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词条 Sam Tata
释义

  1. Early life

  2. Bombay and Henri Cartier-Bresson

  3. Montreal and later years

  4. Exhibitions

  5. Notes

  6. References

  7. External links

{{Infobox person
|name=Sam Bejan Tata
|image=Rooftop Watchers Sino-Japanese War 1937 Shanghai.jpg
|image size=
|caption=Rooftop Watchers. Shanghai, 1937.
|birth_date={{Birth date|1911|9|30|mf=y}}
|birth_place=Shanghai, China
|death_date= {{Death date and age|2005|7|3|1911|9|30}}
|death_place=Sooke, Canada
|children= Tony Tata, Karl Brown, Joanna Brown
|awards=Lifetime Achievement Award, Canadian Association of Professional Image Creators (CAPIC), 1990
|occupation=Photographer
}}

Sam Tata (September 30, 1911 – July 3, 2005) was a photographer and photojournalist.

Early life

Sam Bejan Tata was born in Shanghai, China, on September 30, 1911, to a wealthy, mercantile Parsi family.[1] He graduated from Shanghai Public School, and then studied business for two years at the University of Hong Kong.[2] He took up photography at the age of twenty-four,[3] and was one of the founding members of the Shanghai Camera Club.[1] A friend at the club, Alex Buchman, who was working as a photojournalist for the China Press, inspired Tata to buy his first Leica and roam the streets for meaningful images.[4] In 1939, he learned academic studio portraiture with Oscar Seepol, and he later studied with the photographers Chin San Long and Liu Shu Chong.[1] In his early photographs, he became adept in the use of lighting and in the additive techniques favoured by the pictorialists. His focus on portraiture in these years was partly dictated by the Japanese occupation of Shanghai in 1937, and Tata was not able to take up photography full-time until 1946.[5] In 1956 Sam Tata immigrated to Canada and established himself in Montreal.[6][7]

Bombay and Henri Cartier-Bresson

In 1947, through the efforts of the Indian pictorialist Jehanghir Unwalla, Tata's work was shown in Bombay.[3] Several months later, at a show sponsored by the Bombay Art Society,[8] he met French photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson, and through his influence and mentorship, was galvanized to take up photojournalism with renewed vigour.[3][1] He began to contribute to Bombay periodicals such as Trend and Flashlight.[4] With Cartier-Bresson, Tata documented the Indian Independence movement from 1946–1948, including the assassination of Mahatma Gandhi.[1] In 1949, Tata returned to Shanghai, where he recorded the fall of the Kuomintang and the takeover of the city by Communist troops; for a period he was accompanied by Cartier-Bresson who stayed with Tata and his family.[2][5] Tata remained in the city until 1952, when he moved to Hong Kong.[8] He made a trip to Kashmir and India in 1955, and his photo-essay, "Himalyan Pilgrimage", was published by National Geographic in October 1956.[4]

Montreal and later years

Tata immigrated to Canada in 1956 and settled in Montreal. He quickly found work doing stills for documentary films made at the National Film Board, and he became a photo editor for The Montrealer magazine.[4] His work appeared in publications and magazines such as Macleans, Perspectives, Chatelaine, and Time.[3][4] Sometimes on assignment, but increasingly on his own initiative, he began to amass a portfolio of Canadian literary and artistic figures, including Michel Tremblay, Leonard Cohen, Michael Laucke, Irving Layton, George Bowering, Donald Sutherland, Alice Munro, and Gilles Vigneault.[3] Tata preferred to take pictures with a 35mm camera and use the available light in the homes of his subjects, where they would feel more at ease and their personalities be more fully evoked by posing amidst their personal possessions. In 1988, a major retrospective of his life and work, The Tata Era / L’Epoque Tata was mounted by the Canadian Museum of Contemporary Photography and toured the country.[3] He was made a member of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts,[9] and was awarded the lifetime achievement award in 1990 from the Canadian Association of Professional Image Creators (CAPIC).[10] In 1991, forty of his photographs appeared in the National Library of Canada exhibition, Canadian Writers at the National Library of Canada.[1] Books devoted to his photography include Montreal (with Frank Lowe, 1963), Expo 67: Sculpture (1967), A Certain Identity: 50 Portraits (1983), Shanghai 1949: The End of an Era (1989), Portraits of Canadian Writers (1991), and India: Land of My Fathers (2005). Sam Tata died July 3, 2005 at the age of 93 in Sooke, British Columbia, Canada.[1]

