1920s Chinatown Insider

Exploring scenes from a critical decade of rebuilding San Francisco’s Chinatown through the lens of the May’s Photo Studio. Co-sponsored by Stanford’s Asian American Art Initiative

Center for Asian American Media (CAAM)

Developed in partnership with the Chinatown Media & Arts Collaborative

Part 1: Exploring people and places from a decade of rebuilding San Francisco’s Chinatown through the lens of the May’s Photo Studio.

Additional information about each image or video can be accessed by hovering and clicking on the top left information icon (a lower case "i" in a circle).

Portrait of Isabelle May Lee (1923) by May’s Photo StudioCenter for Asian American Media (CAAM)

May's Photo Studio Co-Owner Isabelle May Lee

The May’s Photo Studio is named for its co-owner, Isabelle May Lee, who everyone knew simply as May.  She was the third child among seven daughters and one son. Her father was a successful businessman and interpreter, which gave the family social status in Chinatown.

May’s Photo Studio Cartouche (1924) by May's Photo StudioCenter for Asian American Media (CAAM)

The double meaning of the May’s Studio “cartouche” or seal

Many of May’s photographs include a seal for the studio's name in English and Chinese (精美映相館). Because “mei” also means beautiful in Chinese, the characters can translate as “Refined, Beautiful Reflections Photo Studio.” Thus, the studio seal has a double meaning.

Women’s Board for Canton Flood Relief (1924) by May’s Photo StudioCenter for Asian American Media (CAAM)

Women’s Board for Canton Flood Relief

Over time, May became better known for her community service, often working with women’s organizations in fundraising – as in this delicately hand-colored 1924 photograph in which May appears holding a box at the far right. 

Portrait of Leo Chan Lee (1923) by May’s Photo StudioCenter for Asian American Media (CAAM)

Judy Yung commentary on Leo Chan Lee
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An immigrant looking to photography to support a new life

As historian Judy Yung explains, Leo came to photography late in life. His surname was Chan, but purchased identity papers from an American family with the surname Lee to escape China and enable his entry into the United States during the Chinese Exclusion Act as a “paper son.” 

Collage of Identity certificates (1922) by May's Photo StudioCenter for Asian American Media (CAAM)

Only Chinese needed to have identity papers with photographs

During the years of the Chinese Exclusion Act, the Chinese were the only nationality required to have identity papers with photographs. May’s Studio produced many such portraits, but their studio photographs more importantly created a sense of community identity and pride.

Lai Yong, Portrait of a Chinese Man (1871) by Lai YongCenter for Asian American Media (CAAM)

A long history of Chinatown community photography studios

There is a long history of Chinese community photography that dates back to the Gold Rush. Many early portrait subjects were seated in symmetrical poses that recalled Chinese ancestor paintings. In the 1860s and 1870s, photographer Lai Yong was also a painter and an activist.  

Portrait of Baritone Walter Low by May's Photo StudioCenter for Asian American Media (CAAM)

Portrait of Baritone Walter Low

In this studio portrait, a gentleman identified as baritone Walter Low sits against a hand-painted backdrop. His symmetrical pose recalls early Chinatown photo portraiture. But the pack of dogs, cigar and half-smile imbue his portrait with a contemporary sensibility and humor.

Portrait of Margaret Chung (1920) by May’s Photo StudioCenter for Asian American Media (CAAM)

Portrait of Medical Doctor Margaret Chung

Among the best-known Chinatown professionals was Dr. Margaret Chung, who opened her practice in 1922.  Chung wore masculine clothing and openly had relationships with women. She was also an advocate for the military and lobbied for the creation of the US Naval Women’s Reserves.

Portrait of Dr. Chang “Chester” Lee (1920) by May’s Photo StudioCenter for Asian American Media (CAAM)

Chang "Chester" Lee's dental office opening day

Chang “Chester” Lee was a dentist who Leo and May considered to be family. They took their son Stanford and extended family to his dental office at 750 Grant Avenue.  The flowers in the foreground suggest this photograph might be commemorating that office’s opening day.

Bridal Portrait (1920) by May’s Photo StudioCenter for Asian American Media (CAAM)

Bridal and wedding portraits

May’s Studio was Chinatown’s premiere wedding photographer during the 1920s, documenting styles that incorporated elegant lace and elaborate veils. May’s photography business extended to some non-Chinese weddings in neighboring North Beach, San Francisco’s “Little Italy.”

Collage of two opera performers (1920) by May’s Photo StudioCenter for Asian American Media (CAAM)

Master of darkroom techniques

May’s Studio mastered darkroom techniques of hand-painting, dodging and burning, and rephotographing collaged images to create magical effects, as seen in these two opera portraits. The image on the right appropriates an earlier, famous photograph of Mei Lanfang by Yung Cheong.

In 2017, art historian Marci Kwon presented a lecture entitled “The Evasive Bodies of the May’s Photo Studio: Images from Chinatown” at the Bill Lane Center for the American West at Stanford University.

Several short audio excerpt from that talk follow, helping us understand how May’s collaged rephotographed images of dispersed husbands, wives, and children functioned to reconcile families who had been separated across cultures and geographies by the cruel immigration restrictions of the US Chinese Exclusion Act, legislation that spanned 1882 to 1943.

Collaged and Rephotographed Family Photo (1920) by Marci KwonCenter for Asian American Media (CAAM)

Marci Kwon Lecture, first excerpt
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Reconciling families

The hair-thin line of white at the woman’s sleeve suggest that these figures were removed from their original context with the use of scissors, combined with another print, and then rephotographed. Here, photography’s alchemical emulsion smooths over physical cuts.

