May 09, 2014

Friday Round Up - 9 May, 2014



For the next two weeks Friday Round Up will focus on Australia's largest photographic festival, Head On Photo Festival which officially opens in Sydney on 16th May and runs through until 8th June. In its fifth outing Head On will feature more than 900 photographers across 140 galleries in a celebration of photography in all its forms.

This week Friday Round Up showcases some of the Australian talent, but the programme is incredibly diverse and this selection should be taken as a teaser only for what's in store. Next Friday we will be blogging directly from the Festival's opening weekend. Check out the Festival website here. 

Featured this week are Australians Nicola Dracoulis, Jarrad Seng, James Horan, Leon Gregory, Kerry Pryor, Ludlites Love Light and Olive Cotton and Sally McInerney. Plus there are photo galleries from Alec Dawson and Lisa Garland. Enjoy the feast of photography that lies ahead.

Nicola Dracoulis 
Viver no Meio do Barulho 
(Living in the Middle of the Noise)
Melbourne photographer Nicola Dracoulis’ exploration of nine young people living in Rio’s favelas is gripping. Shot in 2006 and 2013 in this series of portraits Dracoulis revisits the same people seven years apart capturing both the changes in individuals and their habitats. 




Above images (C) Nicola Dracoulis

29 May to 9 June
Gaffa Creative Precinct
281 Clarence Street
Sydney
   
Jarrad Seng
A L L T E R V A T N
A holiday to Iceland in 2013 provided an unexpected opportunity for 26-year-old Perth photographer Jarrad Seng to experiment with aerial landscape photography the outcome of which is a stunning collection of aerial photographs of Icelandic water flows that are reminiscent of abstract paintings.




Above images (C) Jarrad Seng

5-31 May
The Arthouse
275 Pitt Street
Sydney 

James Horan
Irish Horse
When Irish-born photographer James Horan was growing up in a housing commission estate in Limerick he was warned to keep away from the ‘Travellers’ as the Irish gypsies are known. “Crazy, dangerous people, that you didn’t want to associate with,” he says. But after spending five years documenting the lives of the Travellers Horan has come away not only with a unique view, but also a deep appreciation and concern for these misunderstood and often maligned people.

 


Above images (C) James Horan

21 May to 14 June, 2014
Brenda May Gallery
2 Danks Street
Waterloo


Leon Gregory
At Last - The Seventies
In the early 1970s Sydney photographer Leon Gregory was an aspiring actor who made ends meet by shooting portfolios for his fellow thespians. In his spare time he used his camera in classic street photography style taking photographs of random people that crossed his path. Little did he know that forty years later his eclectic collection of shots of Sydney’s inner city enclaves - Kings Cross, Darlinghurst, Woolloomooloo, The Domain, the City, Glebe and Balmain – taken between 1970-1973 would prove somewhat of a time capsule. 




Above images (C) Leon Gregory

24 May to 13 June
Ginkgo Gallery
166 St Johns Road 
Glebe


Kerry Pryor
Who Lives Here
In Ethiopia almost five million children have lost one or both parents to AIDS, famine, war or disease. The children, known as the “Lost Generation” are mostly left to fend for themselves and often end up living on the street. Since 2011 Australian photographer Kerry Pryor has been documenting the lives of children under the care of 'Beyond the Orphanage' and in her exhibition “Who Lives Here” she shares her experiences.




Above images (C) Kerry Pryor


12 May-29 June 
Leichardt Library 
23 Norton Street 
Leichardt

Ludlites Love Light 
Group Show
This exhibition features images taken on “plastic cameras” by various members of the Ludlites photographic collective, an ever-expanding group of enthusiasts who are taken by the unpredictability of images made on plastic cameras.

 
(C) Anika Luzemann


(C) Patrick Boland

Curated by Australian photojournalist and art photographer Steven Siewart, Ludlites Love Light showcases an exciting collection of what can be achieved in lo-fi photography when one combines imagination, a pinch of technical know-how and loads enthusiasm and patience.

