Weekend Herald

‘Yes, that’s me, all dressed up in town’

A long-forgotten teenage photograph in an exhibition stuns one of the trio

- Picture / Sir George Grey Collection­s, Auckland Libraries Recognise the woman in the middle above or any of the people in street life below? Email us.

Katherine White, aged 71, was amazed to walk into Auckland’s central library and see a large photograph of herself as a teenager.

Dressed for town in a floral frock, cardigan slung about her shoulders and holding a handbag, White, aged 14 or 15, was pictured in Queen St with two other teenage girls.

The image was part of a library exhibition of work by the late John Rykenberg, an Auckland “street photograph­er”, who shot candid pictures of people in public places.

Seeing it has led to White getting in touch with the girl in the photo she recognises, high-school friend Carol Priddle, who now lives in Brisbane.

A retired nurse who lives in the Auckland suburb of Westmere, White first saw the picture in a magazine.

“I looked at it and thought hmm, she’s vaguely familiar. I went into the library and looked at it. They had these huge pictures in there. I realised then that it was me.

“I was stunned.”

She told an organiser of the exhibition.

“She gave me the email of the other person on the righthand side. I got in touch with her and I discovered we went to Kelston Girls’ [High School] together.”

White said she would like to meet Priddle if the opportunit­y arises.

Priddle, whose surname was Woodbury before she married, saw the picture on a Facebook history page.

But neither Priddle nor White recognise girl in the centre of the picture. Nor can they recall the picture being taken.

“Her face is familiar but I couldn’t tell you what her name was,” said White. “It was such a long time ago.”

“I remember the dress, I remember the handbag and I remember the watch.

“It looks like we were just out shopping. In those days it was a big deal to go into Queen St on a Friday after school,” said White, who lived in Glen Eden at the time and would catch the bus into town.

She liked shoe shops, “and going for coffee was quite fun”.

White trained at the Green Lane and Carrington hospitals to become a registered nurse.

“I did a variety of things, mostly

Hmental health. I worked in prisons, court liaison, the Mason Clinic, and as a psychiatri­c district nurse.” Priddle has lived in Britain and Australia and is awaiting the birth of her first grandchild. A library spokeswoma­n said 24 people had been identified from the 17 images in the exhibition.

White made the identifica­tion at the exhibition in the library; the rest were made through Facebook. Rykenberg shifted from the Netherland­s to New Zealand in the 1950s and establishe­d a successful photograph­y business in Auckland. He took pictures on streets, in restaurant­s and on the wharfs as well as shooting weddings and other social events. “Auckland Libraries has the first instalment­s of a collection of more than 1 million images by Rykenberg Photograph­y.

“Most of the people in the photograph­s are unidentifi­ed,” the spokeswoma­n said.

More than 7000 of the Rykenberg images have been digitised and are accessible on the library’s online database.

 ??  ?? Watch the video at nzherald.co.nz Katherine White (left), Carol Priddle (nee Woodbury, right) and an unknown teenager in Queen St, 1960, in one of thousands of images taken by the late John Rykenberg.
Watch the video at nzherald.co.nz Katherine White (left), Carol Priddle (nee Woodbury, right) and an unknown teenager in Queen St, 1960, in one of thousands of images taken by the late John Rykenberg.
 ??  ?? Katherine White (top) and Carol Priddle.
Katherine White (top) and Carol Priddle.
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