Aug 31, 2015

Final List Of Participants (January 2019 Update)

1.   John Mahoney -  (Frame #1)

2.   Michel Gravel - (Frame #2)

3.   Paul Chaisson - (Frame #3)

4.   Rod McIvor -  (Frame #4)

5.   Barry Gray -  (Frame #5)

6.   Gordon Beck -  (Frame #6)

7.   Doug Ball -  (Frame #7)

8.   Peter Bregg -  (Frame #8)

9.   Norm Betts -  (Frame #9)

10. Dick Loek -  (Frame #10)

11. Jac Holland -  (Frame #11)

12. Dave Cooper -  (Frame #12)

13. Gail Harvey -  (Frame #13)

14. Hugh Wesley -  (Frame #14)

15. Tibor Kolley -  (Frame #15)

16. Peter Robertson -  (Frame #16)

17. Boris Spremo -  (Frame #17)

18. Bill Majesky -  (Frame #18) 

19. Dwight Storring -  (Frame #19)

20. Paul Wodehouse - (Frame #20)

21. Bob Carroll - (Frame #21)

22. Erin Elder - (Frame #22)

23. Hans Deryk - (Frame #23)

24. Andrew Stawicki - (Frame #24)

25. Julien LeBourdais - (Frame #25)

26. Gary Hershorn - (Frame #26)

27. Denis Paquin - (Frame #27)

28. Steve Simon - (Frame #28)

29. Douglas Kirkland- (Frame #29)

30. Andy Clark - (Frame #30)

31. Don Denton - (Frame #31)

32. Gary Bartlett - 

33. Erin Coombs -

34. Maria Mann -

35. Phil Bingley -

36. Barbara Cole

Frank Lennon (deceased) The 37th Frame 
_______________________________________________________________________________________

Feb 27, 2014

IMAGES FROM OUR LATEST ATTEMPT

As of today, February 27th 2014, we are back up to 12 frames on the latest attempt to get 36 Photographers and Photo-Editors on 1 roll of film.

Below are the results of the recent attempt at 36Frames…with 22 images taken. I processed the film last week and here are the images from that roll.

Frame Number 1 - Michel Gravel




Frame Number 2 - John Mahoney



Frame Number 3 - Paul Chaisson



Frame Number 4 - Gordon Beck



Frame Number 5 - Rod MacIvor



Frame Number 6 - Barry Gray



Frame Number 7 - Hugh Wesley





Frame Number 8 - Andrew Stawicki




Frame Number 9 - Gail Harvey



Frame Number 10 - Dave Cooper



Frame Number 11 - Norm Betts



Frame Number 12 - Peter Bregg



Frame Number 13 - Doug Ball



Frame Number 14 - Hans Deryk



Frame Number 15 - Dick Loek



Frame Number 16 - Jac Holland



Frame Number 17 - Peter Robertson



Frame Number 18 - Boris Spremo



Frame Number 19 - Yuri Dojc



Frame Number 20 - Bill Majesky



Frame Number 21 - Erin Elder



Frame Number 22 - The Frame That Ended This Attempt



Jan 1, 2014

Hello to Friends, Family, Fellow Photographers, Photo Editors, Photo-Collectors, Lovers of Film and Analogue:
In January of 2012, on a day where Kodak officially declared bankruptcy, I officially announced the launch of my 36Frames Project. This had been 3 years in the making and that day seemed the right time to launch.
A few years ago I started reflecting on my 35 year career and of all the Canadian Photographers, Photojournalists, and Photo Editors that had influenced my work and my life. Some I worked with for many years, some I rubbed shoulders with, others I have yet to meet. I might have been inspired by their work or advice… or it might have been a simple act of kindness to a young photographer growing up in Toronto. The resulting group make up the participants of this project.

One camera; One roll of Tri-X; 36 Self portraits by some of Canada's best photojournalists and photo-editors: roughly 1000 years of combined experience. All on 1 roll of uncut film and when processed will be impossible to replicate digitally. This is a celebration of film, of analogue, of life and....of Kodak.Once the camera is returned, I will drink 2 shots of Vodka to calm my nerves, then hand-process the film. That will be video-taped.
A monograph will be created with all 36 self portraits; the roll of UN-CUT film will framed, backlit and mounted; a traveling show will result and and hopefully this project will help support Canada's photojournalism programs.
Thanks to everyone and wish us luck!
Best Regards

Peter Martin


(P.S. The 37th Frame will be dedicated to the memory of Toronto Star photographer Frank Lennon...who gave an awe-struck and very nervous 16 year old a guided tour of the Star darkrooms...many years ago).



May 7, 2013

Norm Betts Hangs Above Centre Ice - #11

Another one of the three original Toronto SUN photographers, along with 36Frames participants David Cooper and Jac Holland, Norm has raised the bar when it comes to his 36Frames self-portrait.

He submitted this behind-the-scenes video and for all who know Norm...his legendary antics and never ending quest to get the perfect shot...it's 2.5 minutes well spent!

