Wednesday, November 09, 2016

Canada's photo crisis - why government needs to act NOW to save our pictures

   Canada needs launch a program to pay people for relevant photos from the past.
  Tragically, people toss out invaluable photos and negatives every day because they have no incentive to keep them.
   The result leaves an enormous gap in our understanding of the past.
   Significant funds from the government or private foundations need to be organized to pay people for historically-relevant photos before the images get lost forever.
  Alternatively, government could enact fines for people who fail to recycle their photos.
 During the 18 months I've been working on my upcoming 400-page masterpiece Montreal: 375 Tales (set for release within a few weeks) and I have seen a tragic and shocking gap in our visual knowledge of the past.
    There are simply no photos in existence of such relatively-recent places as The Alberta Lounge on Peel, the nightclubs, hotels and restaurants on Metcalfe and Mansfield and most amazingly, the entire once-buzzing strip of Sherbrooke just West of Park, including The Swiss Hut, New Penelope, Spanish Association, Country Palace and Fawzia's Belly-Dancing place.       
   The same crisis surely exists in other places across Canada as well.
   Why do we need photos of restaurants, cafes, bars, nigthclubs?
   Because those places show how we chose to live in the past.
   They inform us of our history and how we lived in the city.
   To start the ball rolling, I offer, as a symbolic gesture, $5 for any good quality photo of such places from the past. 
  The same dearth of photos surely applies to other towns across Canada.
     Some people such as Alfred Bohns have stepped up and scanned their old negatives  and sharedthem online without any financial reward.
   His shot of the Main and St. Catherine (above) might be my all-time favourite photo of Montreal.
   Give him a medal.
  To think that there are more such photos lying around neglected and unseen somewhere is almost mind-blowing.
   Others post their photos onto Facebook on their own pages (see the excellent Armand Monroe's photo at left of the PJ's sign from the 1970s) or excellent pages like Montreal Historical Photos.
   But surely most have simply allowed their photos to sit in boxes or worse yet, tossed them out without taking the time to scan the shots.
   Newspapers and other such outlets have collections that they do not share with the public without getting paid.
   Solution? Government or someone with money needs to buy those collections outright and put them online for all to look at or republish.
   This would be a way to bolster the bottom lines of beleaguered media outlets that have been beset by massive financial problems and it would enrich our understanding of where we came from.
  A photo buyback purchase program could also put money into pockets of long-struggling freelance photographers.
   People like the excellent Jason Felker who barely made ends meet doing his excellent work in Montreal might finally see a payday in exchange for their photos, if they have any still.
   Government already spends billions on much-less-worthy programs which I won't name here.
   Please contact me if you have a collection that might have value and I'll help you proceed.

6 comments:

  1. Unfortunately, the archives of The Montreal Star are owned by The Montreal Gazette and, thus far, are not being made available at Googles's online newspaper collection for whatever reason. Currently, we must view The Montreal Star on library microfiche.

    Incidentally, for the benefit of car nostalgia buffs, the top photo shows:

    Left background: blue 1957 Chevrolet

    Centre background: white 1959 Pontiac

    Right foreground: front end of a blue 1957 Buick

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    1. La Presse, Gazette, Allo Police/Photo Police, Petit Journal, La Patrie, Sunday Express etc...etc... instead of shoveling huge amounts of money to useless things like the CBC, government should offer a big sum to these publications to put their scanned photos (not just low-resolution newspaper scans) online for all to read.

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    2. I used to go to the Country Palace often in the 60's on Sherbrooke street
      it was a great country bar and was very popular.
      I also frequented the Wagon Wheel just before the fire (terrible memory for me.) and used to meet nurses there from the Royal Victoria hospital. Great country music venues.

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    3. Just a few days ago I made a decision to replace my broken scanner and to make a winter project of scanning some of my old slides. I have hundreds of slides from around Montreal from 1987-1991 that are almost old enough to be interesting. Most of them are shit, but some should be worth scanning and posting on Flickr, in my "Montreal Nostalgia" album. https://www.flickr.com/photos/blork/albums/72157625016252505

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  2. Kristian, I seem to remember that Google promised to upgrade its newspaper archive website from its currently inadequate status quo, but--so far at least-- has failed to do so.

    I will assume that this is likely due to the enormously daunting task it would present when one considers how vast a cross-referencing process would be required to track down certain news stories to a specific time-frame. All too often, even key words do not achieve the desired result when attempting to research an event.

    However, when one considers the amazing process involved regarding the reconstruction of the files shredded by the East German government in its waning days, there would seem to be some hope.

    See: http://www.bstu.bund.de/EN/Archives/ReconstructionOfShreddedRecords/VirtualReconstruction/_node.html

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