Category: <span>Black and White</span>

recent black and white, new topographics, street photography.
Halifax, Nova Scotia, 2022 – © Avard Woolaver

What have I been up to lately? Well, spending a bit more time in urban settings, and using a new DSLR that provides a different perspective from my iphone. These recent black and white photos are a mix of street photography and new topographics which aim to let the tones tell part of the story.

The photos, when viewed on a phone, or even a laptop, are so small. I wish they could be seen on a larger scale as some of them contain a information not easily seen in a small photo.

Halifax, Nova Scotia, 2022 – © Avard Woolaver

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recent black and white, new topographics, street photography.
Windsor, Nova Scotia, 2022 – © Avard Woolaver

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recent black and white, new topographics, street photography.
Halifax, Nova Scotia, 2022 – © Avard Woolaver

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recent black and white, new topographics, street photography.
Bedford, Nova Scotia, 2022 – © Avard Woolaver

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recent black and white, new topographics, street photography.
Bedford, Nova Scotia, 2022 – © Avard Woolaver

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recent black and white, new topographics, street photography.
Halifax, Nova Scotia, 2022 – © Avard Woolaver

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recent black and white, new topographics, street photography.
Halifax, Nova Scotia, 2022 – © Avard Woolaver

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recent black and white, new topographics, street photography.
Bedford, Nova Scotia, 2022 – © Avard Woolaver

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recent black and white, new topographics, street photography.
Halifax, Nova Scotia, 2022 – © Avard Woolaver

 

 

Black and White Photography

Toronto Unseen

These are photos from a folder on my computer titled: Toronto Unseen. They are images of Toronto taken in the 1980s and 1990s that have previously not been posted or published–unseen by the public. I will post them periodically on my blog and talk a little about them.

The photo above was taken in 1982, and I’m unsure of the location. I sometimes look at the contact sheet for clues, and it seems that went to the Danforth Music Hall to see a movie, so it may have been taken on the Danforth. I like this one–people waiting for the bus, or a taxi, life in the big city. I was in my second year of photography studies at Ryerson and taking street photos almost every day, on the lookout for scenes like this one. It was on one of the first rolls taken with my Rollei 35–an amazing little camera with a fixed 40mm Zeiss Sonar lens. Totally manual–you even have to guess the focus. It took a bit of getting used to!

Toronto Unseen
Carlton Street, Toronto, 1980 – © Avard Woolaver

This photo was on the first roll of film after I arrived in Toronto in September 1980. It was across the street from my apartment, literally the first thing I saw when I stepped outside to do my first day of shooting and exploring the city. My camera was still loaded with Kodak Panatomic-X that I was shooting in Nova Scotia. I quickly found out that this 32 ASA fine grain film was unsuitable for street photography and switched to Tri-X after that. These two store fronts were a revelation of sorts. I could never have taken this photo anywhere in Nova Scotia. These type of storefronts just didn’t exist, or at least they weren’t easily seen. Toronto was so foreign, and multicultural that it seemed like a different country. It was exciting and amazing, and I had a camera. It was the start of my love affair with Toronto.

Toronto Unseen
Near Queen and Roncesvalles, Toronto, 1994 – © Avard Woolaver

Fast forward fourteen years. I’m back in Toronto after the previous six years teaching English in Japan. Toronto seems smaller and more spacious compared to Japanese cities. I’m still shooting with the Rollei 35, doing less street photography, but trying to refine my approach. I wanted my pictures to be more clever, or at least say something more. With this one I tried to juxtapose the sign “for the human race” with the boy, (racing!) across the bridge with his dog.

These days I’m back living in rural Nova Scotia, where I started out. I have few opportunities to do any kind of street photography, but I’m still refining my vision and trying to take time to observe the world around me.

Black and White Photography Toronto

Avard Woolaver, photographs,
Bay Street Bus Terminal, Toronto, 1982 – © Avard Woolaver

Hi! If you’re new here, my name is Avard Woolaver, and I’m a photographer based in Nova Scotia, Canada. Many of you have probably found this website from my one of my social media platforms. I’ve recently stopped posting photos on Instagram but hope to spend more time posting on this site. So here’s an introduction to my work!

A lot of the people who follow me are especially interested in my Toronto photos, taken mostly during the 1980s. (The above photo, previously unpublished, is an example.) I did a lot of street photography and urban landscapes during and after my photography studies at Ryerson University. The negatives sat sorted in files on a bookcase for thirty years before I started scanning them in 2016. The photos are very nostalgic for me–a blast from the past.

One of my main interests is New Topographics–the human-altered landscape. With the rapid advance of the climate emergency, our mismanagement of the environment is becoming more central to my work. I want my photos to be visually interesting, but also carry a message.

Avard Woolaver, photography,
Hammonds Plains, Nova Scotia, 2013 – © Avard Woolaver

Another one of my interests deals with visual perception. My Wish You Were Here series aims to challenge the viewers’ attention in a subtle way by finding everyday scenes with elements of whimsy and surrealism. Emulating artists like Rene Magritte and Lee Friedlander, I want to make the familiar seem a little strange, but without Photoshop or image manipulation. These photos come about through observation, using juxtaposition, reflection, typography, and scale.

