The community are needed to help identify some of the people in the images displayed in a photo exhibition at the Western Plains Cultural Centre.
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True to Life Likeness: A history of Vincent's Studio, Dubbo, tells the story of the development of photography, the rise of commercial photographic studios and the history of Arthur J. Vincent and his son Jack, whose studio was responsible for documenting the lives and significant events of the community of Dubbo and region.
The exhibition is a collaboration between Western Plains Cultural Centre and the Dubbo and District Family History Society (DDFHS), which in 1995 was gifted the rapidly deteriorating archive of Vincent's studio.
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Working solidly for more than 20 years, the volunteers at DDFHS collated, cleaned, and catalogued approximately 13,000 photographic negatives, making them accessible to the community.
While the studio operated from the early 1900s, the archive only comprises material from the early 1940s until the early 1980s.
The exhibition features vintage prints, objects and a selection of photographs of citizens of the region.
Dubbo Regional Council mayor Ben Shields said the exhibition is an insight into how the community operated in the mid to late 1900s.
"The studio captured the community as it worked and played. The exhibition features some of the region's most significant photographs, including the first use of flash photography in Dubbo," he said.
"It really is very interesting stuff."
Due to the difficulty of identifying many of the people who appear in the images, a photo wall has been created, where visitors are encouraged to write the names of people they may recognise, on the backs of the photos.
Additionally, the backdrop that appears in the photos has been recreated, enabling visitors to take their own Vincent-style portrait within the exhibition.
"I would like to thank the Dubbo and District Family History Society for their tireless work in preserving and restoring these pictures which capture the Dubbo region during a very unique period.
"There are pictures of residents who we don't know, so we'd really love members of the public to help us out by letting us know if they recognise anyone."