The 3-metre tall masterpiece serves as a marker for the burial site of Pierre-Luc D'Orsonnens, a co-founder (with his partner Maurice Bourassa) of Les Saint-Sulpice, a popular night spot and restaurant on rue St. Denis in Montreal.
Tuesday, 30 December 2014
Today's Favorite Find at the Notre Dame des Neiges Cemetery in Montreal
I'm not sure I could ever take a trip into the Notre Dame des Neiges Cemetery in Montreal, Quebec without finding something I'd not seen before. Today, to my surprise, I found this magnificent memorial sculpture.
The 3-metre tall masterpiece serves as a marker for the burial site of Pierre-Luc D'Orsonnens, a co-founder (with his partner Maurice Bourassa) of Les Saint-Sulpice, a popular night spot and restaurant on rue St. Denis in Montreal.
The 3-metre tall masterpiece serves as a marker for the burial site of Pierre-Luc D'Orsonnens, a co-founder (with his partner Maurice Bourassa) of Les Saint-Sulpice, a popular night spot and restaurant on rue St. Denis in Montreal.
Labels:
cemetery,
montreal,
photography
Location:
Montreal, QC, Canada
Monday, 29 December 2014
Sunday, 30 November 2014
Squirrel in Stop Motion
The squirrels in Montreal are much too friendly. But that makes it easy to capture them on film.
The Abandoned Miller House, Part Two
I previously profiled the Miller house, located in Perdue, Saskatchewan. Since then, I've done quite a bit of research on the history of this family and the community in which they lived. I will be posting soon about a house I refer to as "gunshot house", owned by a family named Beckett, a few range roads south of the Miller house. Until then, here are some additional photos of the Miller house and homestead:
The master bedroom |
Some things never change |
Recordings of classical music |
It's really quite rare to find such beautiful windows, still intact. |
Late 1940's tractor |
An old Ford, in the garage |
Thursday, 27 November 2014
Love Old Prairie Towns? Then You'll Love This Site
I heard about Prairie Towns on CBC radio this morning. It's a work-in-progress type of site, and the author welcomes input and photo contributions from readers.
Very well-organized, Prairie Towns features photographs of original mainstreets, schools, churches, residential buildings, rail stations and practically everything else. As a photographer of ghost towns, I find the pics on this site fascinating. Go ahead and check it out.
Very well-organized, Prairie Towns features photographs of original mainstreets, schools, churches, residential buildings, rail stations and practically everything else. As a photographer of ghost towns, I find the pics on this site fascinating. Go ahead and check it out.
One of my favorite hamlets, Tuxford, Saskatchewan. From the website Prairie Towns |
I photographed the building on the far right in the summer of 2014. Quite neat to see it in its original condition. |
Tuesday, 25 November 2014
A Trip to the Dust Homestead
One of the things I love most about photographing abandoned properties is the mystery each house holds. The first question always concerns who owned the house and whether or not that person or family is still in the area. When a family moves houses, or an older couple moves to the city, it's quite easy to see this from the lack of possessions the family left behind.
I've been in quite a few abandoned houses, however, containing belongings that show a family hastily left, or was forced to leave because of age, financial reasons, and from time to time, potential foul play.
I find it especially heart-wrenching when I find a house that was abandoned - most likely when an older couple had to move because of their advanced age and need for daily assistance - is still full of that couple's most precious belongings. Photographs, scrapbooks, fine clothes and jewelry, love notes, and university diplomas, laid to rest in the deteriorating house.
Did these couples or families lack others to care for their belongings, or to hold dear their memories? Was the job of cleaning out the house just too overwhelming for loved ones to face?
I found this house, once belonging to a family named Dust, while out looking for a cemetery I read was nearby. The homestead lay at the very edge of town, across from a badly flooded abandoned hog operation. The entire homestead consisted of a large house, a gorgeous barn, and many wooden storage sheds. The windows of the house were missing and the back door was wide open. The house had not been ransacked but appears to have been left out of necessity and the job of cleaning out the house may have overwhelmed relatives nearby. In any case, the house was a truly beautiful and haunting piece of Saskatchewan history and contained many stories of the family who once called the place home.
Below are scans of negatives I found on the property, as well as my own photos of the homestead today. The house appears to have been occupied as late at 2008 and as early as 1930.
The homestead then...
And now...
I've been in quite a few abandoned houses, however, containing belongings that show a family hastily left, or was forced to leave because of age, financial reasons, and from time to time, potential foul play.
I find it especially heart-wrenching when I find a house that was abandoned - most likely when an older couple had to move because of their advanced age and need for daily assistance - is still full of that couple's most precious belongings. Photographs, scrapbooks, fine clothes and jewelry, love notes, and university diplomas, laid to rest in the deteriorating house.
Did these couples or families lack others to care for their belongings, or to hold dear their memories? Was the job of cleaning out the house just too overwhelming for loved ones to face?
I found this house, once belonging to a family named Dust, while out looking for a cemetery I read was nearby. The homestead lay at the very edge of town, across from a badly flooded abandoned hog operation. The entire homestead consisted of a large house, a gorgeous barn, and many wooden storage sheds. The windows of the house were missing and the back door was wide open. The house had not been ransacked but appears to have been left out of necessity and the job of cleaning out the house may have overwhelmed relatives nearby. In any case, the house was a truly beautiful and haunting piece of Saskatchewan history and contained many stories of the family who once called the place home.
Below are scans of negatives I found on the property, as well as my own photos of the homestead today. The house appears to have been occupied as late at 2008 and as early as 1930.
The homestead then...
The homestead |
The Dust Family |
Dust father and son |
Monday, 24 November 2014
First Winter Snow at the Petryshyn House
A stack of newspapers from 1960 was well-preserved despite the snow that covered it. |
The house was insulated with mud and concrete. With no fireplace or stove, this home must have been rather chilly in the winter. |
Sunday, 23 November 2014
The Abandoned Miller House: Then and Now
I came across this abandoned house in the RM of Perdue, Saskatchewan. I learned that it had belonged to a family named the Millers and appears to have been occupied until the 1970's. Inside were hundreds of photos of the house and family in the 1940's and 50's. Below are a sample of those photos followed by my own photos of the house today.
The Miller house was almost fully furnished and despite a collapsed living room floor, was almost livable.
I will be posting more photos from the Miller homestead soon. Old photos showed the Millers with their new car in the 1950's, a car still on the property today. The homestead included numerous sheds, a barn with 2 cars still inside, and early 1950's farm equipment. Why go to a museum when museums are everywhere in the Saskatchewan countryside?
circa 1949 |
Early 1950's. |
Mr. Miller's home office, 2014 |
The Miller house, 2014 |
Sunday, 16 November 2014
A Prairie Couple's First Home
My photog buddy Joe and I came across an abandoned hotel in a small town in southern Saskatchewan, and decided that it was the perfect setting for our "Prairie Couple" shoot. We bought our outfits at the Salvation Army before our little road trip and as always, Joe was an incredibly good sport.
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