Fischer began his career as an advertising agency art director in New York working with
Paul Rand and
Herb Lubalin then began photographing for
Esquire magazine when
Harold Hayes became its editor in chief in 1963 and was commissioned throughout the 1960s and early 1970s for covers and their accompanying photo-reportage. Working with the magazine's creative consultant
George Lois, who thought Fischer was one of the few photographers who understood his ideas, they devised what became amongst the most famous and provocative
Esquire covers of the 1960s decade;
Muhammad Ali as a martyred St Sebastian, an image so popular that it was used as a protest poster, and a montage of
Andy Warhol drowning in a giant can of tomato soup. The magazine's audience, which had been flagging, was regenerated by these covers and by 1967
Esquire was achieving a $3M profit. By 1968 all of the covers for that year featured Fischer's photographs. His studio was a townhouse on East Eighty-third Street, New York City, where he lived.Interviewed by the magazine in 2015 he recalled; One of the first assignments Hayes gave me was a series of portraits of Southern segregationists. He said, 'Look, we don't want to be seen as editorializing. We want to be fair and we want to give their point of view, so don't use your goddamn wide-angle lens.' He thought that lens would make them look bad, so while I didn't use it, I did make some little changes that I think made [the segregationists] look as ugly as we all thought they were. In that instance Fischer had recopied the pictures on his enlarger to increase their contrast and thus coarsen the skin texture, with unflattering results. but the covers were often politically charged, and included war criminal
William Calley surrounded by Vietnamese children, or during the peak of the
civil rights movement,
Sonny Liston as an angry black
Santa Claus. Hayes, in a 1981 article in
Adweek, recalled the response to the cover which cost the magazine dearly in lost advertising revenue;Sonny Liston was a bad black who beat up good blacks, like Floyd Patterson; there was no telling what he might do to a white man. In 1963, when this was the sort of possibility that preyed on white men's minds everywhere, [Carl Fischer's and] George Lois's Christmasy cover was something more than an inducement for readers to buy Dad extra shaving soap. In the national climate of 1963, thick with racial fear, Lois's angry icon insisted on several things: the split in our culture was showing; the notion of racial equality was a bad joke; the felicitations of this season-goodwill to all men, etc.-carried irony more than sentiment. and ironically included May 1968 cover showing
Richard Nixon with closed eyes submitting to having his face made up for television, over the cover line; "Nixon's last chance. (This time he'd better look right)." went their separate ways in the early 1970s. Fischer directed television commercials and taught as an adjunct professor at the
Rochester Institute of Technology. A member of the
Directors Guild of America, he also served as President of the
Art Directors Club. Fischer died on April 7, 2023, at the age of 98. == Awards ==