Avard Woolaver, photographs
Halifax, Nova Scotia, 2018 – © Avard Woolaver

My travels have taken me various places in the world. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, I worked in Japan, which gave me a chance to visit southeast Asia. Travel photography is exciting because nearly everything is new and interesting, and you may never be in that place again.

Shibuya Scramble Crossing Tokyo, 2020 – © Avard Woolaver

Along with photographing the unfamiliar, I do a lot of revisiting familiar scenes during different times and seasons. A familiar scene can seem so changed under different lighting conditions. I pass the scene below on a daily basis and have photographed it numerous times. It never gets old.

photography
Wentworth Creek, Nova Scotia, 2018 – © Avard Woolaver

Finally, I like doing self-portraits, and also incorporating humour in my photos when I can. I saw some Lee Friedlander self-portraits when I first got a camera, and they made a lasting impression.

photography
Halifax, Nova Scotia, 2012 – © Avard Woolaver

Bee kind. Bee aware. Bee the change.

Black and White Colour Documentary Landscape New Topographics Observation Photography Social Landscape Street Photography Travel

Monochrome, Monochrome Dreaming,  photography,

I have always been monochrome dreaming. Since first picking up a camera, I have been interested in recording odd scenes; photos that make you do a double take. In the early days, I didn’t concentrate on it very much. I’d take a photo whenever I came across something unusual. It wasn’t until I got a digital camera in 2006 that I began to actively look for everyday scenes that make the familiar seem a little strange.

With a digital camera, I could experiment more–take many photos of the same scene in order to change the angle of a reflection or align elements perfectly. My image making went from taking a one-off of a particular scene to exploring the scene more fully to get the best possible shot. In this post I show photos taken over the past decade

In my Wish You Were Here series, I aim to challenge the viewers’ attention in a subtle way by finding everyday scenes with elements of whimsy and surrealism. Like Magritte, and Friedlander, I want to make the familiar seem a little strange, but without Photoshop and image manipulation. These photos come about through observation, using juxtaposition, reflection, typography, and scale. My new project, “Monochrome Dreaming” shows black and white images with dream-like qualities that aspire to entertain the senses.

Monochrome, Monochrome Dreaming, photography,
Windsor, Nova Scotia, 2010 – © Avard Woolaver

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Monochrome, Monochrome Dreaming, photography,
Brooklyn, Nova Scotia, 2014 – © Avard Woolaver

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Monochrome, Monochrome Dreaming, photography,
Halifax, Nova Scotia, 2013 – © Avard Woolaver

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Monochrome, Monochrome Dreaming, photography,
Brooklyn, Nova Scotia, 2020 – © Avard Woolaver

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Halifax, Nova Scotia, 2011 – © Avard Woolaver

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Monochrome, Monochrome Dreaming, photography,
Highway 101, Nova Scotia, 2013 – © Avard Woolaver

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Halifax, Nova Scotia, 2013 – © Avard Woolaver

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Monochrome, Monochrome Dreaming, photography,
Halifax, Nova Scotia, 2013 – © Avard Woolaver

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Monochrome, Monochrome Dreaming, photography,
Union Corner, Nova Scotia, 2013 – © Avard Woolaver

Black and White Observation Photography

Echo Beach

This is the location that inspired Mark Gane of Martha and the Muffins to write the 1980 hit song “Echo Beach.” The photo was taken at Sunnyside Beach, Toronto, in 1984.

On a silent summer evening/The sky’s alive with lights/A building in the distance/Surrealistic sight

From Wikipedia: “Echo Beach, as mentioned in the song, does not refer to a real beach, but rather a symbolic notion of somewhere the narrator would rather be, somewhere ‘far away in time.’ The song was created while Gane was working checking wallpaper for printing faults. He found the work rather dull and his mind drifted to times he would like to live over again. One such time was an evening spent at Sunnyside Beach on the shoreline of Lake Ontario in Toronto in summer. It was only the third song that Gane had written.”

When I took the photo, I had no notion of the connection with the song. I did, however, think that the lone building was quite surreal, appearing like a non sequitor on the blank shoreline.

The song that comes to mind when I look at the photo is “You Never Give Me Your Money” and the line “Oh, that magic feeling, nowhere to go.” I had just graduated from Ryerson, and was uncertain about my future in the recession of the 1980s. Little did I know that three years later I’d be living in Japan.

When I reflect on the photo now, that stage of my life does seem “faraway in time.” I was in my twenties then, and I’m in my sixties now. I have a different perspective, looking back at those years. Some may call it wisdom, but I prefer the term “road tested.”

Echo Beach,
Sunnyside Beach, Toronto, 1984 – © Avard Woolaver

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Echo Beach
Sunnyside Beach, Toronto, 1984 – © Avard Woolaver

Black and White Film Photography Photography Toronto