The Dictionary of Sydney was archived in 2021.
Street Photography

Probably few people in Sydney have escaped being ‘snapped’ by the street photographer. He frequents the busy thoroughfares at all times of the day and has become as well known as the policeman on beat duty … – The Argus (Melbourne), 29 April 1937Commercial street photography boomed in the 1930s and 1940s, and continued into the late 1950s, and then fell out of favour. While nearly every family would have probably had these types of photographs in family albums, the genre and art of the street photographer was largely forgotten. The Museum of Sydney has revealed this Sydney moment in time with their new exhibition called Street Photography. There were few examples held in library collections, so they did a public call out for people to look in their family albums and were inundated with over 1500 photos. Photos were taken in major streets, such as George Street, Hunter Street, Martin Place and Pitt Street. The photos show fashions in dress, shoes, hairstyles, across all ages, and the streetscapes behind are also really intriguing. They reckon in its heyday - in the late 1930s - about 10,000 people in NSW were purchasing snapshots from commercial street photography companies every week. The exhibition was the inspiration of photo-media artist Anne Zahalka, and her contemporary photographs of descendants of subjects in the original photos accompany and complement the exhibition. Anna Cossu has curated the exhibition, and had the extraordinary task of sifting through all the photographs sent in. One of the most amazing finds were some rolls of unprocessed film. These uncensored photos reveal the work of the street photographer: how they framed shots, the number of shots they took, and how they moved along their patch in the street. I’ve already seen the exhibition once, but I’ll be heading in there again - there are so many absorbing details in this evocative exhibition of a lost photographic genre providing a glimpse of everyday street life in Sydney. It’s a must for every city connoisseur. It’s on until July, so there’s no excuse to miss it! Head to the Sydney Living Museums website for further information about the exhibition and to read more about the history of street photography in Sydney: https://sydneylivingmuseums.com.au/exhibitions/street-photography https://sydneylivingmuseums.com.au/street-photography-stories

Categories
Blog
2ser
Anne Zahalka
Exhibitions
Lisa Murray
Museum of Sydney
people
photographic history
street photography
sydney history
Sydney Living Museums
Tess Connery