The Ludlites’ spokesperson on this occasion is long-time plastic camera enthusiast and photographer Tim Hixson who first came across the plastic model in the 1970s when he was studying photography in the US.

He tells that in those days plastic cameras were “about a dollar each” and that photographing with them was somewhat of a respite from the heavily technical practice that was professional photography in pre-digital days. 


(C) Terry Hixson

Shooting with the plastic cameras was more of an intuitive activity rather than being reliant on the technical aspects of photography. That’s not to say there isn’t any technique involved in shooting with these cameras. Quite the contrary says Hixson.

“There is a lot of technique to using these cameras, but you have to let go of the technical and follow your instinct more. With these cameras you are never guaranteed of the shot you think you’ve got and you never feel like you are in control, but that is part of the whole experience. They have one shutter speed and one fixed F-stop so you have to work around these issues and that makes you more patient. Shooting with these cameras you tend to go into it with an idea rather than creating it later in the computer.”

Hixson says because of the lack of control and the freedom of experimentation that comes with the randomness of the experience, ego falls away and “you realise the humility of it all”.

He explains that with these plastic cameras it’s all about the light and “seeing it and getting it is more difficult on a plastic camera”. But that’s all part of the fun, he insists, and making mistakes, and often discovering something wonderful in those errors, is fundamental to the experience. 

 (C) Craig Proudford


 (C) Heleana Genaus

“For me there is a truthfulness with film, you start from a true perspective and the film binds you to traditional photo values that you then set out to break with the plastic camera which is so simple it’s intriguing,” states Hixson who runs workshops on the topic. “I love seeing people have fun with it. You can’t control it so you have to accept what you get, but you can go back and try again and in that way you are training your mind”.


13-24 May
Workshop: 12noon-4pm Saturday 17 May - open
The Depot Gallery
Danks Street
Waterloo

Mother & Daughter: A Conversation
Sally McInerney and Olive Cotton 

 (C) Olive Cotton

(C) Sally McInerney

At this year’s Head On Photo Festival photographer Sally McInerney will exhibit for the first time alongside her mother Olive Cotton who is regarded as a pioneer of modernist photography in this country.

Cotton’s story is well known in photography circles. Married to renowned photographer Max Dupain in the late 1930s Cotton ran Dupain’s studio while he was at war and in the process honed her skills as a master printer. Their marriage was short-lived and later Cotton married farmer Ross McInerney moving to the country and shelving her darkroom skills for nearly 20 years.

But Cotton never stopped taking photographs with her Rolleiflex camera even if she was unable to make prints. “She wasn’t expected to leave behind her photography when she got married,” says daughter Sally McInerney. “The camera was a feature of our domestic life. Sometimes someone would see something remarkable and mention it to Olive and off she’d go”. 

 (C) Olive Cotton

 (C) Olive Cotton

(C) Sally McInerney

(C) Sally McInerney

Sally caught the photography bug early after being given her first camera at the age of eight. There ensued her lifelong passion, which she says really grew organically and was encouraged by the natural curiosity of her family in the world about them.

“Living in the country certain things were generally always remarked on like cloud formations or the rain or the shapes of trees, especially dead trees,” she says. “In our family it was very normal for someone to say look at this great skeleton leaf or that flocks of birds. Anyone of us - my brother, father, mother or I - would comment on something and the rest of us would be interested. There was such a lot around our little old house, such a lot to look at outside, and that was interesting to us all.”

The McInerney’s worked a subsistence farm about 25 kilometers from Cowra in rural New South Wales. Sally recalls growing up without electricity or running water in an old house that was “falling down”. It wasn’t until 1964 that Cotton went back into the darkroom opening a small studio in Cowra.

“My mother and I both had a long consistent practice of taking photos although there were breaks for technological reasons,” explains Sally. “We got the films processed elsewhere, but always looked after the negatives and printed when we could.”

