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Inside the Kodak collection

Exploring the Kodak Canada Corporate Archives and Heritage Collection at the Ryerson Archives and Special Collections
By: Will Sloan
February 21, 2017

In 2005, Kodak Canada ended more than a century in Toronto鈥檚 Mount Dennis area when it closed its historic 鈥淜odak Heights鈥 factory鈥攑art of a company-wide downsizing brought about by the digital revolution. That same year, the company donated its entire Canadian archives to the Ryerson . Taken together, the Kodak Canada Corporate Archives and Heritage Collection tells the story of the rise and fall of the photography industry, and the day-to-day workplace culture of an industrial giant.

鈥淭here are a lot of entry-points to this collection,鈥 said Alison Skyrme, librarian at Special Collections. 鈥淩esearchers could be studying labour relations. They could be doing genealogical research鈥攁 lot of families had generations working at Kodak, and a lot of the history of the employees is recorded here. They can research the history of snapshot photography, or how the cameras were constructed. We have filmmakers coming in, individuals doing private research, and post-doc students doing research on all kinds of things.鈥

The archive includes a full record of all of the advertisements that were produced for the Canadian market from the 1920s to the 鈥80s; photographs by Kodak鈥檚 marketing department of the company鈥檚 products and spaces; hand-written ledgers of the company鈥檚 history; cameras, technology, and documents from across the company鈥檚 history; and complete runs of Kodak鈥檚 internal magazines.

鈥淓mployees would write a magazine, it would have everything from events, safety tips, and also births, deaths, marriages, gossip, who won the softball games,鈥 said Skyrme. 鈥淭he employee culture there was really fascinating. They had a building that had a cafeteria and a manager鈥檚 club and a stage where they would perform plays, and exercises classes and a gym and basketball.

鈥淵ou can also see the progression from the simple box cameras to those proprietary film cameras that made them so much money, like the disk cameras and the micro formats.鈥

Kodak鈥檚 fall in the mid-2000s was sudden and devastating. 鈥淭he decline was linked directly to digital,鈥 said Skyrme. 鈥淭he lack of digital products is telling. We can see an attempt to try to keep film going, because frankly, that鈥檚 where they made their money. There were certainly individuals in the company that proposed and researched digital, but the company didn鈥檛 embrace it as the future in time.鈥

Robert Burley, artist and Ryerson Image Arts professor, facilitated the donation while he was photographing abandoned Kodak factories for his art exhibit, 鈥淜odak Canada in Mount Dennis was one of the places he photographed,鈥 said Skyrme. 鈥淲hile photographing, he noticed that there had been a museum and archive to celebrate their anniversary not too many years beforehand, and it had a beautiful display of cameras and products they had produced, as well as the history of the company鈥攖heir archives had all of the documentation back to the beginnings in Toronto in 1899.鈥

Even a decade later, Kodak鈥檚 workplace culture survives. Last year, after lobbying from former employees, Metrolinx literally the last remaining building at Kodak Heights (it would have otherwise been demolished to make room for the Eglinton-Crosstown LRT). 鈥淚t鈥檚 still standing,鈥 said Skyrme. 鈥淧eople are really attached to that building

To learn more about the Kodak Canada Corporate Archives and Heritage Collection, visit the Ryerson Archives and Special Collections , or visit the new reading room on the 4th floor of the library, open from Monday to Friday, 9-5. To book an appointment, contact specialcollections@torontomu.ca or call 416-979-5000 ext 7027.

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