Tag: <span>Toronto Flashback (1980-1986)</span>

Toronto Flashback, colour,
Queen Street West, Toronto, 1982 – © Avard Woolaver

Toronto Flashback (1980-1986) was self published in 2016. It came about with the scanning of negatives that had lain dormant for over thirty years. I was surprised by what came out of the scanner, as I had forgotten many of the images. Thirty plus years will do that to one’s memory. And there are so many images in the Toronto work to recall–over 800 rolls of film.

Recently blogTO, a popular online Toronto publication, reposted a feature about my Toronto Flashback series. It touches on my motivation for taking the photos, and why I decided to scan and publish them. I’ll include a link here: https://www.blogto.com/city/2016/08/a_flashback_to_the_gritty_toronto_of_the_1980s/

Toronto Flashback, blogTO,

Back in the 1980s I would shoot a roll of film (usually black and white), process it a few days later and make a contact sheet. After that I might make an enlargement of one or two of the strongest shots, and then move on. The contact sheets may be reviewed from time to time when preparing for an exhibition, but basically I didn’t look at them for years and years.

Looking back, I wish I had taken more colour photos, but am thankful for the ones I have. There were reasons for not shooting much colour. First, there was the added cost; second, I didn’t have much access to a colour darkroom to make prints. And in those days black and white was the preferred medium for fine art and documentary photographers. William Eggleston, Stephen Shore, Edward Burtynsky and other colour specialists were just emerging in the art world, and colour photography was not yet fully accepted in the art world.

There is a sense of hyper realism in a colour photograph, like looking at a Technicolor movie, that you don’t get with the more abstract black and white view. And there’s also the psychological component of how the colours make us feel. There have been numerous requests that I post and publish more of my Toronto colour work, so my next book will be “Toronto Flashback in Colour.” Stay tuned.

Toronto Flashback, colour,
Gerrard and Carlaw, Toronto, 1982 – © Avard Woolaver

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Toronto Flashback, colour,
Front Street, Toronto, 1982 – © Avard Woolaver

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Toronto Flashback, colour,
Gerrard Street East, Toronto, 1982 – © Avard Woolaver

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Toronto Flashback, colour,
Yonge Street at Elm, Toronto, 1982 – © Avard Woolaver

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Toronto Flashback, colour,
Rio Theatre, Yonge Street, Toronto, 1982 – © Avard Woolaver

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Totonto Flashback, colour,
Wellesley Station, Toronto, 1981 – © Avard Woolaver

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Toronto Flashback, colour,
Yonge Street, Toronto, 1982 – © Avard Woolaver

Colour Film Photography Photography Toronto

Yonge Street, Toronto, 1982, flashback friday,
Yonge Street, Toronto, 1982 – © Avard Woolaver

It’s Flashback Friday, a day when social media users post photos and videos from the past. On this Flashback Friday (#FBF), I have chosen photos from my book Toronto Flashback (1980-1986). Looking at these images inevitably brings feelings of nostalgia. I remember being 22, walking the streets with my camera, going out to clubs, hanging out with friends–living life to the fullest. We can’t go back, but photographs can help us remember.

Michael Amo writes in the introduction, “I encountered Avard for the first time in 1980. It was the first class of our foundational year of a four year program “Photographic Arts” at the Ryerson Polytechnical Institute in Toronto. Behold a bunch of first year students dressed like the Culture Club version of artists: leggings, scarves, Gitanes. Then there was Avard with his tractor-friendly jeans and Emerson, Lake and Palmer hair all freshly laundered from a recent stint in the railway yards in Kentville, Nova Scotia. Strangely, he was smiling. Living in the city for the first time, I quickly noticed how seldom Torontonians seem to smile or make eye contact. Avard did both and our friendship was born.

We grew up in rural places, Avard and I, which may have contributed to our instant bond. I came from a small Ontario town. Avard came from his family farm in Nova Scotia, a truly beautiful place which has been in the family for many generations. I think that sense of psychic dislocation – tree to stone, stream to street, sky to wire – had a profound effect on both of us. Overnight, our green frame of reference was gone, sending us on a search for something that would reflect our former selves – our identity, our humanity – back at us in the clatter and concrete of the city.

