Blohm's first assignment in the Canadian North occurred in
Pond Inlet in 1979 when he was given the opportunity to photograph a gathering of Elders coming from all corners of
Baffin Island. Blohm was hired to record all the big events leading up to the establishment of
Nunavut. He was present at several of the meetings where the negotiations took place; the Agreement in Principle in
Igloolik; the contract signing with Prime Minister
Brian Mulroney in
Iqaluit; the Royal Assent signing at Coppermine (
Kugluktuk); the unveiling of the Nunavut flag in
Iqaluit during the April 1, 1999 celebration marking the official creation of the
Nunavut Territory. Blohm also obtained assignments from
Makivik Corporation,
Nunavut Tunngavik Incorporated (NTI) and
Canadian Geographic to photograph various people of the Arctic. On behalf of the
Inuit Justice Taskforce he photographed the Inuit inmates in southern-style penal/halfway institutions in the Arctic as well as white man's court in session about the Inuit. Blohm's book based on his experiences with northern people,
The Voice of the Natives - The Canadian North and Alaska, took three decades and was originally published in English and German. During his travels, Blohm asked the northern Native people to reflect upon their experience on the living land. It has texts by a variety of Inuit. Blohm published it into the language of the Inuit. An advanced copy of the
Inuktitut version was unveiled at the
Frankfurt International Book Fair on October 7, 2004. Blohm's work in the
House of Commons of Canada has found him at various times perched on top of the
Speaker's table or constructing a special "tent" to control lighting around the highly polished Speaker's mace. Throughout his career, he had the opportunity to take the official portraits of several members of the House of Commons of Canada. Blohm was assigned by the
National Film Board to photograph the burial of Prime Minister
Lester B. Pearson as well as the
Liberal Party of Canada convention where
Pierre-Elliott Trudeau won the leadership and replaced
Lester B. Pearson. Blohm supported his camera with a solid gold bar while working deep within the main vault of the
Royal Bank of Canada. Blohm undertook (along with other photographers) the first-ever production of a photographic catalogue of all artworks in the custody of the
National Gallery of Canada on the occasion of its 100th anniversary (in 1980). An altogether different aspect of Blohm's work has focussed on high technology. In 1981, as he was standing in
Mitel’s lobby with one of the company’s 3-inch wafers in his hands, light hit the wafer a certain way and he saw a riot of colour coming off. After hours of attempts, the right angle appeared and Blohm took the photo he had longed for. The next day, the photo was put on the cover of Mitel’s annual report. Mitel commissioned their first backlit mural (six panel 14’ long and 10’ high) in a two-story-high mirrored wall used to create a panoramic array at its main reception lobby. For this mural, the 1/25th of a ¼" square microchip had to be enlarged 16 million times in area. Engineers calculated it to be the highest magnification of a small portion of a microchip, up to that time. Blohm was commissioned to produce nine more murals that hung in Ireland, Puerto Rico,
Washington, D.C.,
Florida,
Bromont, Quebec, etc. One of these was 28’ long and 8’ high for the new Mitel plant in
Renfrew, Ontario. Before long, he was hailed by some as Canada's best microchip photographer. Images of integrated circuits captured on his research microscope have become the public image of several high technology clients such as Mitel,
Nortel, MOSAID,
Motorola, Optotech, Lumonics, etc. In 1986, Blohm published
Pebbles to Computers with
Anthony Stafford Beer (
Oxford University Press). The book traces the evolution of technology from early pebble to computers through information storage devices such as the
Phaistos Disc in
Crete,
Stonehenge, and
medieval calculators. It is a visual and philosophical musing on the link between prehistoric and ancient technologies and the "so-called
high technology" of today. Blohm invested over six years of research and travel (to thirteen countries) before the book was published. As well as the book, an international exhibit, a calendar and a one-hour
TVOntario documentary were produced. Blohm's photographs are distributed worldwide by Masterfile, Canada's largest
stock photography agency. Blohm has been a contributor for over 30 years. For
Science North in
Sudbury, Ontario Blohm photographed thin slices of various rocks containing minerals in polarized light and darkfield. His photographs are being shown to children and visitors as part of the
interpretive display. Over 180,000 photographs taken by Blohm have been acquired by
Library and Archives Canada. ==Publications==