Photos of the week:
The Mediterranean Migrant Crisis
(C) Argiris Mantikos / AP
(C) Alessandro Di Meo / AP
Book Review:
Kill City: Lower East Side Squatters 1992-2000 Ash Thayer
In the early 1990s, unable to pay the rent on her apartment in Brooklyn, photographer Ash Thayer, then a struggling art student in New York City (NYC), found a home with the squatters who populated the derelict buildings on the Lower East Side.
Left to rot, these tenements had been abandoned during the financial crisis that had brought NYC to the brink of bankruptcy 15 years earlier. With the city’s infrastructure in tatters, the wait for low-income housing was interminable. These buildings became illegal havens for those who otherwise would have been living on the streets of what was one of the city’s most nefarious neighbourhoods...(to read the full review and see more photographs click on the Book Reviews tab at the top of the blog).
Book Review:
Kill City: Lower East Side Squatters 1992-2000 Ash Thayer
In the early 1990s, unable to pay the rent on her apartment in Brooklyn, photographer Ash Thayer, then a struggling art student in New York City (NYC), found a home with the squatters who populated the derelict buildings on the Lower East Side.
Left to rot, these tenements had been abandoned during the financial crisis that had brought NYC to the brink of bankruptcy 15 years earlier. With the city’s infrastructure in tatters, the wait for low-income housing was interminable. These buildings became illegal havens for those who otherwise would have been living on the streets of what was one of the city’s most nefarious neighbourhoods...(to read the full review and see more photographs click on the Book Reviews tab at the top of the blog).
(C) Ash Thayer
Exhibitions:
(C) Yanagi Miwa: My Grandmothers
Exhibitions:
Sydney
Loud!
Photographs of women by women
Loud!
Photographs of women by women
(C) Yanagi Miwa: My Grandmothers
A total of nine works by photographic artists Anne Zahalka (Australia), Yanagi Miwa (Japan), Yvonne Todd (New Zealand) and Rosemary Laing (Australia) comprise this exhibition, which the Art Gallery of NSW claims, "examines the importance of photography as a medium for the construction of personas and the tension between photographic truth and its wilful manipulation".
A total of nine works by photographic artists Anne Zahalka (Australia), Yanagi Miwa (Japan), Yvonne Todd (New Zealand) and Rosemary Laing (Australia) comprise this exhibition, which the Art Gallery of NSW claims, "examines the importance of photography as a medium for the construction of personas and the tension between photographic truth and its wilful manipulation".
(C) Yanagi Miwa: My Grandmothers
The works that interest me the most in this exhibition are Yanagi Miwa’s series “My Grandmothers” which pays homage to ageing and to the diverse dreams and fantasies of her subjects (above) and Sydney-based photo media artist Rosemary Laing’s “A Dozen Useless Actions for Grieving Blondes” which points to stereotyping, superficiality and the complexity of the individual (below).
Above: (C) Rosemary Laing “A Dozen Useless Actions for Grieving Blondes”
It is a shame there are only nine images in this exhibition that is in celebration of the 40th anniversary of International Women’s Year. In particular given the breadth of Anne Zahalka’s oeuvre, and the number of her images held in the Gallery's collection I would have expected to see more than a single image (below). That being said, if you’re in Sydney it’s definitely worth a look and at the same time you can check out the Gallery’s other exhibition, The Photograph and Australia, which is on until 8 June.
(C) Anne Zahalka
(C) Yvonne Todd
Exhibitions:
Canberra
Colour My World
Group Show
(C) Robyn Stacey
Eventually the introduction of colour photography put an end to the need to paint photographs, but in the post-modernist era hand-colouring made a come back, this time as an artistic pursuit. Photographic artists began to experiment with pencils, crayons and paints on photographs blurring the lines between high art and pop culture. Hand-colouring was viewed as somewhat anarchistic, its resurgence coinciding with the feminist and punk movements and the ‘anything goes’ mentality of the times.
In the exhibition - Colour My World – this period of experimentation in Australian photographic history is celebrated with an expansive collection from a diverse group of artists – Micky Allan, Ruth Maddison, Warren Breninger, Julie Rrap, Janina Green, Christine Barry, Fiona Hall, Miriam Stannage, Robyn Stacey, Nici Cumpston, Lyndell Brown/Charles Green and Jon Cattapan.
Hand-coloured photographs date back to the late 1800s when portraits were enhanced with spots of red on the cheeks and lips, or coloured in their entirety as a way of appeasing customers who were used to painted portraits. At that time hand-colouring was a commercial endeavour and purists of both painting and photography looked unfavourably at the practice, which was often carried out by women employed as colourists.
Eventually the introduction of colour photography put an end to the need to paint photographs, but in the post-modernist era hand-colouring made a come back, this time as an artistic pursuit. Photographic artists began to experiment with pencils, crayons and paints on photographs blurring the lines between high art and pop culture. Hand-colouring was viewed as somewhat anarchistic, its resurgence coinciding with the feminist and punk movements and the ‘anything goes’ mentality of the times.
