Bio
Stephen Schafer (AKA: Schäf) specializes in architectural photography of our inherited environment. Having completed over one hundred large format documentations to date, Schafer is an expert in the documentation of buildings and sites with a practiced understanding of historic structures. His work ranges from bridges and subway tunnels to skyscrapers and Spanish colonial adobes, documenting historic homes, cultural landscapes, and built technology projects in twenty states and on the island of Guam. These archival documentations are transmitted to the Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS), the Historic American Landscapes Survey (HALS) and the Historic American Engineering Record (HAER) collections at the Library of Congress.
Schafer’s client list includes institutions, corporations and cities as diverse as San Francisco, Los Angeles, Riverside, Alameda, Santa Monica, San Jose, Culver City, Monterey Park, Berkeley and the Ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles, the San Diego Unified, LA Unified, and Long Beach School Districts, Cornell University, UC San Francisco, UC Santa Cruz, Pepperdine University, UCLA, the San Francisco Presidio Trust, the Getty Conservation Institute, the LA Conservancy, Caltrans, Caltrain, LA Metro Rail, SCE, PG&E, SDG&E, EBMUD, El Paso Gas Co., NASA, GSA, USGS, the National Park Service, the US Bureau of Reclamation, the Naval Facilities Engineering Command, and California State Parks among others he is not allowed to talk about.
Schafer’s architectural photographs have been featured internationally in books and publications like the Wall Street Journal, Architect Magazine, the Los Angeles Times, Traditional Building Magazine, NPR, and the National Trust’s Preservation Magazine. He was chosen by Ken Bernstein to document historic Los Angeles for the bestselling coffee table book: Preserving Los Angeles (Angel City Press, 2021). His documentary photographs have been used to nominate sites to the National Register of Historic Places and as CEQA and NEPA mitigation measures.
After attending the University of Cape Town, South Africa and Brooks Institute of Photography in Santa Barbara, Schafer opened his photo studio – Schaf Photo – in Ventura in 1989. Photography has taken him to over twenty countries worldwide and much of the United States but he still regularly documents the changing local neighborhoods and buildings in his hometown of Ventura.
In 1997, he accepted the rare opportunity to teach in the University of Pittsburgh’s Semester at Sea program aboard an ocean liner circumnavigating the globe. He has also taught photography as an adjunct professor at California State University Northridge, at Ventura College and at the Los Angeles Center of Photography. He has lectured on HABS photography and historic preservation at the American Planning Association Conference, for the Association for Preservation Technology International, and at the National Archives in Washington, D. C., and he regularly lectures on HABS/HAER/HALS at USC and for California Preservation Foundation educational programs. Mr. Schafer serves on the board of the San Buenaventura Conservancy for Preservation and he was an appointee to the Ventura County Cultural Heritage Board for 14 years. He lives in downtown Ventura with his wife Sherry, in an 1881 folk Victorian farmhouse that they rehabilitated in 2001.