions. Until 
relatively recently, he said, “I never cared much for elections one way or 
another. Because I was so young when I was in the civil rights movement, I 
always believed democracy happened in the streets. Part of that has never left 
me.”

That indefatigable belief buoys three releases of Mr. Lyon’s own very American 
films, photographs, and writing — work that, since his first landmark 
photography books in a blazingly prolific decade, has elevated social 
documentary to an art form. He has always spoken from the streets, whether 
through incarcerated people, outlaw motorcyclists, freedom fighters, or the 
very buildings themselves. Aperture has just reissued “The Destruction of Lower 
Manhattan,” Mr. Lyon’s reverent 1969 document of the historical structures that 
would be demolished to make way for the World Trade Center.

“American Blood," ( https://www.artbook.com/9781949172454.html ) edited by 
Randy Kennedy for Karma Books, collects six decades of Mr. Lyon’s sharp-witted 
and sanguine essays, interviews and photographs, starting with his days as the 
staff photographer of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, or 
S.N.C.C., when he packed both an Olivetti typewriter and a camera.

But it is the fate of Mr. Lyon’s third new project, the one closest to his 
heart, that remains as uncertain as that of a divided country in the grips of a 
pandemic: the 75-minute film “SNCC” (pronounced “snick”), about the early days 
of the youth-led direct action civil rights organization that was known among 
its members simply as “the movement.” It “broke the back of Jim Crow,” he said, 
before its eventual unraveling.

The film also centers on Mr. Lyon’s six-decade friendship with Representative 
John Lewis, whom he met when he hitchhiked from Chicago to Cairo, Ill., in 
1962, when he was 20 and Mr. Lewis 22.

He finished editing the film in record time — “I haven’t left this chair since 
March,” he said as he walked into his studio. One wall remained analog, with a 
photomontage in progress. The rest he had turned into an editing room, with 
three computer monitors and stacks of hard drives. He is intent on finding a 
distributor to get the film’s message into the hands of a new generation of 
activists.

For Mr. Lyon, whose half-century-old work about mass incarceration and racial 
injustice is presciently relevant, a film about the past is urgent: His ideal 
audience is young people addressing the climate crisis. “It’s the elephant in 
the room,” he said. “I cannot believe what’s happened to the earth and how 
culpable our quote ‘leaders’ are on both sides. I wanted to show how a small 
group of people could be so effective at changing the course of history, which 
is what S.N.C.C. did.”

The Whitney Museum of American Art, which premiered the first comprehensive 
retrospective of Mr. Lyon’s photographs and films in 2016, hosted a virtual 
screening of the film in October. Pharrell Williams has signed on as executive 
producer. Thus far, however, “SNCC” has been turned down by both Netflix and 
Hulu. “I was told the way it was made was ‘not traditional,’” Mr. Lyon said. 
“That’s a compliment, actually.”

Though disappointed that “SNCC” has not seen a major release, he is determined 
to find other avenues. “I’m psyched to enter it in festivals,” he said.

“SNCC” is the most ambitious and documentary of Mr. Lyon’s films — but like his 
others, most of which are free to watch via his Vimeo page ( 
https://vimeo.com/user65587177 ) — it is also personal. The poetic and 
idiosyncratic influence of Robert Frank, with whom Mr. Lyon shared his first 
film camera, is evident. Mr. Lyon calls “SNCC” a “compilation film,” collaged 
from his own photographs, notably many that have never been published, as well 
as new interviews with fellow activists, shot on hand-held camera, and vintage 
recordings, including the organization’s leader James Forman’s stirring and 
resonant speeches.

Some of Mr. Lyons’s S.N.C.C. pictures circulated again widely after Lewis’s 
death in July and have had echoes in contemporary images of police brutality ( 
https://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/15/us/ferguson-images-evoke-civil-rights-era-and-changing-visual-perceptions.html.
 ). (Most recently, posters made from those images emerged as hot collectibles 
on an episode of “Antiques Road Show.”)

“The nature of my work is to make a great work of art, which means if you get 
one frame on a roll of film, you’re happy,” Mr. Lyon said. “One.”

Those that didn’t appear in books went unknown for decades. When Mr. Lyon 
finally had scans made, he said, he was fascinated by the tiny details that 
emerged — “how the kids put a SNCC pin in their hair,” memories of mass 
meetings in a church strung with microphones “like at Carnegie Hall” to record 
Bettie Mae Fikes leading the Freedom Singers in “This Little Light of Mine.” 
“They’re raw material made in the middle of the struggle and they’re untouched 
by time.”

