Richard Fish Collection
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http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8gh9n5j No online items Guide to the Richard Fish Collection Special Collections & Archives University Library California State University, Northridge 18111 Nordhoff Street Northridge, CA 91330-8326 URL: https://library.csun.edu/SCA Contact: https://library.csun.edu/SCA/Contact © Copyright 2020 Special Collections & Archives. All rights reserved. Guide to the Richard Fish URB.RF 1 Collection Contributing Institution: Special Collections & Archives Title: Richard Fish Collection Creator: Fish, Richard, 1919-2005 Identifier/Call Number: URB.RF Extent: 65.16 linear feet Extent: 679.91 Megabytes Date (inclusive): 1934-2005 Date (bulk): 1934-2005 Abstract: Richard Fish was born in Los Angeles, California on February 25, 1919. He earned a bachelor's degree in Cinematography and Journalism at the University of Southern California in 1940, served in the United States Army during World War II, and later attended the California School of Fine Arts in San Francisco. The Richard Fish Collection documents his career as a professional photographer with a focus on residential and commercial architecture and landscape design, art and artists, writers and composers, celebrities and public figures, and natural land and waterscapes. The collection consists of records, documents, correspondence, diagrams, maps, promotional material, publications, notes, photographic material, audio recordings, and ephemera. Language of Material: English Biographical Information: Richard Fish was born in Los Angeles, California on February 25, 1919. His father, Benjamin Fish, worked in the motion picture distribution business, initially for his brother Samuel Goldwyn, and later for other companies. The family frequently moved and Fish spent his grammar school years in Seattle, Washington, then moved to Cleveland, Ohio. Later, the family moved to Chicago, Illinois where he attended Hyde Park High School. In his last semester of high school his family moved to Beverly Hills, California. At Beverly Hills High School, Fish wrote for the Beverly Hills High Lights and the Beverly Hills Citizen. He graduated in 1936. Following high school, Fish attended the University of Southern California, where he graduated with a Cinematography and Journalism degree in 1940. He worked for Lockheed Aircraft Company in Burbank before being drafted in 1944. Fish served as a United States Army Technician, fourth grade, and was stationed in Germany. While in the Army, he met Boris Kremenliev, who later became a composer and professor of Ethnomusicology at the University of California, Los Angeles. Fish was discharged from the Army in June 1946. In 1947, Fish began attending the California School of Fine Arts in San Francisco (now the San Francisco Art Institute) where he studied with Ansel Adams, Minor White, and other renowned photographers. In 1948, Kremenliev invited Fish to photograph composer Arnold Schönberg and his family for a German music magazine. Many of Fish's Schönberg photographs were featured in an exhibition celebrating the opening of the Schönberg Institute, which was located on the campus of the University of Southern California. An exhibition of these photographs was also presented in August, 2007 at the Arnold Schönberg Center in Vienna. Fish began working for the Los Angeles Times in 1953. In March 1959, the Times sent him to photograph homes in the historic San Angel neighborhood of Mexico City, which marked the beginning of his interest in home and landscape design photography. Over the next several decades, Fish also experienced a growing interest in capturing images of painters, sculptors, musicians, composers, actors, and writers, and over the years photographed Robinson Jeffers, Rico Lebrun, Peter Voulkos, José Luis Cuevas, Lorenzo Castelnuovo-Tedesco, Jean Arthur, Richard Chamberlain, Bruce Dern, and Igor Stravinsky. Over his long career, Fish photographed and wrote articles for a variety of publications, including Los Angeles Times Home Magazine, Sunset, Better Homes and Gardens, House and Garden, House Beautiful, Home, Chicago Sun-Times Magazine, Garden Design, Southern California Home and Garden, and T.V. Guide. He photographed many celebrities and public figures, including Ed Asner, Eva and Zsa Zsa Gabor, Eddie Albert, Larry Hagman, Michael Landon, Jacqueline Smith, Liz Claiborne, Frances and Sidney Brody, Robert Wagner and Natalie Wood, and Sobey Martin. Richard married his wife Marie on April 29, 1972. The couple traveled widely throughout the 1970s and 1980s, both nationally and abroad. Many of his most beautiful and interesting architectural and landscape photographs are those he took while visiting Asia, Europe, and the Netherlands. Fish was a member of