On April 8, 2015, Canada Post issued a permanent domestic stamp with a photograph entitled Angels, Saint-Jean-Baptiste Day, taken in Montreal by Sam Tata in 1962.[11]

Exhibitions

  • Evacuating Nuns, Shanghai, 1949, The Winnipeg Art Gallery, Winnipeg, Manitoba[12]

Notes

1. ^[Anonymous] Fisher Library, University of Toronto, Mss Collection 00448. n.d. Introductory notes.
2. ^McLachlan, Ian; and Sam Tata. Shanghai 1949: The End of an Era. B. T. Batsford Ltd: London, 1989.
3. ^Kunard, Andrea. "Sam Tata's Life and Photographs". In: BlackFlash Magazine. November 20, 2012
4. ^Dessureault, Pierre. The Tata Era / L'Epoque Tata. Canadian Museum of Contemporary Photography. Ottawa, 1988.
5. ^James, Geoffrey. In: A Certain Identity. Deneau Publishers, Toronto, 1983.
6. ^{{cite web|title=Sam Tata|url=http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/sam-bejan-tata/|website=The Canadian Encyclopedia}}
7. ^{{cite web|title=Photography Friday: Sam Tata|url=http://shanghaiist.com/2016/06/03/photography_friday_sam_tata.php|website=Shanghaiist}}
8. ^Hawthorn, Tom. "Sam Tata, Photographer 1911–2005." Globe & Mail. August 29, 2005.
9. ^{{cite web|title=Members since 1880|url=http://rca-arc.ca/who-we-are/members/members-since-1880/|publisher=Royal Canadian Academy of Arts|accessdate=September 11, 2013}}
10. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.oscarcahen.com/external/capic_awards.html |title=CAPIC Lifetime Achievement Awards |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20141127035924/http://www.oscarcahen.com/external/capic_awards.html |website=Oscar Cahén |archivedate=November 27, 2014 |accessdate=January 25, 2016}}
11. ^{{cite web|title=Canadian Photography|url=https://www.canadapost.ca/cpo/mc/personal/collecting/stamps/2015/2015_canadian_photography.jsf|accessdate=June 21, 2015|deadurl=yes|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20150621070348/https://www.canadapost.ca/cpo/mc/personal/collecting/stamps/2015/2015_canadian_photography.jsf|archivedate=June 21, 2015|df=}}
12. ^{{cite web|title=Evacuating Nuns, Shangahai, 1949|url=http://wag.ca/art/collections/photography/display,collection/51293|website=The Winnipeg Art Gallery}}

References

  • [Anonymous] (n.d.) Fisher Library, University of Toronto, Mss Collection 00448. Introductory notes.
  • Dessureault, Pierre (1988). The Tata Era / L'Epoque Tata. Canadian Museum of Contemporary Photography. Ottawa.
  • Hawthorn, Tom (August 29, 2005). "Sam Tata, Photographer 1911–2005." Globe & Mail.
  • James, Geoffrey (1983). In: A Certain Identity. Deneau Publishers, Toronto.
  • Kunard, Andrea (November 20, 2012). "Sam Tata's Life and Photographs". In: BlackFlash Magazine.
  • McLachlan, Ian; and Sam Tata (1989). Shanghai 1949: The End of an Era. B. T. Batsford Ltd: London.

External links

  • Hawthorn, Tom. "Sam Tata, Photographer 1911–2005" Globe & Mail. August 29, 2005.
  • Sam Tata (1911–2005). Virtual Shanghai.
  • Dubin, Zan. "His Camera Captured Mao's Conquest of Shanghai" Los Angeles Times. January 11, 1990.
  • Ms Coll. 00448. Sam Tata Collection. Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library.
  • Sam Tata fonds. Library and Archives Canada.
  • Tweedie, Katherine. Honorary degree citation. Concordia University. June 1982.
{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Tata, Sam}}

10 : 1911 births|2005 deaths|Artists from Shanghai|Canadian photographers|Photography in China|Photography in India|Street photographers|Parsi people|Members of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts|Chinese photographers

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