Orest Semchishen

Orest Semchishen (born 1932) is a Canadian photographer whose prints of Alberta document and evoke specific places and people in subjects such as rural communities, ethnic groups and prairie farms and collectively give a sense of Canada.

Concerned about the abandonment of rural Byzantine rite churches, he systematically recorded them using a view camera[3] along with disappearing Albertan localities as they were 40 years ago (these black-and-white works date from 1973 to 1986).

[2] His major influence is said to be the American photographer Walker Evans but he developed his own style,[1] distinguished by its "restrained lucidity".

[3] Semchishen has had a number of solo exhibitions from 1976 on, among them one of the Chinese community in 1985, Dragon to Phoenix and one of Trappers in the Whyte Museum of the Canadian Rockies (1989).

[4] In 2006, Through Alberta Eyes – The Photographs of Orest Semchishen was shown at the art gallery at Mount Saint Vincent University, Halifax, NS.