Life on the edge of Canada’s eastern shores
- Text by Miss Rosen
- Photography by Melinda Blauvelt
In 1971, Melinda Blauvelt became the first woman accepted into the Yale School of Art MFA photography program. That same year, she collaborated with Walker Evans to help curate his retrospective exhibition, Forty Years. In doing so she becoming deeply immersed in his intimate chronicle of tenant farm families struggling to survive during the height of the Great Depression in Hale County, Alabama.
The experience shaped her view of what photography could be and do. “Walker and I spent countless hours searching and discussing his archives and designing the exhibit,” Blauvelt remembers. “Looking at his photographs of portraits, signs, and buildings, as well as watching him photograph on road trips was an extraordinary education in learning what Walker meant by having an ‘eye.’”
During the summer of ’72, Blauvelt took those lessons to heart, purchasing a used 4x5 Deardorff camera for an immersive project wholly her own. She headed north to work with the Quebec Labrador Foundation, which placed American students in remote villages on Canada’s eastern shore to work at day camps with local children.
Blauvelt landed in Brantville, a small fishing village in New Brunswick, where she lived with French-speaking Acadian villagers, Ulysse and Jeannette Thibodeau, and their three young children. The Thiobodeaus welcomed Blauvelt with open arms, including her in family meals, beach adventures, weddings, and birthday parties with extended family members and friends.
“The community was tiny, inclusive, and meant people were related to one another,” she says. “Everyone was eager to embrace the Americans.”
By day, Blauvelt ran the day camp, playing games, giving swim lessons, and making puppet shows. She spent her free time reading books from a list Walker Evans provided to ensure she was “properly educated” in the works of Thomas Mann, Virginia Woolf, and Gustav Flaubert.
And then there were the photos: slow, thoughtful, collaborative works collected the new book, Brantville (Stanley/Barker). The book brings together Blauvelt’s portraits of the community made over four trips between 1972–74, offering a look inside a way of life that is quickly receding into the past.
“The view camera was initially a curiosity but everyone wanted to participate,” Blauvelt recalls. “If I saw something I liked — teenagers sunbathing on buoys, children playing near tar-papered houses, old barns, boats, and majestic fishing nets — they were patient while I made a photograph.”
Although Blauvelt couldn’t develop the film until she returned home, the kids delighted in performing for the camera. “The collaborating and posing seemed more important to them than the idea of the photograph itself,” says Blauvelt, who reconnected with many of the people she photographed when they were shown at the Beaverbook Art Gallery in New Brunswick.
“Fifty years later, the sense of community, generosity, and trust that I encountered when Jeannette Thibodeau welcome us to Brantville with a tub of boiled lobsters for breakfast seems rarer and more precious than ever,” she says. “The photographs and this book are theirs as well as mine.”
Enjoyed this article? Follow Huck on X and Instagram.
Support stories like this by becoming a member of Club Huck.
Latest on Huck
This erotic zine dismantles LGBTQ+ respectability politics
Zine Scene — Created by Megan Wallace and Jack Rowe, PULP is a new print publication that embraces the diverse and messy, yet pleasurable multitudes that sex and desire can take.
Written by: Isaac Muk
As Tbilisi’s famed nightclubs reawaken, a murky future awaits
Spaces Between the Beats — Since Georgia’s ruling party suspended plans for EU accession, protests have continued in the capital, with nightclubs shutting in solidarity. Victor Swezey reported on their New Year’s Eve reopening, finding a mix of anxiety, catharsis and defiance.
Written by: Victor Swezey
Los Angeles is burning: Rick Castro on fleeing his home once again
Braver New World — In 2020, the photographer fled the Bobcat Fire in San Bernardino to his East Hollywood home, sparking the inspiration for an unsettling photo series. Now, while preparing for its exhibition, he has had to leave once again, returning to the mountains.
Written by: Miss Rosen
Ghais Guevara: “Rap is a pinnacle of our culture”
What Made Me — In our new series, we ask artists and rebels about the forces and experiences that have shaped who they are. First up, Philadelphian rap experimentalist Ghais Guevara.
Written by: Ghais Guevara
Gaza Biennale comes to London in ICA protest
Art and action — The global project, which presents the work of over 60 Palestinian artists, will be on view outside the art institution in protest of an exhibition funded by Bloomberg Philanthropies.
Written by: Cyna Mirzai
Ragnar Axelsson’s thawing vision of Arctic life
At the Edge of the World — For over four decades, the Icelandic photographer has been journeying to the tip of the earth and documenting its communities. A new exhibition dives into his archive.
Written by: Cyna Mirzai