May 01, 2012

Head On Festival Opens Friday 4th May Sydney

Head On Festival in Sydney opens this Friday, May 4 at Customs House (7- 9pm) with the Head On Portrait Prize winners announced at 8pm.

Judges of the 2012 Portrait Prize include photographer Tamara Dean, Monash Gallery Director Shaune Lakin, ABC broadcaster Robbie Buck and Head On curator Moshe Rosenzveig. The ‘Critic’s Prize’ will chosen by photographer and critic Robert McFarlane.

Seminars Presentations Workshops
This year’s Festival features hundreds of exhibitions spread across numerous spaces. There is also a highly regarded Seminar Programme featuring local and international speakers including Magnum Photos' David Alan Harvey and Multi Award winning photographers - Australians Stephen Dupont and Andrew Quilty and from India, Pablo Bartholomew. Plus there are leading curators, festival directors, bloggers and others on the programme. It's a very exciting line up and provides a rare opportunity to explore international themes.

To find out more about Head On and its extensive programme please click here

And please look out for my feature on this year's Festival in a coming issue of Pro Photo magazine.

Maggie Diaz feature now on website

'Pearls and Gloves'. This photograph was taken by Maggie Diaz in Chicago in the late 1950s. This image, and others, feature in my profile on Maggie which is the cover story for the May issue of Pro Photo, on sale now. You can read the story in PDF format on my website Reality & Illusion

April 27, 2012

Maggie Diaz feature out now

My profile on Maggie Diaz is the cover story for May's issue of Pro Photo.  


The Canberra - Maggie arrived in Melbourne on the maiden voyage in 1961
(C) Maggie Diaz

April 24, 2012

Winner of Fotobook Dummy Award

"A remarkable body of work from Dagmar Keller and Martin Wittwer", 'Passengers', has won this year's Fotobook Dummy Award in Paris. The prize? A publishing contract with the German publisher Seltmann und Sohne.

A collaborative work, 'Passengers" was shot on location in Poland in the winter of 2011-2012.. The pair independently photographed the passengers at a main bus terminal in Kielce where dozens of regional lines originate. To see the winning book and read the full article visit Lightbox Time.

Winner: Passengers (C) Dagmar Keller and Martin Wittwer

April 18, 2012

The Girls of Chechnya - Diana Markosian

Twenty-two year old Diana Markosian is a Russian-born photographer who in November last year moved to Chechnya to progress her photo essay documenting the lives of girls living in this war-torn, and still extremely dangerous, country. The freedom we take for granted is definitely not present there...Check out the story and her photographs at Time Lightbox

"Khedi Konchieva, 15, goes on a date with her boyfriend in the village of Serzhen-Yurt. A couple on a date in Chechnya must meet in public and sit a few feet apart. Any form of intimate contact is forbidden; some young woman who have sex before marriage risk death at the hands of their family." Photography: Diana Markosian. Copy: Time Lightbox

April 12, 2012

Street Photography Sale Now On

PhotoVoice has organized an online sale of limited edition street photography. Sale started yesterday so get in quick. You can check out the work at PhotoVoice

PhotoVoice is a charity that works with marginalized communities “around the world to tell their own stories and represent themselves visually”. All proceeds from the street photography sale go towards PhotoVoice’s work.

There are some awesome photos, two I particularly like - the polar bear looking longingly at a cake shop window (Jo Paul Wallace), and the pigeon walking in Trafalgar Square (shown on the book cover below) by Matt Stuart.

Check out the book Street Photography Now by Sophie Howarth and Stephen McLaren available on Amazon.com


April 04, 2012

Great Photography Books from T&G Publishing

T&G is a boutique publishing house based in Sydney, Australia. Director Gianni Frinzi is incredibly passionate about photography and about producing beautiful books - many of T&G's titles will no doubt become collector's items.

My favorite T&G books, at the moment, are:

Martin Parr No Worries (read my article at Pro Photo Martin Parr)

















Max Pam's Atlas Monographs (read my article at Pro Photo Max Pam)

I am planning to review the incredible collection of Lewis Morely's work - I to Eye, but in the meantime please check out T&G's website to view, and buy, this beautiful book (T&G Publishing).