For me, that is the hallmark of Avard’s photography. It started in Toronto in 1980 and it continues to this day: a search for the human element even when there are no humans in sight. It might be the ragged dignity of the regulars in a pawn shop, the soaring majesty of a walkway at City Hall overhanging a single, stout pedestrian or simply the intersection of two unpeopled snow-filled streets, tire tracks tracing the paths of those who’ve come and gone. In every instance, there is a sense that we are in the picture – we being all those souls doing our best to make our way in the world. Somehow Avard’s lens finds us even when we’re not there.

There’s a family story about Avard – how, as a small boy, he was placed in a wooden box at the edge of a field while his father plowed row after row on his tractor. The young Avard would sit and watch for hours.

When Avard arrived in Toronto in 1980, he brought that watchfulness with him, that deep-seated empathy for humans going about their solitary business, a simultaneous loneliness and delight in our ceaseless effort to remake the world in our own image. I don’t know if there’s a word for that singular emotion but I do know it can found in the images in this book.”

Flashback Friday…

The Junction, Toronto, 1983, flashback friday,
The Junction, Toronto, 1983 – © Avard Woolaver

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Kensington Market, Toronto, 1983,
Kensington Market, Toronto, 1983 – © Avard Woolaver

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Allan Gardens, Toronto, 1981
Allan Gardens, Toronto, 1981 – © Avard Woolaver

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Yonge Street, Toronto, 1984
Yonge Street, Toronto, 1984 – © Avard Woolaver

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Gerrard Street East, Toronto, 1983
Gerrard Street East, Toronto, 1983 – © Avard Woolaver

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College and Yonge, Toronto, 1981
College and Yonge, Toronto, 1981 – © Avard Woolaver

Blogging Photography Toronto

Avard Woolaver, Toronto, photos resemble paintings,
Elm Street at Yonge (looking west), Toronto, 1982  © Avard Woolaver

Sometimes photos resemble paintings–whether it’s the lighting, the subject matter, or the mood. Some photographers recreate paintings as photographs like Laura Hofstadter with her self-portrait series. Also many painters use photographs as a reference when they paint.

I had always thought that this 1982 photograph of Elm Street in Toronto looked like a painting, but no painter came to mind. Then my social media friend Amy Dix suggested that it looked like something by English artist L.S. Lowry. I could immediately see the similarity. 

The above photo was taken from the rooftop of Sam the Record Man–the iconic record store. These days it’s the location of The Ryerson Student Centre, an amazing creation of function and design. In 2018, I managed to get a photo of Elm street  through a window, maybe on the 4th floor. It’s great to compare the old with the new, and see the changes over the past 36 years.

Avard Woolaver, Toronto, photos resemble paintings,

Elm Street at Yonge (looking west), Toronto, 1982, appears in the book Toronto Flashback (1980-1986) and is available through Blurb Books.

Blogging Photography

Avard Woolaver, Toronto, Toronto Flashback (1980-1986), Yonge-Dundas Square, photography,

In 2003 this space became Yonge-Dundas Square – an effort by the city to create a version of New York’s Times Square. But twenty yeas earlier, when this photo was taken, it was a parking lot. There was a lot more open space in the city back then. also fewer cars, and fewer people. I was on my way to classes at Ryerson and climbed a fire escape to get this image. These days it would require a drone, or a cherry picker.

From the book: Toronto Flashback (1980-1986) – available through Blurb Books, and Amazon.

 

Colour New Topographics Photography

sunrise, Toronto, poem, poetry, latent image, imagery, image,
Sunrise on Gerrard East, Toronto, 1982   © Avard Woolaver 

In analog photography, the image is invisible and remains hidden on the film until it magically appears during development. Poetry can remain in our minds like a latent image. Here is a poem I wrote about this phenomenon.

 

Latent Image

 

Immersed under a film of random moments

A whisper of time when all was exposed

Then quickly hidden in a latent image

Time passed, time past

The moment is, the moment was

But I remember it differently:

I thought the light on the horizon

Was a holy orb

Lifting my spirit upward

I needed the picture to be whole

 

–Avard Woolaver, 2017

 

Sunrise on Gerrard East, Toronto, 1982” is from the book: Toronto Flashback (1980-1986)

Blogging Colour Documentary Light New Topographics Photography