By Sniffles
The McCord Stewart Museum has a terrific exhibit on Montreal street photography right now. "Pounding the Pavement" looks at city street scenes through more than 400 images, by both photojournalists and professionals, dating from the 19th century to today.
There's this weird shot from 1982 (no, we can't explain it, and neither can the McCord) — and there are interesting photos of historical events, from the false-alarm V-E Day celebrations in 1945 (they had heard news of Germany's surrender a day earlier than it actually happened) to the massive "Non" demonstrations against Quebec independence 50 years later. (The 1995 separatist referendum failed by a whisker.)
What dawned on us when we were touring the exhibit today was that street photography might just be obsolete. After all, aside from news coverage — photos of parades, rallies, pro-Palestinian demonstrations, and the like — what kind of street scenes could photographers capture in 2025? Everybody would just be walking around with their heads down, looking at their phones. Are we right, or are we right? We cats HISS.
(IMAGE: Bertrand Carrière, Stanley Street, Montreal, from the series Chronique nocturne, 1982)