Advertisement

We need your help now

Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.

You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.

If you've seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.

Man on Bridge
man on bridge

Photo project collects 1,800 of your photos taken over 50 years on O'Connell Street

Do you have a photo taken by Arthur Fields?

LAST YEAR WE brought you the story of Arthur Fields, the photographer who took photos of passersby on O’Connell Bridge from the 1930s until he retired in 1985 at age 84.

Film-maker Ciaran Deeney was looking for funding for his interactive photo collection project that gathers the photos and tells the story of Arthur Fields.

Since then, the project has come to fruition under El Zorrero Films and funding by the Arthur Guinness Projects.

Last week they appeared on RTÉ’s The Late Late show and appealed for you to send on your family photos taken by Fields over the years, as well as attend the events organised to scan your cherished pics.

In just one week they have had over 1,800 photos submitted and they’re still rolling in.

Arthur fields – the man behind the camera

Arthur Fields took hundreds of thousands of photos throughout his career but no negatives survive.

The goal of the project is to gather these photos from the public from their personal collections and create an alternative photographic archive of Dublin city, one that reveals how we lived, how our city and its people changed over fifty years.


El Zorrero Films / Vimeo

Arthur was just one of many street photographers who worked in Dublin over the years, although he was the most prominent and enjoyed the lengthiest career as a street photographer.

Fields was a Jewish man who had fled the Ukraine amidst the breakout of World War Two and became a Dublin institution.

It is estimated he took  more than 182,500 photographs throughout his career.

Photo appeal

Speaking to The Journal.ie, Ciaran Deeney says the enthusiasm towards the project has been overwhelming.

“We appeared on RTÉ’s Late Late Show last week and it was a perfect platform for us to make an appeal for photos,” he said, adding, “since then it’s been flying”.

Deeney said that after seeing the show, one man in Derry got the first bus down to Dublin the next day so that he could attend the scanning event in Clerys.

“It was touching as he was actually willing to donate the one photo that he had of his father, but we explained that we only wanted a copy of it,” explained Deeney, who said that there are a lot of emotions surrounding these photos.

Some photos come from the most unusual places, as this story tells:


El Zorrero Films / Vimeo

“There photos come with a lot of family stories and memories. The girl scanning the photos has been through a whole range of emotions hearing everyone tell their stories,”  said Deeney.

He explained that the project is not a short-lived one and will be going on over the next year. All images are going to Dublin City Libraries where they will look after them being archived.

“To see Dublin in photos over 50 years, it tells a social history of the people, the fashion and the architecture, it really is fascinating that Arthur documented all of this with his photographs,” said Deeney, urging that everyone get searching in their old family photo albums and dig them out.

So, if you have a family photo in an old family album that you would like to submit, what do you do?

You can head along to one of the locations where images are being scanned or you can upload a copy of it by clicking here.

Here are just some of the photos that people have submitted so far:

422bbddad428dd12a883beba18074e85 Teresa Byrne, Bernadette Byrne and Grandmother Margaret Byrne from Blanchardstown on a shopping trip in 1958. Cloudfront Cloudfront

69fa2a8600b934044dda68a6bb9cfca0 Michael Sorahan with his daughter Bernadette Inzani nee Sorahan, aged 11, walking across O'Connell Bridge on our way to see my Nana and Grandad Sorahan, who lived in Bridgefoot St. It was taken in August 1970. Cloudfront Cloudfront

c87068e1040cbc7d45ac53ae9775bf60 Mum, Emma nee Withers Sorahan taken in March 1949 on O'Connell Bridge with some friends. Cloudfront Cloudfront

 

994aa16bd720add42e1d741d290e7413 Frank and Mollie Weldrick with Terry and Bernie Bergin taken on St. Patrick's day 1955. Cloudfront Cloudfront

5df34af5476eaa0ee3bd9ce4ff23ba0c Joe Lynch Cloudfront Cloudfront

 

6e7f0035bee34f3346b20b0ffffb071a Eamon Dignam with friend. Cloudfront Cloudfront

fcb5f64fed7d5c736015f4437a032f23 Taken in 1960/61 Man on Bridge Man on Bridge

BkN1PqGCYAEbRhy Arthur Field's sons on the Bridge. Wally Cassidy Wally Cassidy

For more information on the project and how to submit photos, click here. Follow them on Twitter @ManOnBridgeDoc.

Related: Do you remember photographer Arthur Fields of O’Connell Bridge?>

Your Voice
Readers Comments
28
    Submit a report
    Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
    Thank you for the feedback
    Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.