Allan de la Plante is known for catching the action.

A resident of Burnaby, BC, his  life’s work has been spent chasing speed, whether international car racing, hockey, downhill skiing or horseracing. He produced an early portrait of Sandy Hawley in 1973, a young jockey who had just won an astonishing 515 races; he did a shoot with ‘The Shoe’, Bill Shoemaker; he covered the famous Russia-Canada hockey series in 1972; he followed the Crazy Canucks in World Cup downhill skiing. Along the way he was named official Canadian and COJO photographer at the Montreal Olympics in 1976 and created the First Canadian Gallery of Athletes, a collection of portraits.

Allan de la Plante.

De la Plante spent 18 years shooting in the high-octane world of Formula One, plus other racing series including Indy and Can Am. “It was fun, but I lost a lot of friends,” he said. “I was photographer to one of the Ferrari drivers who unfortunately was killed.” That driver was the fiery young Canadian Gilles Villeneuve. De la Plante recorded Villeneuve’s meteoric rise and after his untimely death in the fall of 1982 at the age of 32, he released Villeneuve, an award-winning photographic essay about his friend’s racing life. In 1996 Canada Post released two commemorative stamps in memory of Villeneuve based on de la Plante’s work.

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