Honorary degree citation - Sam Tata
By: Katherine Tweedie, June 1982
Mr. Chancellor, I have the honour to present to you Sam Tata, an accomplished photographer, eye-witness to our time and above all, a humanist.
His photographic career has led him on journeys through India, Japan and China where he witnessed one of the greatest upheavals of the twentieth century, the Chinese revolution in 1949. In Shanghai, he was never without a camera to record a momentous event and its effect on the people. For Westerners, the Shangai photographs depict moments removed from our experience; they supplement or contradict other sources of information so that we may better comprehend a society which was in the process of profound change.
Sam Tata's journey brought him to Canada in 1956. In time he produced a photographic document of historical importance, but this time for Canadian culture. It is a series of portraits of artists, photographs which are unassuming, unpretentious, each preserving the identity and dignity of the individual. Like his own extensive interests, Tata's portraiture reached out into every artistic discipline; writers, painters, musicians, poets,