Beatrice Street

Author: 
Anne Grant
Teaser: 

 In the spring of 2008, Anne Grant began photographing a group of adjoining apartment buildings occupying a single lot on Beatrice Street in Cedar Cottage, a residential neighbourhood on the east side of Vancouver.

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Beatrice Street is part of a work commissioned by the Geist Foundation with assistance from Arts Partners in Creative Development.

Memory is a story I tell myself.   —a ten­ant

In the spring of 2008, Anne Grant began pho­tograph­ing a group of adjoin­ing apart­ment build­ings occu­py­ing a sin­gle lot on Beatrice Street in Cedar Cottage, a res­i­den­tial neigh­bour­hood on the east side of Vancouver. She had observed the build­ings over a period of years, and only rarely seen any­one going in or out. In time she came to see the anony­mous, rather unfor­giv­ing facade of the Beatrice Street build­ing as the face of a silent repos­i­tory, a house of mem­ory. She began pho­tograph­ing some of the peo­ple who live there, and talk­ing to them about per­sonal his­tory and memory.

In 1911, when the vil­lage of Cedar Cottage was incor­po­rated into the city of Vancouver, much of the sur­round­ing area was still farm­land; today it’s an older neigh­bour­hood of mod­est homes and a few small apart­ment blocks. Trout Lake (John Hendry Park) is a short walk away and Lord Selkirk School is just around the cor­ner. Until the late fifties, there was a small com­mer­cial area only a block away with a bank and gen­eral store and other ser­vices. Property records for the Beatrice Street lot go back to 1914, when one of the build­ings housed a sheet-metal busi­ness and a gro­cery store on the main floor. 

In order to begin answer­ing the ques­tions of what had been here then and what was here now, Grant made her own inves­ti­ga­tion into the lin­eage of the build­ings, the vari­ety of own­ers and pro­pri­etors (some leg­endary, oth­ers ver­i­fi­able); and she began to inter­view some of the peo­ple liv­ing in the apart­ments, as well as peo­ple who had lived there in the past. Many of the peo­ple who talked to Grant did not want their apart­ments pho­tographed, but they were will­ing to share their fam­ily albums with her. Everything at Beatrice Street — peo­ple and place — was cloaked in privacy.

This place is haunted. See that pic­ture? It often falls off the wall. That man­nequin falls down those stairs again. For no rea­son.”

Memories are hard to ver­ify. Some of the ten­ants were cer­tain that Beatrice Street had been owned at one time by a wait­ress at Scott’s Café, but there is no record of her. Another res­i­dent remem­bered fol­low­ing the hockey career of a son of one of the own­ers, but no one by that name has ever played for the wha. The leg­less woman with “fake legs,” seen “crawl­ing around doing things” by one ten­ant, is unknown to any­one else.

We’d hear the pitter-patter of lit­tle feet at night, yet the chil­dren were sound asleep. The neigh­bours told us years ago a lit­tle girl named Donna had been killed on her way to Lork Selkirk School. They said to tuck Little Donna in at night as I tucked in my own chil­dren. The pitter-patter stopped.

Over an extended period of get­ting acquainted with the peo­ple and the build­ings of Beatrice Street, Anne Grant accu­mu­lated a port­fo­lio of images and sto­ries that form the mate­ri­als of the next stage of her project: to offer her rep­re­sen­ta­tion of Beatrice Street to a wider audience. 

We kids would meet at the old oak. This guy lived in num­ber 3. He was the size of a moun­tain. He had this sui­cide blond girl­friendyou know, a chick who doesn’t want to be brunette. On week­ends we’d lis­ten at their win­dow. She’d come by with strange guys. They’d all get liquored and high. She’d say some guy touched her ass. A fight would hap­pen. Cops would come. She once hit him over the head with a bot­tle. He got seven stitches. We’d com­pare sto­ries at that old tree.

Portrait-making is a way of get­ting to know peo­ple. During a por­trait ses­sion, when one of her new sub­jects spoke of her con­cern for a rel­a­tive whose mem­ory was fail­ing, Grant asked her how she might rep­re­sent such a con­di­tion. After some thought, the woman cov­ered her­self in a white sheet.

The images dis­played here are a reflec­tion of first acquain­tance, an exten­sion of the first moment of ­say­ing hello. 

Mandelbrot

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Anne Grant grew up in Edmonton and stud­ied art and pho­tog­ra­phy at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design. She lives in Vancouver and main­tains a dark­room on Main Street.
Date Published: 
March 16, 2009

Anne Grant

Anne Grant grew up in Edmonton and stud­ied art and pho­tog­ra­phy at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design. She lives in Vancouver and main­tains a dark­room on Main Street.

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