




The work of Murray Bowles, a photographer who covered the punk rock scene in the Bay Area, was recently celebrated at Verge Center for the Arts in Sacramento. The exhibition, HAIL MURRAY: Bay Area Punk Photography from 1982 – 1995, showcased a variety of his exuberant photos of punk rock bands and their audiences, giving viewers a chance to go back in time.
From the gallery-
Using the recently published, 270 page monograph as its launching point, HAIL MURRAY: Bay Area Punk Photography from 1982 – 1995, showcases the work and life of Bay Area punk photographer Murray Bowles. Though Bowles came to reside in Sacramento at the end of his life, he spent over forty years at the epicenter of what would become a definitive movement for punk music and culture. Bands like Green Day, the Dead Kennedys, Rancid, and Operation Ivy exploded onto the scene through Bowles lens. Bowles’ documentation captured a sensibility that would come to define the Bay Area aesthetic. Most importantly, Bowles existed in the Northern Californian punk community as a friend and enthusiast motivated by the sense of community the scene afforded. Most weekends found Bowles, a self-taught photographer, developing prints in his kitchen immediately following a show so that he could sell them at the next show for $.25 each or published in the seminal, volunteer run magazine Maximumrocknroll.
A collection of Bowles photographs were as likely to include the audience or a kid getting a stick ‘n poke tattoo as they were a band shot. The photographs depict scenes ranging from University quads and living rooms to iconic locations including Mabuhay Gardens and 924 Gilman. In addition to Bowles’ ability to capture crisp, perfectly exposed shots of stagedivers in low lit clubs and bars, his photos also feature young people lounging on punk house couches and backyards. Bowles’s photographs provide a context for a culture that includes not just the performers, but the friends, fans, and environments that made the scene possible. Most art exists this way but we’re not always so lucky to have an exhaustive archive of not just the performers and their recordings but of the entire moment that made it feel alive.
Bowles sadly passed away in 2019, but the images he made will live on- enjoyed by fans of this time period in music, as well as the members of the communities he documented so extensively.