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architecture, colour, digital, urban, Wellington

art photography in Wellington

December 7, 2015

My last two visits to Wellington ( New Zealand) have  enabled  me  to  see  that art photography in Wellington looks  to be centred around the PhotoSpace  gallery that is  run by James Gilberd. The gallery  opened in 1992 and it is the longest running photographic gallery in New Zealand.  It  remains the only gallery in the Wellington region dedicated to exhibiting contemporary New Zealand and international photography. It values  a high level of craft and has a stable  of established, regular exhibitors.

 Unfortunately,  147 Cuba Street was closed, when I visited it.  Though there  are no state funded photography galleries in New Zealand,  the   City Gallery Wellington,  regularly exhibits photography. The nearest photographic gallery to PhotoSpace is the McNamara Gallery  in Whanganui.  The current exhibition  is   contemporary ambrotypes and daguerreotypes by Joyce Campbell,  and the gallery has  good  links to contemporary New Zealand photographers and publications. 

This gallery  has done far more foregrounding New Zealand photography over the past decade than the largely conservative Auckland Art Gallery and Christchurch Art Gallery,   which have acted to  marginalise  photographers vis-a -is the public gallery system. They  do so  with  exhibition programmes that function as if New Zealand photography wasn’t happening, or if they acknowledged photography’s existence,  they  were noted for their absence  over the past couple of decades in dealing with the medium of photography critically.

Coop Bank, Wellington

Coop Bank, Wellington

The established Wellington-based photographers include Mary McPherson,   Andrew Ross, Peter Black  and  Julian Ward. I knew the photographic work of Lester Blair  from his Flickr days and came across  the photos of Gabrielle Mckone recently whilst  photographing in Wellington. I know next to nothing  about the critical writing on New Zealand art and photography.  I’ve only just discovered that  Geoffrey Batchen  is  currently teaching at Victoria University. That is the extent of my surface knowledge of Wellington art photography.

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coastal, colour, film, history, landscape

Fleurieuscapes + the Indigenous absence

November 26, 2015

I’ve started working  on my forthcoming Fleuriescapes exhibition  at  the Magpie Springs Gallery  in January/February   2016. The exhibition explores  the Fleurieu Peninsula in terms of people, space and place as this opens up a way to gain a perspective on the  white colonisation of the region and  the  contemporary Indigenous absence.  The exhibition is the first step in this project about a region that markets itself as Adelaide’s holiday adventure playground.

The history of the Fleurieu Peninsula  appears to be premised on  the pioneer myth/legend based on the  ingenuity hard work  and adventurousness of the early settlers and the cultural extinction of the Ngarrindjeri people. An anthropologically constructed image of a southern Indigenous person in a possum skin cloak in the South Australian Museum comes to represent a ‘unique’, but extinct Indigenous presence in the heartland of the white Australian nation.

Starfish Hill

Starfish Hill

 

The story of modernity excludes Indigenous people. It produces a set of foundational myths that are written by signs of development such as the bridge, the jetty and the marina. They all represent the power of western technology to overwrite the ‘natural landscape’. This is the landscape in which Indigenous people and Indigenous interests have been traditionally located. It is assumed that the Indigenous place has been obliterated or covered over by the layers of progress.  Continue Reading…

abstraction, colour, film

into the studio

November 14, 2015

When I was living in  the Sturt St  townhouse in Adelaide’s CBD  some of our  poodle walks in the Adelaide parklands involved me looking at the base of  cut logs to photograph as well as the trunks of trees. The logs were  from  the cut down trees in the parklands, and they were scattered around the parklands   to make the parklands  more like the bush and less like a park.

I photographed the most interesting ones  whilst on  the  walks but I’ve done nothing with these images.  I wasn’t all that  happy with what I’d done,  but   I felt that there was little that I could do with these found objects in the field. These logs were huge and they could not be bought to the makeshift studio at Encounter Bay.I continued with  the open air studio after we moved to Victor Harbor  as I realised that bringing back live cuttlefish and wet seaweed  into the studio didn’t really work.

log abstract

log abstract

Then I saw the work of Ed Douglas in his recent Some Connections exhibitions  –he was doing the same thing that I was but he was working in the studio, using a large format camera and black and white film. Consequently, he had much greater control over his  found subject matter— which he selected from the firewood that he had delivered to his property in the Adelaide Hills. The work was far more sophisticated and of much higher quality.

