Month: <span>January 2021</span>

Toronto In Colour: the 1980s, photographs by Avard Woolaver, photo book,

Toronto In Colour: the 1980s is my recent collection of Toronto photographs, and is now available at Blurb Books. A recent feature on a popular Toronto site BlogTO has brought my photos to a new audience. I thought I’d post a few of my favourites, as well as some outtakes from the book.

In the years 1980 to 1986, I shot about 800 rolls of film, most of them street photographs. Of the thousands of photos only about 10% were in colour. I tended to look for different scenes when I had colour film in my camera–usually Kodacolor II, but sometimes Ektachrome or Kodachrome. I would think in terms of “light and colour” rather than “tones and the moment.” So, I sought out slightly different subject matter than when shooting in black and white.

Book Introduction to Toronto In Colour: the 1980s 

There is a feeling of freedom walking around a city with a camera. At 62, I still have that feeling but it was more pronounced when I was in my mid twenties, studying photography as a student at Ryerson Polytechnical Institute. I took a lot of photographs in my early years in Toronto, capturing street scenes and ordinary aspects of daily life that happened to catch my eye. American photographer Henry Wessel sums up my approach in this way: “Part of it has to do with the discipline of being actively receptive. At the core of this receptivity is a process that might be called soft eyes. It is a physical sensation. You are not looking for something. You are open, receptive. At some point you are in front of something that you cannot ignore.”

I had no way to anticipate how significant these Toronto photos would seem to me 30 years later. They show things that no longer exist, even though it hasn’t been that long. Without necessarily trying to, I caught images of buildings, cars, fashions, gadgets that are no longer part of our world. Toronto’s entire skyline is utterly changed, part of the inevitable growth and evolution.

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 have been reviewed from time to time when I was 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 I’m 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. Ernst Haas was one of the few to exhibit colour photographs. William Eggleston, Stephen Shore, Edward Burtynsky and other colour specialists were just emerging, 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. Japanese photographer Shin Noguchi is one of my favourites. Chuck Patch writes, in the introduction to Noguchi’s In Colour in Japan, “He prefers shooting in colour, because he says, black and white distances his audience by interjecting a layer of artifice between the viewer and the ‘Real World.’” And there’s also the psychological component of how the colours make us feel. Toronto In Colour: the 1980s is a collection of colour photos not seen in the three Toronto books I assembled previously; many of these images, in fact, haven’t ever been posted or published at all.

Queen West and Portland, Toronto, 1983 – © Avard Woolaver

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Toronto In Colour,
Watching Chess at Yonge and Gould, Toronto, 1983 – © Avard Woolaver

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Toronto In Colour
Rio Theatre, Yonge Street, Toronto, 1983 – © Avard Woolaver

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Toronto In Colour,
Near Wellington and John, Toronto, 1982 – © Avard Woolaver

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Toronto In Colour
Bulova Tower, Exhibition Place, Toronto, 1982 – © Avard Woolaver

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High Park, Toronto, 1983 – © Avard Woolaver

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Toronto In Colour
View of Cabbagetown, Toronto, 1982 – © Avard Woolaver

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Toronto In Colour,
My one-room apartment on Carlton Street, Toronto, 1982 – © Avard Woolaver

photo book Photography Toronto

Moscow, 1993,

I spent a few days in Moscow in late June, 1993. My journey began in Kobe, Japan and a ferry ride to Shanghai, China. After that I made my way to Beijing where I caught the Trans-Siberian to Moscow. I had been working in Japan and decided to return to Canada heading westward across Asia and Europe, rather than the usual flight to Toronto.

My impressions of post-Soviet Russia were that it was generally run down and in disrepair. People in Moscow were quite friendly and welcoming, though some of them were suspicious of my picture taking. Shelves at the supermarkets were quite bare and my morning breakfast was lard on bread. I felt sorry for the women selling dogs and cats outside the train station, trying to earn a living. The economy was in rough shape and American dollars were preferred over Rubles. I got a drive across the city in an ambulance; the driver was earning extra money using it as a taxi. It seemed that the free enterprise system had yet to catch on. It also seemed to me like the wild west.

