The Pleasure of His Company offers a moving look at male friendship through found photographs
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The Pleasure of His Company offers a moving look at male friendship through found photographs



ROCHESTER, NY.- At first glance, the photographs gathered in John Ibson’s The Pleasure of His Company may seem modest: men standing shoulder to shoulder, friends posing together, companions leaning into the camera, bodies arranged with a closeness that now feels both familiar and strangely distant. But that is precisely the power of this absorbing new book from RIT Press. Through 385 vintage photographs, all published here for the first time, Ibson invites readers to look again at the visual history of male togetherness — not as a curiosity, but as a deeply human record of affection, ease and social change.

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The Pleasure of His Company by John Ibson
The Pleasure of His Company
By John Ibson
A compelling collection of vintage found photographs exploring male togetherness, friendship, intimacy, and visual culture across everyday American life.
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Ibson, a historian of American masculinity and male relationships, has long understood that everyday photographs can tell stories formal history often overlooks. In his earlier book Picturing Men: A Century of Male Relationships in Everyday American Photography, he examined how ordinary snapshots reveal shifting ideas about manhood. With The Pleasure of His Company, he returns to that terrain with a fresh and generous eye, opening his personal collection to reveal a world of male intimacy that was often casual, public and unselfconscious.

The book’s title is beautifully chosen. These images are not merely about men appearing together; they are about the pleasure of being together. They show companionship as something visible in gesture, posture and proximity. A hand on a shoulder, a relaxed lean, a shared joke, a theatrical pose for the camera — each detail suggests a social world in which male affection could be performed without the defensive stiffness that later became so common.

One of the great strengths of the book is its refusal to reduce these images to a single interpretation. The photographs are historical documents, but they are also emotional objects. They raise questions rather than closing them down. Were these men brothers, lovers, friends, soldiers, classmates, co-workers, travelers? In many cases, we may never know. Yet the uncertainty is part of the book’s richness. Found photographs preserve moments while withholding biography, leaving viewers to consider the broader cultural atmosphere in which such images were made.

Ibson’s central argument is compelling: these photographs take us into a world of unselfconscious affection among American men, a world that has largely receded. The loss of that emotional openness, he suggests, has helped shape the more rigid and damaging forms of masculinity so often criticized today. The point is not nostalgia for the past as a simpler time. Rather, the book asks us to recognize that the past contained forms of tenderness that contemporary culture has not always preserved.


Description of image


This makes The Pleasure of His Company more than a photography book. It is also a social history, a meditation on memory and a quiet challenge to the assumptions we bring to images of men. At a time when conversations about masculinity often revolve around crisis, anger or alienation, Ibson offers a different archive: one filled with closeness, playfulness, touch and trust.

The found photograph has a particular magic. It is intimate but anonymous, ordinary but mysterious. Unlike official portraits, these images often come from private albums, flea markets, estate sales and forgotten boxes. They were made to remember a day, a friendship, a trip, a person. In Ibson’s hands, they become evidence of something larger: the emotional lives of men across generations and the ways photography allowed those lives to be briefly, beautifully visible.

The design of the book, at 168 pages and in a generous 8.5 by 11 inch format, gives the photographs room to speak. The images are the heart of the project, and their cumulative effect is powerful. One photograph may charm; several may intrigue; hundreds begin to reshape the viewer’s sense of what male companionship has looked like in American visual culture.

Steve Harrison’s afterword adds another layer to the publication, helping frame the photographs not only as collectible images but as cultural testimony. Together, the book’s text and pictures create a thoughtful, accessible and emotionally resonant experience.

What makes The Pleasure of His Company especially valuable is its warmth. It does not lecture the viewer. It asks us to notice. It asks us to look carefully at the small freedoms preserved in these images and to consider what has been gained, lost or misunderstood in the history of male friendship.

For readers interested in photography, social history, gender studies or the emotional life of everyday images, this book is a rewarding and quietly important publication. It reminds us that photographs do not simply show us how people looked. They show us how they stood near one another, how they touched, how they wanted to be remembered — and sometimes, how much pleasure there was in another person’s company.

The Pleasure of His Company: Male Togetherness in Found Photographs: Vintage Photographs from the Collection of John Ibson is published by RIT Press. The book is available in paperback and hardcover.


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