To request this workshop for a class or other group, please send an email to libraryworkshops@uvic.ca or fill out the workshop request form located at https://libguides.uvic.ca/instruction.
The development of photography had a profound impact on documentary heritage as well as creative practice. This workshop explores the role of photographs as historical documents using rare materials from Special Collections and University Archives. A small number of photographs and photograph albums have been digitized and are available online here.
This workshop introduces participants to the history of photography and methods for interpreting photographs. Participants will gain hands-on experience with different photographic processes and prints, including daguerrotypes, tin types, ambrotypes, stereograms, and collotype prints. Shifting from considering different types of photographs the workshop then asks participants to develop deeper visual literacy skills through working closely with photograph albums from the collection.
At the end of this workshop participants will:
Please consult the following handout prior to visiting Special Collections and University Archives.
Each workshop is designed in collaboration with faculty so as to meet the specific needs of the course. In general participants will be introduced to:
Collections-based learning, which incorporates rare and unique materials into the curriculum, provides an opportunity for participants to develop primary source literacy. For more information on primary source literacy, see the Guidelines for Primary Source Literacy.