Peter Bregg Takes Frame - #12

Photojournalist Peter Bregg has traveled to more than 70 countries in 40 years covering a host of assignments including eight Olympic Games, Stanley Cups, World Series, Presidential trips, Vietnam in 1973, the Iran hostage crisis in 1979-80, and the imposition of martial law on the Solidarity movement in Poland in 1981. He was also in New York to cover the 9/11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Centre in 2001.
He was chief photographer at Maclean’s for 17 years as well as a photographer and editor with the Canadian Press and the Associated Press in London, New York, and Washington, DC.
Some of his many awards include a World Press Photo Award, NPPA Regional Photographer of the Year, Canadian Press Photo of the Year, Eastern Canada News Photographers Association Awards, a Canadian National Newspaper Award, and White House News Photographers Association Awards.

 

Peter Robertson - Frame #17

Peter was graphics editor for the Toronto Star for 19 years and a founding editor of PhotoSensitive. He has been the photo editor of several books and has lectured and conducted seminars on photography and communications at newspapers, community colleges, universities and at the National Archives in Ottawa. 
In 1986 he began a 22-year teaching career, first at Loyalist College in Belleville, Ontario, and later at Ryerson University in Toronto. 

Boris Spremo - Frame #18

Arguably Canada's most recognized Photojournalist, Boris  Spremo joined the Globe and Mail staff in 1962 and moved to The Toronto Star in 1966, where he retired in 2001.
During his career, Spremo has won over 280 national and international awards for photography, including being the first Canadian to capture a First Prize Gold Medal in the World Press Photo Competition in the Hague in 1966.
In 1997, Spremo was awarded Canada's highest honour, the "Order of Canada" (C.M.) for his years of photographic excellence with a presentation by Governor General Romeo Le Blanc at Rideau Hall in Ottawa.  
The loves of his life are his Wife, his 4 grown daughters...and his '59 Caddy (pictured below...with the 36Frames camera case)
 

   

Yuri Dojc - Frame #19

In 1968, when Russian tanks were rolling into Czechoslovakia, Yuri's status as a "summer student" in London, England was amended to "refugee". 
Flash forward to the present and Dojc's hometown of Humenne has named a gallery after their native son. A major player on the photographic stage, prestigious ad agencies and designers revere his unique artistic vision. 
Often compared to two great fashion visionaries: Guy Bourdain and Helmut Newton, Yuri's work has migrated to such diverse subjects as  "What Remained," which pays homage to Slovak Holocaust survivors and garnered a medal of honour from the Slovak Ambassador to the United States.
An accompanying documentary film on the project is in post-production. Photos from his recent travels in Rwanda, Dojc's first trip to Africa, appeared as double-page spread in the French daily Liberation.


Bill Majesky - Frame #20

After leaving high school, I took a full time job at Black’s Camera in Scarborough. On weekends I went to as many events as I could in Toronto, trying to get through any door that would lead me to a newspaper job.
I met Bill Majesky, then a staff photographer at the Oakville Journal Record, during the annual Toronto Island CHIN pick-nick.  Six months later, he tracked me down and called, asking if I’d be interested in a weekend shift at the Oakville Journal Record. That was the beginning of my career.
Bill moved on to the Toronto Sun and a successful free-lance career himself.

Erin Elder - Frame #21


Erin Elder has been a leading figure in promoting the achievements of photographers and encouraging an appreciation of photojournalism for the past 18 years. 
In 1990, she began working at Maclean's magazine, Canada's national news magazine, as photographer and editor. After moving to Hong Kong in 1995, she became photo editor on Asiaweek magazine. 
In 1998 she became photo editor of Canada's national newspaper, The Globe and Mail, which in 2005 won a gold medal from the Society of Newspaper Design for Best Use of Photography. Under her guidance, The Globe and Mail continued to win numerous awards. 
Elder was the Canadian nominator for the Joop Swart Masterclass from 2003 - 2007 and World Press Photo jury member in 2007 and 2008. 
In 2008, she decided to move into Digital Media at the newspaper where she is responsible for business development in the online and other new media sectors.



Tibor Kolley - Frame #22

Tibor Kolley graduated from Ryerson's photography program in 1970. After freelancing for six years, he became a staff photographer for The Globe. He has won National Newspaper Awards for Spot News, the Canadian Press Picture of the year, nine Canadian Press Picture of the month awards and the National News Photographers Association's Photographer of the Year (Region2).
His photo of 75-year-old Canadian D-Day Veteran Alfred Finley still brings tears to my eyes every time I see it.

Dec 13, 2012

  Jac Holland takes Frame #16...

Life has been good to Jac Mazereeuw, who has gone by Holland since he immigrated to Canada. "I never actually changed my last name. When I first immigrated to Canada, I started my own business in Deep River. Mazereeuw was too difficult for native-born Canadians to remember so in honour of my birth country, I used "Holland" professionally.

Jac Holland, one of three original Toronto SUN photographers, along with 36Frames participants David Cooper and Norm Betts, recalls having so much fun they never took a day off until forced to do so.

The fun and passion for his assignment work near and far kept Jac glued to the tabloid from 1971 to the mid-80's. Ironically, one of the biggest benefits of working for the Toronto SUN, a two-month sabbatical after 10 years employment, turned his thoughts elsewhere. "I was spoiled after that", Jac recalls. "I realized there was more to life than work." In 1986 he left the SUN to teach and travel the world.

"I finally retired when I had to convert to digital"...   

 Two Dutchmen fighting over the camera case with Dick Loek (left) and Jac Holland (right). "Jac wanted to expose all the frames to make sure he got one in focus"


"I finally retired when I had to convert to digital"...