Charlie Dawes: Everybody's Artist Photographer

Charlie Dawes: Everybody's Artist Photographer

C.P. Dawes

Central City Library
44-46 Lorne St, Auckland

31 May - 18 August 2019

Part of the Auckland Festival of Photography

Explore the work of Hokianga photographer, Charles Peet Dawes, including images from a collection of glass plate negatives recently acquired by Auckland Libraries.

"While-you wait" photos. Photographers Enos Pegler (l) holding camera and tripod and Charlie Dawes (second from left). Photo / Dawes collection, Auckland Libraries

"While-you wait" photos. Photographers Enos Pegler (l) holding camera and tripod and Charlie Dawes (second from left). Photo / Dawes collection, Auckland Libraries

C.P. Dawes. Charlie Dawes: Everybody’s Artist Photographer. About 1905. Auckland Libraries Heritage Collections, 1572-1220.

Charles Peet Dawes spent most of his life in the Hokianga. He was a jack-of-all-trades, working variously as a carrier, mailman, nightsoil collector and orchardist. He was also a photographer, running a studio in Kohukohu probably from at least 1892 to around 1925.

When he died in 1947 his negatives were dispersed, but a box of his glass plates was found at a junk shop in Auckland’s Upper Queen Street in the 1970s, and around 475 negatives were discovered in a secondhand store in Kaitaia in 2012.

Together with 1,650 negatives gifted by Dawes descendants in 2018, these now form the Dawes Collection at Tāmaki Pātaka Kōrero | Central City Library. Many of the photographs in this exhibition are displayed for the first time.

C.P. Dawes: Māori dog-tax resisters, including leader Hone Toia (centre, standing), following their surrender at Waima in Northland in 1898. Auckland Libraries Heritage Collection

C.P. Dawes: Māori dog-tax resisters, including leader Hone Toia (centre, standing), following their surrender at Waima in Northland in 1898. Auckland Libraries Heritage Collection