the American Society of Magazine Photographers and served as President of the Los Angeles chapter of the organization. He received the Merit Award from Philadelphia First, The Art Directors Club for a 1980 magazine editorial in TV Guide. Richard Fish passed away on December 8, 2005, at the age of 86. Scope and Contents The Richard Fish Collection documents the career of professional photographer Richard Fish. His early work demonstrates the influence of mentors Ansel Adams and Minor White, whose technical and philosophical approaches to photography Guide to the Richard Fish URB.RF 2 Collection imbued Fish's work with a sense of artistic and emotional depth throughout the 1940s and 1950s. Although Fish spent much of his career in commercial photography, he continued to produce work that seemed to surpass the simplicity of the objectified image. Throughout his mid-career years, he focused on residential and commercial interiors, exteriors, and landscapes, exploring the use of light, space, texture, and color. With a critical eye for staging and styling, Fish captured a vibrant era in the history of home and commercial architecture, landscape, and interior design, during which self-expression and individuality were hallmarks. Fish also wrote articles which featured the owners of homes he photographed that were published alongside his photographs. In later years, Fish utilized his photographic skills in the areas of commercial advertising and the television industry, and returned to some of his early interests such as landscapes, seascapes, and historical architecture. The collection is arranged into six major series: Client Files (1955-2004), Work Orders (1952-1988), Subject Files (1950-2002), Publications (1959-2003), Administrative Files (1959-2005), and Personal Files (1890, 1934-1940, circa 1980-circa 1998). Series I, Client Files, documents the relationships between Richard Fish and his clients. His client base was primarily located in California, and consisted of individuals, families, architects, construction firms, landscape designers, interior designers, television studios, film studios, recording studios, celebrities, artists, publishers, or marketing firms. The series consists of three subseries: Records, Documents, and Correspondence (1955-2004), Photographic Material (1961-2001), and Recorded Interviews (circa 1970-circa 1989). Records, Documents, and Correspondence includes client job orders, contact information, correspondence, invoices, consent forms, floor plans, design diagrams, blueprints, architectural renderings, biographical information, fact sheets, newspaper clippings, and article drafts. Photographic Material consists of photographic prints, negatives, proof sheets, and transparencies related to specific clients. Highlights of this subseries are photographs of film and television actors in their homes, such as Eddie Albert, Richard Chamberlain, Joseph Cotton, Mike Farrell, Burgess Meredith, Jean Arthur, James Cagney, Dennis Hopper, Ed Asner, Hope Lange, Bonnie Franklin, and Michael Landon. Also included are photographs of the home and landscape design work of Walt Young, Galper Baldon Associates, Isabelle Greene, Julie Heinsheimer, and Takeo Uesugi and marketing photographs for commercial clients such as First Pacific Bank, General Electric, and Mc Donald's. Recorded Interviews consists of fifteen interviews conducted by Fish, primarily with television actors and actresses in the 1970s and 1980s. Highlights include interviews with James Whitmore, Richard Thomas, Zsa Zsa Gabor, Redd Foxx, and Ed Asner. This series is arranged alphabetically by the surname or company name of the client. Series II , Work Orders, documents Richard Fish's work, using his original system for recording work orders, associated contact information, and photographic material. The series consists of two subseries: Records and Notes (1952-1988) and Photographic Material (circa 1952-circa 1988). Records and Notes consists of six notebooks and collated notes in which Fish recorded scouting trips and photo shoots by assigning each a work order number. Researchers may utilize this original numeric system to locate photographic material found elsewhere in the collection. Details contained in this subseries may also provide clues for locating more information about clients and specific subject matter. Photographic Material consists of photographic prints, negatives, proof sheets, and transparencies, as well as a small amount of accompanying notes. This subseries documents the subject content associated with each work order number and contains a broad range of material, including residential home interiors, landscape design, gardens, decks, pools, and other water features. Images also feature families and individuals engaged in leisure activities, government and commercial