I have set up a  primitive studio –Encounter Studio–at Victor Harbor. It is based around using  one small window light,   a Cambo heavy duty studio stand with  2 geared heads  for view cameras and an 8×10  Sinar P.  I’ve also just purchased a beat up  (entry level) 5×4 Sinar F2 from Alex Gard in Tasmania.   Though I have a started  looking for objects to bring back into the studio to photograph  –ie., materials from nature, eg., from both the  beach and the bush—but so far  I have found very little that is useful  photography wise.

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architecture, colour, film, topographics

silo, Cowangi, Mallee Highway

October 29, 2015

I’ve finally scanned the medium format negatives  from the scoping I did  for the silo project  whilst I was  returning to Adelaide from the Canberra trip,  as well as those made  in the Wimmera  when I was returning  to Adelaide from being at the Ballarat International Foto Biennale.  This project evokes  the solitary road trip and  cross-country journeys,  as a working model of photography without the 35mm “grab-shot” style that captured flux and contradictions of modern life with a fresh immediacy. It is a winter project, given the summer heat in the Mallee.

This is an image of a silo at Cowangie,  in the Victorian part of  the Malle Highway  made with an old,  mechanical  handheld Rolleiflex SL66.   The picture that I also made  whilst I was scoping with  the digital camera  at the same time can be seen  here.

silo, Cowangie, Mallee Highway

silo, Cowangie, Mallee Highway

This  photography  of contemporary, rural Australian Mallee  is in the topographical style–an Australian topographics.   It is how I would make the picture in black and white using  the  8×10 Cambo monorail: straight on to the object,  with  cloud cover,  gentle light and some context to the landscape.  I wish that I ‘d taken the picture with the  8×10 then and there; but at the time when I was  in the field,  I wasn’t sure of  the right perspective to adopt. Hence the number of different interpretations I made with a digital camera. I then had to see them on the computer screen to be able to judge which of the  various interpretations was the most appropriate.

The photograph  endeavours to avoid being nostalgic  about the Australian Mallee and its fading small farm past to concentrate more on the object. It is  akin to the work of  Brend and Hilla Becher,  with their connection to  Minimalism and Conceptual Art and their systematic series or typologies industrial architecture.  Their pictures  of the architecture (eg., coal bunkers and pit heads) showed  a resource  industry that was visibly defunct and dying,  instead of the glimpses of hope of a thriving, developing nation that was evident in the 1970s American  New Topographics.  
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coastal, colour, film, landscape

photography and ugliness

October 22, 2015

I have noticed that there are a few  recurring images  in my archives of  coastal erosion of the sand dunes in,  and around,  the  Victor Harbor area of the Fleurieu Peninsula in South Australia. Since these images are a part of  The Littoral Zone  they got me thinking about how to construct the series or as a book.

The initial thinking behind these images suggests that the recession of the sand dunes is  due, by and large  to storm surges which  are causing the sand dunes to slowly recede,  and that with climate change  the sand dune shorelines around the Victor Harbor township and Hayborough will continue to recede. The categories associated with  climate change assume that one of the consequences of climate change in the form of a warming world is rising sea levels and these, in turn, when coupled to storm surges cause the recession of the sand dunes along the coast of the Fleurieu Peninsula.

sand dune erosion

sand dune erosion

The other kind of thinking or the categories  behind these discrete group of image is the  assumption  that  a (self-conscious) photography as art is the  voice of sensuous particularity against  an abstract economic rationality. Photography as art is more than,  and beyond,  economic reason,   the exchange value of the capitalist market,  and photography as the avatar of  modernity’s technological rationality,  with its mechanical technique, automation and deskilling.

 How do we make sense of  these two modes of thinking: scientific  theory and photography as art?

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