‘A Conversation’ is an exhibition that features the black and white work of Cotton and Sally’s colour photographs. She tells me that the idea to do a combined exhibition was first mooted by curator Sandy Edwards.

“As I began to think more about it I realised there were a lot of echoes and associations common to both of us, but in particular to some of my images. My mother never took very dark or scary looking or candid photos and I do those, but in this show the selection shows those echoes and references between both sets of photos.”

I imagine that she and Cotton had long discussions about photography, but Sally refutes that notion. “My mother and I never had a serious photographic critiquing session”.

And the pair never shot together. “We didn’t call it shooting it was just taking photographs,” she states. “My mother was quite shy and unobtrusive in her photographing manner. I like to wander around old back streets of funny looking towns and talk to strangers and take their photos. She didn’t do that, but then generally women didn’t at that time. But we both had a similar appreciation of certain things, mostly nature and solitude, aspects of solitude and we did sometimes talk about the beauty of the occasional. In this show the mood is fairly sympathetic between this selection of my images and hers,” Sally ends.

Mother & Daughter: A Conversation
Sally McInerney and Olive Cotton
13-24 May
Damien Minton Gallery
583 Elizabeth Street
Redfern

Alec Dawson
Nobody Claps Anymore










Nobody Claps Anymore
6 May – 24 May
He Made She Made
70 Oxford St
Darlinghurst

Lisa Garland








7 May - 7 June
Stills Gallery 
36 Gosbell Street
Paddington

May 02, 2014

Friday Round Up - 2nd May, 2014

This week on Friday Round Up the focus is primarily on the environment with a look at Sean Gallagher's evocative work on the toxic impact of India's leather industry, Daniel Beltrá's book SPILL and a new exhibition in Melbourne inspired by Deep Ecology. Plus there's a blast from the past with an exhibition featuring images from the US Farm Security Administration in the 1930s.

Book:
Daniel Beltrá – SPILL




‘The oil-stained, blue waters of the Gulf of Mexico swirl in my mind’s eye like a grotesque painting,’ Daniel Beltrá.

In light of the urgent, and vital, protests around the insanity of the drilling in the Arctic that is happening right now, this is an ideal moment to talk about Daneil Beltrá’s book SPILL. This book documents the disastrous Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010. More than 210 million gallons of crude oil were released into the ocean in that spill devastating an area of more than 68,000 square miles and causing one of the most catastrophic environmental disasters of all time. The potential for an even greater disaster in the fragile ecology of the Arctic is not a fiction invented by the "greenies," but an absolute reality and Beltrá’s images remind us of how devastating such an accident can be.

Beltrá’s aerial photographs may appear as abstract art, and are truly visually stunning, but the truth behind these images which capture the monumental scale of this disaster should not be forgotten.


From Spill by Daniel Beltrá © Daniel Beltrá courtesy GOST Books


From Spill by Daniel Beltrá © Daniel Beltrá courtesy GOST Books


From Spill by Daniel Beltrá © Daniel Beltrá courtesy GOST Books

About Daniel Beltrá
Born in Madrid, Spain Beltrá began his photographic career with the Spanish National Agency, EFE before working with the French agency Gamma. In 1990 he began his collaboration with Greenpeace and work has taken him to all seven continents. He was awarded Wildlife Photographer of the Year Award 2011, the Lucie Award for International Photographer of the Year and a finalist for Critical Mass for Photolucida for his work documenting the Gulf Oil spill. His work has been published in The New Yorker, Time, Newsweek, The New York Times, Le Monde, and El Pais, amongst others. Daniel Beltrá is a fellow of the International League of Conservation Photographers and was nominated for the Prix Pictet 2012.