At the same time there was a great sense of art and history everywhere–amazing architecture and museums. The Moscow metro has some extravagantly designed stations such as Electrozavodskaya that resembles a museum rather than a subway station. In 1993 a metro fare was the equivalent of one cent. There were lots of buskers and street performers on the tourist filled Arbat Street. Some young people were playing American blues songs–a sense of the pervasiveness of American pop culture. I did some street photography there, as well as around the Kremlin.

1993 was the year of the Russian constitutional crisis— a political stand-off between the Russian president Boris Yeltsin and the Russian parliament that was resolved by military force. This took place in early October. The ten-day conflict became the deadliest single event of street fighting in Moscow’s history since the Russian Revolution–147 people were killed and 437 wounded. The country was in a state of drastic change.

Perhaps my photos don’t capture this sense of unrest and transition, but they serve as a document of life in Moscow a few years after the the dissolution of the Soviet Union in December 1991.

More photos this series are in the Moscow 1993 menu. I will be posting colour photos from this series at a later date.

Moscow, 1993,
Moscow Wedding, 1993 – © Avard Woolaver

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Moscow, 1993,
Pedestrians, Moscow, Russia, 1993 – © Avard Woolaver

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Moscow, 1993,
Street Scene, Moscow, 1993 – © Avard Woolaver

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Electrozavodskaya Metro Station, Moscow, 1993 – © Avard Woolaver

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Moscow, 1993,
Moscow, Russia, 1993 – © Avard Woolaver

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Women selling pets, Moscow, 1993 – © Avard Woolaver

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Arbat Street, Moscow, 1993 – © Avard Woolaver

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Arbat Street, Moscow, 1993 – © Avard Woolaver

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Arbat Street, Moscow, 1993 – © Avard Woolaver

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Arbat Street, Moscow, 1993 – © Avard Woolaver

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Tsoi Wall, Moscow, 1993 – © Avard Woolaver

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One vodka, two more vodkas, one beer, Russia, 1993 – © Avard Woolaver

Photography Travel

Chester, Nova Scotia, 2020 – © Avard Woolaver

I have decided to post some recent colour photos. It has been an unusual year with the Covid-19 pandemic, and I have mostly stuck close to home. However, this has not deterred me from taking my usual photos.

When I take a walk with my camera, I’m always on the lookout for the unusual–odd scenes, quirky juxtapositions. To me unusual things are more visually interesting. They demand our attention in different ways than traditional beauty does.

Do you remember those unforgettable Hipgnosis album covers? If you are around my age, you probably spent a lot of time in your teenage years listening to LPs and studying the album covers. You would play side one, then flip over to side two, all the while contemplating the meaning of the prism on the cover. The album art was sometimes humorous, but often it was surreal and enigmatic–very artsy, and unusual.

When I got a camera some years later I remembered those cool Hipgnosis creations (by Storm Thorgerson) and looked for photos with similar moods and juxtapositions. A discarded door on a sidewalk, an odd reflection in a mirror, a blank sign–this lead me to produce a series titled: Wish You Were Here. Thorgerson was good at isolating odd elements in the image, much like the painter René Magritte. It was clear what you were supposed to notice, but an intended meaning was not so clear. This ambiguity can draw you in and keep you looking for a long time.

I take photos for many different reasons, but am always on the lookout for those quirky, off-beat scenes–the ones that make you do a double-take.

Windsor, Nova Scotia, 2020 – © Avard Woolaver

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Brooklyn, Nova Scotia, 2020 – © Avard Woolaver

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Windsor, Nova Scotia, 2020 – © Avard Woolaver

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Brooklyn, Nova Scotia, 2020 – © Avard Woolaver

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Windsor, Nova Scotia, 2020 – © Avard Woolaver

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Brooklyn, Nova Scotia, 2020 – © Avard Woolaver

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Brooklyn, Nova Scotia, 2020 – © Avard Woolaver

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Brooklyn, Nova Scotia, 2020 – © Avard Woolaver

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Brooklyn, Nova Scotia, 2020 – © Avard Woolaver

Colour Nova Scotia Photography