Another milestone: The final day open to the public is 28 March 2024, 10 am–9 pm.

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Image: Unknown photographer, Veronica Foster, an employee of John Inglis Co. Ltd. and known as “The Bren Gun Girl” posing with a finished Bren gun in the John Inglis Co. Ltd. Bren gun plant, Toronto, 10 May 1941, Contemporary print from vintage negative, National Film Board of Canada. Photothèque / Library and Archives Canada e000760453
EXHIBITIONS
The Other NFB: The National Film Board of Canada’s Still Photography Division, 1941–1971
27 August 2016–4 December 2016
Historical Feature Gallery

Fall Season Launch: 15 September 2016

Curated by Carol Payne and Sandra Dyck and produced by Carleton University Art Gallery, Ottawa

The National Film Board of Canada (NFB) has long been acclaimed for documentary, animated and feature films, which are among Canada’s iconic cultural products and exports. But few Canadians know that during a pivotal period in the country’s history—the mid-twentieth century—the NFB also functioned as the country’s official photographer.

Mandated by the federal government to promote the nation, the NFB’s Still Photography Division produced an “official” portrait of Canadian society. The Division commissioned its photographers to travel across the country, where they shot approximately 250,000 images of people, places, work, leisure, and cultural activities. Millions of Canadians as well as international audiences saw these photographs reproduced in newspapers, magazines, books, filmstrips, and exhibitions. The Other NFB looks at how this agency imagined Canada and Canadian identity, what role photographs played in that imagining, and how the NFB’s photographic archive was—and continues to be—used.

Hero image: Veronica Foster, an employee of John Inglis Co. Ltd. and known as “The Bren Gun Girl” posing with a finished Bren gun in the John Inglis Co. Ltd. Bren gun plant, Toronto, 10 May 1941, Contemporary print from vintage negative, National Film Board of Canada. Photothèque / Library and Archives Canada e000760453

This exhibition is funded in part by the Government of Canada.

Government of Canada Wordmark

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Footnotes
Image Credits

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