Image after image flashes by, luminous and unpolished, showing startlingly 
young activists clasping hands, rejoicing, grieving, resisting, believing. 
Watching and listening now, it is impossible not to feel newly transported to 
those rooms and streets.

“Lyon’s photographs are going to be looked at by historians for as long as 
people are interested in looking at the history of democracy in America,” said 
the critic John Edwin Mason, who teaches the history of photography at the 
University of Virginia. “I’m pretty excited to know there are many more that 
have been unseen that focus on the ordinary people who were part of that 
movement.”

Recently, Mr. Lyon discovered a boarding pass from his last trip to see Lewis. 
“I think it was January 21,” he said — before the pandemic broke out, before 
the murder of George Floyd spurred international protests. Lewis, who always 
wore suits, especially as a young demonstrator, is uncharacteristically dressed 
down in an undershirt, with a recent diagnosis of Stage 4 pancreatic cancer. 
Still, interviewed in bed under quilts, the congressman’s manner remains 
gentle, thoughtful, dignified.

That scene echoes another intimate moment, shot in a hotel room in Denver 
during the 2008 Democratic National Convention. In that clip Lewis had 
described a dream — a nightmare — of falling. In that moment the great civil 
rights hero is revealed as human.

In Mr. Lyon’s last in-person visit with Lewis, the human becomes oracle. Candid 
and reflective, as he vividly recalls his long-ago youth in Alabama, Lewis also 
speaks to the future. “They’re on their way. Another group is on the way.”

That group “on the way” is what drives Mr. Lyon’s push to get the film seen. 
“So I’m saying S.N.C.C. is the model for climate activists,” he said. “It’s the 
whole way they worked. They targeted impossible areas. They said if we can do 
this in Mississippi — which would cost them their lives — we will change all of 
America. And they were right.”

If ”SNCC” is the work of the eternal optimist, “The Destruction of Lower 
Manhattan” is the lament of the historian. In a beautiful new printing, the 
book is a window onto a double-disappeared life: the paintings and layers of 
patterned curtains still hanging in an abandoned apartment in a World Trade 
Center site that would undergo its own destruction, for instance.

Just as he was a participant, New Journalism style, on the streets of Albany, 
Georgia and Clarksdale, Miss., Mr. Lyon is spiritually allied with the 
demolition men he photographs as they prep the sites for eradication; like him, 
they are the last witnesses to these vanishing places.

“What the hell does John Lewis have to do with architecture?” he asked, 
self-effacingly, half-jokingly, questioning the connections between his works 
as he wandered the yard behind his house. His own collections answered back. 
Wooden tables lined the patio, covered with rocks and fossils the Lyons have 
foraged, some dating back to the dinosaurs. Inside more than half of his 
library is devoted to volumes of history. Mr. Lyon is a student of the long-ago 
past, an empathetic participant-observer, and a restless soul who’s ready to 
tear the broken parts down.

The near-simultaneous arrival of these projects may appear coincidental, but 
aptly speaks to his persistent productivity, and to the serendipity of a life 
that has intersected with some of the major figures of the 20th century. What 
other artist has shared apartments with both John Lewis and Robert Frank? For 
that matter, what other artist has gone skiing with Robert Frank? (Mr. Lyon, a 
first-timer, left the slopes in a wheelchair.) What other photographer can 
rightfully attest that their ophthalmologist father, a talented amateur 
photographer, was the eye surgeon of Alfred Stieglitz? Within the same year, 
Mr. Lyon met Sanders, Lewis, and Mark di Suvero, to whom he dedicated “The 
Destruction of Lower Manhattan.”

“One would run for president of the United States, one would be the pre-eminent 
figure of civil rights in the United States, and one would be considered the 
greatest artist in the United States,” Mr. Lyon mused.

Days later, after the race was called for Joseph R. Biden Jr., Mr. Lyon did 
leave his chair. He and Nancy drove to Albuquerque, where Mr. Lyon photographed 
overjoyed strangers, posting them afterward on Instagram.

Last week, in a speech at the “Biden, Be Brave” rally urging the 
president-elect to uphold the tenets of the Green New Deal, Representative 
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez repeatedly referred to her fellow climate activists as 
part of “the movement” — an echo of S.N.C.C. speak.

And when one of Mr. Lyon’s photographs of a youthful Lewis, speaking at a rally 
in 1963, was recreated as a 3,000-square-foot painting on a building in 
Rochester, N.Y., by Darius Dennis and other artists, it delivered a welcome 
shot of optimism.

“This spontaneous reappearance of my work after 58 years is one of the most 
rewarding things I have experienced,” Mr. Lyon wrote in an email. For a moment, 
it did look as though democracy had returned to the streets.


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