SPILL Daniel Beltrá
Published by: Gost Books
For more information visit the website here

Save the Arctic - click here to add your name to the petition signed by more than 5 million people around the world who want to stop the drilling in the Arctic

Photo Essay:
Sean Gallagher – The Toxic Price of Leather


Saida a tannery worker suffering from a serious skin condition believed to be from the toxic conditions in which she works (C) Sean Gallagher

Sean Gallagher’s photo essay, and short film “The Toxic Price of Leather” is a powerful study of the shocking impact of India’s leather industry on both human beings and the environment.

In my opinion Gallagher is one of the most insightful documentary photographers working today and his images continually bring to light issues that should concern all who are interested in caring for others and for the planet. In this series Gallagher documents the lives of those working and living in Kanpur, India. With around 300 tanneries in operation Kanpur is now the largest exporter of leather in India. Ninety percent of its products are produced for Europe and the United States. 







Above: Pollution from the tanneries

The environmental impact of the tanneries on the local area, and the Ganges River, is significant as is the toll on the health of both tannery workers and local residents. Once again the West is procuring goods at ridiculously low prices ignoring the fact that their practices are in fact exacting the highest price of all. 


Pollution from the tanneries floats on the Ganges


A child worker with piles of leather


Skin conditions afflict many who work in and live near the tanneries


A tannery worker amidst the waste. OH&S doesn't exist here.


A farmer works in his field where tannery waste is polluting the ground and water
(C) All images Sean Gallagher

Visit Sean Gallagher’s website for more information
View the short film The Toxic Price of Leather here
View Gallagher’s Toxic Business at Pulitzer Center for Crisis Reporting 

Exhibition: Melbourne
Kate Robertson – Celestial Body Model



Norwegian mountaineer, and philosopher, Arne Naess is credited with introducing the phrase "deep ecology" into the environmental conversation in the early seventies. In its basic definition deep ecology recognises "the inherent value of all living beings" and celebrates the richness and diversity of life on earth in all its forms.

As concern around the environment has moved further into the general populace deep ecology has shifted from being a phrase in the environmental movement's vernacular to a movement of its own. The deep ecology platform "involves deep questioning, right down to fundamental root causes...and involves redesigning our whole systems based on values and methods that truly preserve the ecological and cultural diversity of natural systems," as explained by Alan Drengson, emeritus professor at the University of Victoria in British Columbia Canada.

Australian photographic artist Kate Robertson has used the concept of deep ecology in her latest series of work – Celestial Body Model – that opens at Melbourne’s Edmund Pearce gallery next week. Robertson says the inspiration for this particular series of photographs comes from a deep ecology workshop where participants experienced the vastness of space by walking through a scale model of the solar system. In these photographs Robertson reflects themes of connectedness, observation and mindfulness in both the physical approach to the work and the ethereal nature of the imagery. 










(C) All images Kate Robertson

7-31 May
Edmund Pearce Gallery
Level 2 Nicholas Building
37 Swanston Street
Melbourne

Exhibition: Melbourne
Pure Record – Photos from the Farm Security Administration 1930s


(C) Walker Evans

Those who are familiar with the history of documentary photography will know of the US Farm Security Administration (FSA) through the work of Dorothea Lange and her iconic 'Migrant Mother' photograph taken in 1936. But Lange was only one of a number of photographers commissioned by the FSA during the Depression to document the living and working conditions of farm workers in order to drive reforms in the American agricultural industry.


(C) Dorothea Lange


(C) Dorothea Lange


(C) Walker Evans


(C) Walker Evans


(C) Walker Evans


(C) Walker Evans

The exhibition "Pure Record" features photographs by Lange as well as other FSA photographers including the late Walker Evans (1903-1975) . Like Lange, Evans was committed to documenting the harsh conditions in which the migrant workers were forced to live, but was less driven by politics – Lange is on record saying her disgust at the wealthy farm barons and their disdain for their workers drove her to take the FSA job. Evans claimed he was “committed to the principle of pure record not propaganda” shooting what he saw with “no politics whatsoever”.

