
The unbelievable story of the photographer, the grandson and a legacy left unseen for decades.
Welcome to A Blank Wall. I'm Jack, the Grandson of Herbert, the photographer at the heart of this project, and the man I never met.
A Blank Wall is a photography project, archive, print store and video channel to share the lifetime of photography taken by my Grandfather Herbert with the world.
It’s mission is simple: to restore, digitise and tell the untold stories behind his photos. So lets go back to the start…

In December 2021, a large crate, covered in messy handwriting and wrapped in bin bags, was opened in a garage near London, U.K. These were photographs taken by my late Grandfather Herbert Smith, who travelled around the world between 1945-87, taking photos as he went.
By the time he passed away in the late 1980s, he had travelled to over forty countries, as far flung as Afghanistan, Japan, New Zealand and Guatemala. Many of these places were visited at a time totally unrecognisable today.
Upon discovering the photographs in 2021, I realised this archive spanning almost fifty years had to be shared. A Blank Wall was born.

Who was my grandfather, the photographer?
Herbert was born in 1917 on boxing day, in Bolton, Manchester (UK). He started taking photos during high school and university, whilst studying to be a doctor.
Amongst his cameras he used a Rolleiflex & Olympus OM1 and OM4, and he used these to take extensive photographs of England in the 1940-60s, most of which remain untouched in perfect condition today.
As he started to build his photography collection, he became a doctor, a local surgeon in the city of Manchester, a profession which might explain his extremely meticulous approach to photography.

He used the money gained as a doctor to start travelling with my grandmother.
He went to Scandinavia and the Alps, taking more and more photos as he went.
He had a respect for Ansel Adams, and much of his early work reflected large landscapes and architecture in the north of England, as well as Europe.
In the 1960s, he bought a pair of Olympus OM1s and started meeting other photographers, some professional and able to help his style and technique.
He began travelling to more far flung places, such as Canada and Bolivia to take photos with friends.
This would last for the next 30 years until his premature passing in the late 1980s. He would visit countries at a very different time to today, such as Afghanistan before the Soviet invasion in the 1970s, or Nepal before climbing and walking made it so popular for tourists.

I unfortunately never met my Grandfather or Grandmother.
He was an amateur photographer, but he was highly respected, being a fellow of the Royal Photographic Society in the U.K. For this, he created a large body of beautiful portraits from around the world, some of which will be exhibited in public soon.
The collection is huge. All the colour images are in plastic and paper 35mm slides, on diapositive film, and the B&W negatives in sleeves of archival photographic film books. The negatives are a mix of medium (120 roll) and 35mm film.

There were roughly 65,000 colour images on film, and 15,000 black and white negatives.
My Grandfather was extremely meticulous. He sorted all the slides into hundreds of boxes in stacks. Each stack of slides has around 20,000 photos in, in their original yellow Kodachrome I and II boxes. The oldest film from 1945-50, is in hand-sealed envelopes.
There are also hundreds of original prints, handmade on Ilford paper, in their original packaging. These were developed in his darkroom at home, and still include countless test prints that didn't make the final cut.
Every single image is labelled, dated, and the location made clear in scrawling handwriting by my Grandfather. This has made my archiving considerably easier...

A Blank Wall today is an ever-expanding photographic collection and archive, using the best images for 320gsm Giclee prints and bespoke-made framed prints.
Most of the images are curated, developed and edited by myself, a process that will likely take many years. They are professionally scanned, but many of the images are damaged and require restoration. This means each image can take hours to edit, followed by extensive photographic print testing on the final paper stock.
Follow along this journey as I develop more film, digitise more photos, exhibit his work and create books, prints and much more, and follow along on Instagram at @blankwall.uk