Commercial work Freelance After the war Kalisher undertook a
BA in History at
Indiana University Bloomington, graduating in 1948 whereupon he immediately started in commercial photography, freelancing for Scope Associates whose clients included
Texas Co. in the oil industry of the
Kalispell area, and one of his pictures, taken for the company pre-1954, of two women in frilly aprons backlit and chatting at the gate of a house, was chosen by
Edward Steichen for
MoMA's world-touring
The Family of Man, seen by nine million visitors.
Magazines His cameras at the time were
Canon and
Contax 35 mm format, efficient and compact Japanese cameras increasingly being embraced by photojournalists post-war. Using them he produced images for a range of trade magazines like
Chevrolet's
Friends, the
American Iron and Steel Institute's
Steelways, and photographed for MoMA. From the early fifties his photographs also appeared in
American Youth,
Sports Illustrated,
Fortune,
Interiors,
Television/Radio Age,
Coronet,
Musical America,
Popular Photography,
Business Week, and he produced the photographs for book publications including
Clinical Sociology and for a new 1955 edition of Charles Darwin's
The Expression of the emotions in man and animals.
Annual reports and advertising Kalisher's work for annual reports was recognised in the Time-LIFE photography book
Photojournalism which in a section "Helping Corporations Look Their Best" it used examples of his semi-abstract colour photographs for the annual reports of the Wallace-Murray Corporation and of
Bangor Punta. Other clients for annual reports were
Mobil,
Champion International (1976), Miles Pharmaceuticals and Arkwright-Boston Insurance. He received a gold medal in 1975 for a
Cabot Corporation annual report
Independent documentary projects Kalisher was better known for his independent projects, including his
street photography made mostly in New York City, which he published in book form, exhibited, and which were included in major
Museum of Modern Art surveys including
The Family of Man (1955) and
Mirrors and Windows: American Photography Since 1960 (1978). During the 1950s he joined others freely practicing social documentary photography as an emerging art form; he befriended
Garry Winogrand, who grew up near Kalisher, and his associates
Guy Gillette,
Jay Maisel, and John Lewis Stage as well as
Lee Friedlander, who arrived in New York in 1955. It was Kalisher who introduced Winogrand to
Nathan Lyons, assistant director of
George Eastman House, Rochester, New York in 1952. During the showing of
The Family of Man at MoMA (1955), Kalisher,
Arthur Lavine,
May Mirin,
Hella Hammid,
Ray Jacobs,
Ruth Orkin, and
Ed Wallowitch. and others included in that landmark international exhibition gathered at
Helen Gee's Limelight gallery, New York City's first important post-war photography gallery. In 1957 he joined Winogrand in meetings of an informal group of independent photographers, with Lee Friedlander,
David Vestal,
Saul Leiter, Walt Silver and
Harold Feinstein in John Cohen's loft. Later, in 1966 Kalisher was to tape-record an interview with Winogrand in which they discussed the 'snapshot' aesthetic and the desirability of its 'casualness', though it was a term Winogrand was to disown in the 1970s. In 1959 the photographer
Ivan Dmitri, with support of the
Saturday Review, initiated "Photography in the Fine Arts" (PFA), a series of six large group exhibitions of contemporary photography selected by juries of American museum curators and exhibited in national museums. During its preparation in 1958 both
U.S. Camera and
Modern Photography denounced the project because the work selected was from commercially published sources, and not by direct request from the photographers themselves. In 1959 members and associates of the independent group, Kalisher, Robert Frank, Lee Friedlander, Ray Jacobs, Saul Leiter, Jay Maisel, Walt Silver, David Vestal and Garry Winogrand signed a letter of objection, sending it to MoMA, which may have influenced Edward Steichen in a decision not to continue supporting PFA beyond its initial exhibition. Kalisher's 1961 book,
Railroad Men: A Book of Photographs and Collected Stories with 44
duotone plates of men at work on trains and in railway yards in a period of decline for that form of transport, was produced from pictures for an unpublished magazine assignment. He funded the project himself and used a
Leica and tape recorder. The photographs were accompanied by 44 interviews recorded by the photographer. Kalisher followed
Railroad Men with two more photographic books,
Propaganda and Other Photographs (1976) in which
Ian Jeffrey identifies the photographer as "a specialist observer of urban alienation and, like
Diane Arbus, a brutal parodist of pictorial stereotypes;" and
The Alienated Photographer (2011), the contents of which were also exhibited. Kalisher was listed in a document with other photographers
Garry Winogrand,
Hans Namuth,
Harry Callahan,
Roy De Carava, amongst numbers of artists and musicians as attending a public meeting of the National Committee for a SANE Nuclear Policy in
Madison Square Garden on May 19, 1960. The document was used in the 1960 Senate inquiry "Communist Infiltration in the Nuclear Test Ban Movement. In 1974, by contrast, he is identified as "the internationally famed photographer" for his picture of Litchfield County's
Shepaug River used to illustrate the Senate Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs
Amend the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act document (part 4) to show its "scenic beauty of and the dramatic action of its clear, unspoiled water." == Portraits ==