Whatever the personal motivations of the FSA photographers "Pure Record" gives an insight into the harsh realities of life in the Depression in the US for those living on the land and provides a unique opportunity for those in Melbourne to view these rarely exhibited photographs.

4-24 May
Opening: Sunday 4 May 4pm
Guest Speaker: Tim Lee ABC Landline
Photonet Gallery
15a Railway Place
Fairfield (Melbourne)

April 25, 2014

Friday Round Up - 25 April, 2014

This week on Friday Round Up three very different, but equally wonderful books by photographers at different points in their careers – Australians Paul Blackmore and Kristian Laemmle-Ruff and American Joel Meyerowicz – plus a photo essay on the Bangladesh Rana Plaza Garment Factory disaster victims a year after their lives were irrevocably shattered.

Book:
Paul Blackmore – At Water’s Edge




Shot in black and white, the images in Paul Blackmore’s “At Water’s Edge” create dramatic contrasts of dark and light that undulate across the paper, rippling like water itself, lapping at the edges of thought. Blackmore’s photographs are both lyrical and documentary in their composition. He has shared what he has learned, not only what he has seen, in the thoughtful framing of each scene…(Read the full review here or click on the Book Reviews tab at the top of this blog).

Book Launch:
Kristian Laemmle-Ruff- In The Folds of Hills


Within the covers of this beautifully crafted book live the stories of the inhabitants of a tiny Victorian town – Swanpool. What is so evocative about this publication is not the individual stories themselves, but the way photographer Kristian Laemmle-Ruff has focused on what most would overlook, to capture a way of life that has virtually disappeared. There is such honesty and emotion in the simplicity of life “In the Folds of Hills” that you can’t help, but be swept up in the nostalgia of a time when life was slower, less complicated and perhaps more grounded. While not wanting to romanticise the lives of those depicted in this book, in these stories, told in both words and pictures, can be found the core values that are the hallmark of rural Australia. 








(C) All images Kristian Laemmle-Ruff

Laemmle-Ruff has a clear vision for someone so young. Yet this digital native has not only discovered a way of life that he says “is quietly going unnoticed” but captured it with humility, respect and a generous spirit that celebrates what has gone before with trivialising. His strong black and white images, which are interwoven with interviews conducted by his mother Charlotte Laemmle, transport the reader to another time; an impressive feat given this project was shot from 2009-2013.

Book Launch and Exhibition Opening
Launch: Thursday 1 May 6.00pm
Exhibition: 1 – 8 May
The Compound Interest
15-25 Keele St, Collingwood

For more information visit the website here
Published by Pearce Press, Australia

Book:
Joel Meyerowicz by Colin Westerbeck



“Photographers learn to accept the gifts that come their way because surely life produces moments crazier than we can conceive.” Joel Meyerowitz

In 1962 Joel Meyerowitz was working in New York as an art director when he was given the opportunity to sit in on an advertising photo shoot with Robert Frank. At the time he had no idea who Frank was, but the way the older man worked with his camera seamlessly integrating himself into the scene sparked something in Meyerowitz’s imagination...(Read the full review here or click on the Book Reviews tab at the top of this blog).

Photo Essay:
GMB Akash – Lifelong Scars


(C) Taslima Akhter

Many will remember the photograph above taken by Taslima Akhter, which spoke of the horrific loss of life in the Rana Plaza garment factory collapse in Bangladesh on 24 April, 2013.

A year after the disaster photographer GMB Akash has published his photo essay on the victims who are still suffering physical and psychological trauma. In a world where news is in sound-bytes and there are billions of images that "live" in cyber space for seconds only, this is important work. 

Those photojournalists who revisit stories after they have fallen from the media headlines not only remind us of those who are suffering. These photo stories document history as it unfolds, the timeframes of which are not dictated to by mass media priorities.








(C) All images GMB Akash

To see more images and read the stories visit the website here.


April 23, 2014

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Alison Stieven-Taylor