April 03, 2012

Ramadan in Yemen - new book by Max Pam

"Ramadan in Yemen" documents photographer Max Pam's travels through this amazing country in the late 1990s. Max believes the journal he kept at this time is one of his best and this journal forms the heart to the book "Ramadan in Yemen" published by Éditions Bessard in Paris. The journal is full of jottings, notes, drawings and disjointed quotes that add to its ability to transport the viewer to that moment in time. Pam's journals give an insight into his creative processes and his photographs evoke the spirit and warmth of the people of Yemen.

The book is beautifully bound and comes in an exquisite box giving weight to the idea that this is definitely a collector's item. Published as a limited edition of 1000 copies, the first 250 books will be personally numbered, embossed and signed by Max. Congratulations to Pierre and his team at Ã‰ditions Bessard on publishing such a beautiful book.

Of "Ramadan in Yemen" Max Pam said: "What could I say about Yemen that did it justice. I tried in my journal to work it honestly. I tried with 60 rolls of black and white 120 film to translate the experience. That hot, spare and beautiful Ramadan. No eating or drinking anything between sunrise and sunset. The faithful waiting for the moment. The cannon booms from the mosque in the afterglow of the day. KABOUMMM and a frenzy of quat buying, tea drinking and food eating begins in the suqs and squares and oases and towns all over the country. Everyone is happy, elated, laughing and joking sitting down together as one nation. And you know what? People always wanted me to share and be part of their Ramadan, their community, their Yemen. I travelled all over the country with them. To Shibam, Taizz, Al Mukallah, Sanaa, over the desert, by the sea and into the mountains. The shared taxis were always a half past dead Peugeot 405’s with sometimes 10 or 12 people jammed in. The 92 pages of this book give my version of that unforgettable Ramadan month. An experience freely given to me by the generosity of Yemeni people".

Email Ã‰ditions Bessard to order your copy today  contact@editionsbessard.com  






All photography by Max Pam


March 29, 2012

Carla Coulson - win a portrait shoot

I first interviewed Carla in Paris in 2009. Since then this extraordinarily talented and gutsy woman has gone from strength to strength. Carla is an inspiration and continues to reinvent herself. She has just launched a new business and is generously giving away a portrait shoot and make over in either Paris or Sydney. Check out this link for details Carla Loves Photography Competition

And look out for my feature on Carla in a coming edition of Pro Photo magazine.

From Paris with love....indeed!


Photography by Carla Coulson (c)

March 28, 2012

Big Day Out Photography Exhibition - Arts Centre Melbourne

Two exhibitions definitely worth checking out at the Arts Centre - one celebrating the 40th Anniversary of the Sunbury Music Festival and the other "a nod to the 20th Anniversary of the Big Day Out" (BDO). Australian photographer Marty Williams, who has covered the BDO for 20 years, and shot thousands of gigs over his rock'n'roll photography career (so far), has a number of photos in the BDO exhibition. On at the Arts Centre in the St Kilda Road Gallery until May 27. Rock On!

Scott Owen, Living End, BDO
Marty Williams Photography (c) 2012



March 22, 2012

Foto Freo Highlight - Old Sad and Mad Exhibition

Kevin Cooper's series of portraits shot at Siddhi Shaligram Briddhashram - Home for the Elderly at Pashupatinath, in Kathmandu Nepal, is on show at the Buffalo Club, High Street, Fremantle. The black and white photographs depict the elderly residents of this ramshackle facility that is housed in a structure built in the mid-19th Century. The Home is rundown and the amenities extremely poor, a single tap for washing, and too many rickety flights of stairs for old bones. A number of residents, who have nowhere else to go, suffer from dementia. 

Cooper's photographs may echo with poignancy, and to deny the atrocious state of the facility and the conditions in which these people live would be to ignore reality, but these photos also capture the human spirit with dignity. Cooper said to me he wasn't sure of the ethics of photographing people who don't really know what's going on, but in my opinion one of the roles of a photojournalist is to bring to a greater audience a view of life that may alter perceptions, evoke compassion and force action for a better world.

This is an excellent collection of compassionate and honest photographs that is a must see at this year's Foto Freo. To find out more about Cooper's photography check out his website: Kevin Cooper