Collaged and Rephotographed Family Photo (1920) by May's Photo StudioCenter for Asian American Media (CAAM)

Marci Kwon Lecture, second excerpt
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Leo Chan Lee was a magician in the darkroom

Maquettes that combined original prints into one suggests that he also used a process of positive/negative/positive – that is, turning a photographic print into a negative, which he then combines with another negative , to reunite families.

Collaged and Rephotographed Family Photo (1920) by Marci Kwon lectureCenter for Asian American Media (CAAM)

Marci Kwon Lecture, third excerpt
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Breaching geographical and temporal space via photo-collage

He breaches the space between the photograph on the left and the man on the right, excerpting the young boy and placing him next to his father’s shoulder to create a more balanced composition. 

Collaged and Rephotographed Family Photo (1920) by May's Photo StudioCenter for Asian American Media (CAAM)

Marci Kwon Lecture, fourth excerpt
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Erasing borders to ease physical separation

A table bearing flowers conceals the seam, easing the transition between families, the material border of the picture plane, the geographic borders that separated families.

Collaged and Rephotographed Family Photo (1920) by May's Photo StudioCenter for Asian American Media (CAAM)

Marci Kwon Lecture, fifth excerpt
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Photographs creating a fantasy of togetherness and wholeness

Much like the actors at the Great China who were only allowed into the United States as temporary entertainers, the families pictured in these photographs could slip out of their context & transverse temporal and geographic gaps only by surrendering the fullness of their flesh.

Collaged Photograph of the China Emporium (1920) by May’s Photo StudioCenter for Asian American Media (CAAM)

Even storefront collages: Chung Wah China Emporium

May’s photography magic was also sometimes put to use in collaging and rephotographing storefronts where reflections in shop windows and shadows in doorways might have obscured the display of merchandise, as in this photo of the Chung Wah China Emporium at 733/755 Grant Avenue. 

Map of San Francisco Chinatown (Mei guo san fan shi hua qiao qu : xiang xi tu) (1929) by H. Wong and J.P. WongCenter for Asian American Media (CAAM)

1929 Bilingual Map of Chinatown

This bilingual map by J. P. Wong, commissioned in 1929 by the community’s self-governing Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association, documents the shops and associations in the then most populous US Chinatown, and still most densely populated neighborhood west of New York City.

1929 Bilingual Map of Chinatown

This bilingual map by J. P. Wong, commissioned in 1929 by the community’s self-governing Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association, documents the shops and associations in the then most populous US Chinatown, and still most densely populated neighborhood west of New York City.

1929 “Oriental” Bank of America opening at 939 Grant Avenue

Outtakes from a 1929 Fox Movietone Newsreel story about the opening of Bank of America’s new “Oriental” branch feature clips including the Lung Kong Tin Yee (Four Brothers Association) Lion Dancers, a teller speaking Cantonese, and a conversation with branch manager Dolly Gee.

Business Opening Elaborate Flower Arrangements (1920) by May’s Photo StudioCenter for Asian American Media (CAAM)

Elaborate floral arrangements and grand openings

Because flowers represent wealth, status and good fortune in traditional Chinese culture, it is no wonder that the opening celebrations for new Chinatown shops and businesses featured elaborate floral arrangements, and sometimes lion dancers to bring luck and drive away evil. 

Hop Sing Protective Association (1920) by May’s Photo StudioCenter for Asian American Media (CAAM)

Chinatown’s mutual-aid community associations: the Tongs

“Tong” translates as “meeting rooms.” Chinatown was self-governed by name-based clan associations, dialect-based district associations, and sometimes independent associations not limited to surname or ancestral hometown, like the Hop Sing Tong at 137 Waverly Place seen here. 

Tap to explore

Today: Hop Sing Tong (合勝堂)

This colorful building also boasts a colorful history. It has been home to influential martial arts academies, whose members have at times been embroiled in controversy. Use Google Street View to visit the building and explore the neighborhood today.

This is Part 1 of 1920s Chinatown Insider, a multi-part story series exploring scenes and stories from a decade of rebuilding San Francisco’s Chinatown through the lens of the May’s Photo Studio.

Credits: Story

Editors: Waverly Chao-Scott, Mark Dean Johnson, Stephen Gong, David Lei
Principal Designer: Waverly Chao-Scott
Editorial Advisors: Marci Kwon, Anna Lee, Ben Stone, Maggie Dethloff, Hansong Zhang
Original captions: Mark Dean Johnson, SFSU; Stephen Gong, CAAM; David Lei; Chase Wang, Xidian University

Consultants: Arthur Dong, Jianye He, Felicia Lowe, Shirley Ng, Nancy Rao, Lydia Tanji, Wylie Wong
Special Thanks: Leif Anderson, Nisha Balaram, George Berticevich, Kylee Jo Diedrich, Anna Eng, Chris Hacker, Carrie Haslett, Melissa Ho, Candace Huey, John Jacob, Anna Lee, Ding Lee, Joanne Lee, Minxiong Li, Tim Noakes

Funding and Support: Terra Foundation for American Art; Chinatown Media & Arts Collaborative; Stanford Libraries Special Collections; Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association Archives Project

Featuring Stanford's Special Collections Library: Philip P. ChoyHim Mark LaiJudy Yung, and Wylie Wong's collection of May's Studio Photographs Part 1Part 2Online Archive of CA

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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