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Facing Black Star

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Hardcover
$34.95 US
7.31"W x 9.44"H x 0.92"D   | 37 oz | 10 per carton
On sale Jun 13, 2023 | 304 Pages | 978-0-262-04784-5
The Black Star Collection at The Image Centre: the expectations, challenges, and results of a decade of research in a key photo agency’s print collection.

In 2005, Toronto Metropolitan (formerly Ryerson) University (TMU) acquired the massive collection Black Star Collection of the photo agency previously based in New York City—nearly 292,000 black-and-white prints. Preserved at The Image Centre at TMU, the images include iconic stills of the American Civil Rights movement by Charles Moore, among thousands of ordinary photographs that were classified by theme in the agency’s picture library. While the move of the collection from a corporate photo agency to a public cultural institution enables more access, researchers must still face the size of the collection, its structural organization, the materiality of the prints, and the lack of ephemera. Facing Black Star aims to fruitfully highlight this tension between research expectations and challenges. 

Coeditors Thierry Gervais and Vincent Lavoie have gathered local, national, and international researchers ranging from graduate students to established scholars and curators to illuminate the staggering range of the collection, from its disquieting record of the Nazis’ rise to power to its visual archive of climate change. Each contribution highlights methodological, epistemological, and political issues inherent to conducting research in photographic archives and collections, such as indexing protocols and their impact on research, the photographic archive as a place of visibility and invisibility, and the photographic archive as a hermeneutic tool. 

Shedding new light on current issues in the theory and history of photography, this impressive volume containing 100 images will not only discuss the subjects portrayed in the photographs but will also address the history of photojournalism, the role of such a photographic archive in our Western societies, and ultimately photography as a medium.

Like the other volumes of the RIC Books series (MIT Press/The Image Centre [formerly the Ryerson Image Centre]), this publication will appeal as much to academics of visual history as it will to photography enthusiasts in general.
Foreword xi
Donia Popescu

Introduction 1
Thierry Gervais and Vincent Lavoie

A Chronology of the Black Star Publishing Company and the Black Star Collection 43
Alexandra Gooding and Valerie Matteau

Part 1: Questioning the Origins of the Black Star Collection 

Suitcases, Stamps, and Paper: Piecing Together the Story of Black Star's Nazi Photographys 67
Nadya Bair

Dismantling Photographic Authorship: The Many Voices of Max Pohly's "German History" in the Black Star Collection 93
Christian Joschke

The Making of the Black Star Collection at The Image Centre: Framing the Move form a Commercial Entity to a Cultural Institution and the Conundrum of Outstanding Significance/National Importance 119
Zainub Verjee and Emily McKibbon

Part 2: Generating Visibilities in the Black Star Collection

Black Star: Gay Rights, Gay Life 143
Sophie Hackett

"Smile / Social Issues / Swing": Bias and Contradiction in Evolving Archival Descriptions of Indigenous Subjects 167
Reilley Bishop-Stall

"Caribbean Misc.": Finding the Caribbean in the Black Star Collection 189
Alexandra Gooding

Telling on Archival Erasure: The Stories Behind Griffith Davis's Liberia Photographs 213
Drew Thompson

Picturing Wild Style: Martha Cooper, Black Star, and New York's Underground 237
Vanessa Fleet Lakewood

Part 3: Curating with the Black Star Collection

Getting to Know the Unknowable: Black Star and the Rudolph P. Bratty Family Collection 261
Denise Birkhofer

Reflections on Human Rights Human Wrongs 279
Mark Sealy in Conversation with Taous Dahmani

Speculating on the Visual Archive of Climate Change 301
Benedicte Ramade

Afterword 331
Paul Roth

Notes on Contributors 338

Index 345

About

The Black Star Collection at The Image Centre: the expectations, challenges, and results of a decade of research in a key photo agency’s print collection.

In 2005, Toronto Metropolitan (formerly Ryerson) University (TMU) acquired the massive collection Black Star Collection of the photo agency previously based in New York City—nearly 292,000 black-and-white prints. Preserved at The Image Centre at TMU, the images include iconic stills of the American Civil Rights movement by Charles Moore, among thousands of ordinary photographs that were classified by theme in the agency’s picture library. While the move of the collection from a corporate photo agency to a public cultural institution enables more access, researchers must still face the size of the collection, its structural organization, the materiality of the prints, and the lack of ephemera. Facing Black Star aims to fruitfully highlight this tension between research expectations and challenges. 

Coeditors Thierry Gervais and Vincent Lavoie have gathered local, national, and international researchers ranging from graduate students to established scholars and curators to illuminate the staggering range of the collection, from its disquieting record of the Nazis’ rise to power to its visual archive of climate change. Each contribution highlights methodological, epistemological, and political issues inherent to conducting research in photographic archives and collections, such as indexing protocols and their impact on research, the photographic archive as a place of visibility and invisibility, and the photographic archive as a hermeneutic tool. 

Shedding new light on current issues in the theory and history of photography, this impressive volume containing 100 images will not only discuss the subjects portrayed in the photographs but will also address the history of photojournalism, the role of such a photographic archive in our Western societies, and ultimately photography as a medium.

Like the other volumes of the RIC Books series (MIT Press/The Image Centre [formerly the Ryerson Image Centre]), this publication will appeal as much to academics of visual history as it will to photography enthusiasts in general.

Table of Contents

Foreword xi
Donia Popescu

Introduction 1
Thierry Gervais and Vincent Lavoie

A Chronology of the Black Star Publishing Company and the Black Star Collection 43
Alexandra Gooding and Valerie Matteau

Part 1: Questioning the Origins of the Black Star Collection 

Suitcases, Stamps, and Paper: Piecing Together the Story of Black Star's Nazi Photographys 67
Nadya Bair

Dismantling Photographic Authorship: The Many Voices of Max Pohly's "German History" in the Black Star Collection 93
Christian Joschke

The Making of the Black Star Collection at The Image Centre: Framing the Move form a Commercial Entity to a Cultural Institution and the Conundrum of Outstanding Significance/National Importance 119
Zainub Verjee and Emily McKibbon

Part 2: Generating Visibilities in the Black Star Collection

Black Star: Gay Rights, Gay Life 143
Sophie Hackett

"Smile / Social Issues / Swing": Bias and Contradiction in Evolving Archival Descriptions of Indigenous Subjects 167
Reilley Bishop-Stall

"Caribbean Misc.": Finding the Caribbean in the Black Star Collection 189
Alexandra Gooding

Telling on Archival Erasure: The Stories Behind Griffith Davis's Liberia Photographs 213
Drew Thompson

Picturing Wild Style: Martha Cooper, Black Star, and New York's Underground 237
Vanessa Fleet Lakewood

Part 3: Curating with the Black Star Collection

Getting to Know the Unknowable: Black Star and the Rudolph P. Bratty Family Collection 261
Denise Birkhofer

Reflections on Human Rights Human Wrongs 279
Mark Sealy in Conversation with Taous Dahmani

Speculating on the Visual Archive of Climate Change 301
Benedicte Ramade

Afterword 331
Paul Roth

Notes on Contributors 338

Index 345