In the exhibition - Colour My World – this period of experimentation in Australian photographic history is celebrated with an expansive collection from a diverse group of artists – Micky Allan, Ruth Maddison, Warren Breninger, Julie Rrap, Janina Green, Christine Barry, Fiona Hall, Miriam Stannage, Robyn Stacey, Nici Cumpston, Lyndell Brown/Charles Green and Jon Cattapan.
(C) Micky Allan
(C) Micky Allan
Micky Allan is considered a pioneer when it comes to hand-painting as she was one of the first to engage with the form in this country. Having trained as a painter, Allan extended the concept of hand-colouring with dyes by using watercolours, oil and acrylic paints as well as pencils.
She says the tactile nature of painting led to her experimentation. “I didn’t like the darkroom very much and I couldn’t wait until the photo was ready to paint. When you touch the photograph directly, like in painting or drawing, it creates this direct link to all those little brain tremors that come out the hand, whereas in the darkroom it felt different. Because I am naturally a painter I liked the combination and the unexpected outcomes with cross overs of media”.
“I wanted to combine the fluid nature of paint with those elements of the photograph that are so peculiar to photography, like that fabulous tonal range and the fact that there is this sense that this place is real, or this event happened, or this person exists,” she explains.
In particular, women readily embraced the intimate involvement with the artwork that hand-colouring necessitated. This is evidenced in the weighting of female artists in ‘Colour My World,’ a rarity for an exhibition that spans an era in Australian photography where men dominated.
(C) Micky Allan
(C) Micky Allan
Micky Allan is considered a pioneer when it comes to hand-painting as she was one of the first to engage with the form in this country. Having trained as a painter, Allan extended the concept of hand-colouring with dyes by using watercolours, oil and acrylic paints as well as pencils.
She says the tactile nature of painting led to her experimentation. “I didn’t like the darkroom very much and I couldn’t wait until the photo was ready to paint. When you touch the photograph directly, like in painting or drawing, it creates this direct link to all those little brain tremors that come out the hand, whereas in the darkroom it felt different. Because I am naturally a painter I liked the combination and the unexpected outcomes with cross overs of media”.
“I wanted to combine the fluid nature of paint with those elements of the photograph that are so peculiar to photography, like that fabulous tonal range and the fact that there is this sense that this place is real, or this event happened, or this person exists,” she explains.
In particular, women readily embraced the intimate involvement with the artwork that hand-colouring necessitated. This is evidenced in the weighting of female artists in ‘Colour My World,’ a rarity for an exhibition that spans an era in Australian photography where men dominated.
(C) Ruth Maddison
(C) Ruth Maddison
(C) Ruth Maddison
Ruth Maddison, whose work is also on show, was drawn to hand-colouring and its interactive nature, and this form influenced her early career in the 1970s. In recent years she’s revisited the practice and says, “hand colouring allows me to work directly on the object as well as giving me time away from the screen – a much more enjoyable and calming way to work”.
One of Australia’s most acclaimed photographic artists Robyn Stacey embraced the form in the early 1980s creating a series of hand-coloured artworks entitled Queensland – Out West. She says, “hand-colouring seemed a good way to visually re-enforce the personal and intimate quality of the prints, as well as being sympathetic to the subject matter”.
Ruth Maddison, whose work is also on show, was drawn to hand-colouring and its interactive nature, and this form influenced her early career in the 1970s. In recent years she’s revisited the practice and says, “hand colouring allows me to work directly on the object as well as giving me time away from the screen – a much more enjoyable and calming way to work”.
One of Australia’s most acclaimed photographic artists Robyn Stacey embraced the form in the early 1980s creating a series of hand-coloured artworks entitled Queensland – Out West. She says, “hand-colouring seemed a good way to visually re-enforce the personal and intimate quality of the prints, as well as being sympathetic to the subject matter”.
(C) Robyn Stacey
(C) Robyn Stacey
Throughout the eighties Stacey continued to experiment with hand-colouring and various images are included in ‘Colour My World,’ which is the first exhibition curated by the National Gallery of Australia’s new Senior Curator of Photography, Dr. Shaune Lakin.
“This exhibition brings together some of the most beautiful photographs made by Australian photographers over the last four decades,’ says Lakin. ‘It captures and reflects our diverse community and provides a unique perspective on the place of photography in our lives, at a time when the act of taking photographs has become a daily occurrence for many of us.”
Throughout the eighties Stacey continued to experiment with hand-colouring and various images are included in ‘Colour My World,’ which is the first exhibition curated by the National Gallery of Australia’s new Senior Curator of Photography, Dr. Shaune Lakin.
“This exhibition brings together some of the most beautiful photographs made by Australian photographers over the last four decades,’ says Lakin. ‘It captures and reflects our diverse community and provides a unique perspective on the place of photography in our lives, at a time when the act of taking photographs has become a daily occurrence for many of us.”
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