August 12, 2016

Friday Round Up - 12 August, 2016

This week a feature interview with Belgian photographer Nick Hannes about his expansive project Mediterranean: The Continuity of Man.

Feature Interview:
Nick Hannes with Alison Stieven-Taylor

St. Tropez, France

Belgian photographer Nick Hannes visited 20 countries over a four-year period to create his expansive body of work ‘Mediterranean: The Continuity of Man,’ which is now a book and also a touring exhibition. In all, he made 20 trips to tell a compelling story about this unique part of the world. The only country he didn't get to cover was Syria, for obvious reasons.

“Once you start a project like this there is no way back,” he laughs of his obsession to pursue the story at great personal expense. 

Nick explains the project has its roots in a long-held fascination for the Mediterranean that dates back to his youth when at school he learned about this sea that was at the cradle of civilisation. 

“I was intrigued with the historical facts of this area that was a crossroads of cultures and where the cross-pollination of ideas saw the countries on the Mediterranean evolve much faster than those on mainland Europe.”

“I wanted to see what was left of this idea of a crossroads between continents, a place where throughout history a lot of exchange took place. If you look at it now, it’s a region of fault lines, a region of conflicts and crisis. So that was the starting point, but as I began to travel and photograph I really opened up my mind and my eyes and I photographed as much as possible.”

Nick says that after the first few trips certain themes started to recur such as urbanisation, the impact of tourism on the landscape and also migration. 

Benidorm, Spain

Bijela, Montenegro

Ibiza, Spain
La Grande Motte, France

At the time he was working, various countries in the region were in the midst of transformation and events such as the Arab Spring and the crises in Greece are also incorporated in this body of work.

Cairo, Egypt

Sirte, Libya

Sirte, Libya

Rafah, Gaza

“I ended up with a very complex story with different storylines that are always linked by the Mediterranean. The outcome of the project is that I confront different parallel realities; the jet set tourism in Monaco and southern France and on the other side the dramatically different living conditions in the Gaza Strip and the effects of the war in Libya. So all of these extremes and contrasts are in the project.”

The Mediterranean is often defined as a haven for tourism and gastronomy and the Mediterranean lifestyle is put forward as the ideal way to live. But when you look at the map and see that this sea touches three different continents you start to realise how diverse this region of the world truly is and these complexities come through in Nick's illuminating and insightful body of work.

Nick delivers a very different view of the Mediterranean, and his photographs are at times quite political by intention and design; there is no attempt to dress up the Mediterranean to present the perfect picture. Nick's beach photographs, for example, often feature a disturbing element like an industrial backdrop, or an oil rig, which is the case in the photograph of the beach at Montenegro. 

These elements signify not only the environmental degradation of the region, but also the differences in lifestyles raising questions of equality, power and the distribution of wealth.

Much of his travels were made by car and he says he was at times "very upset" to see how little of the natural landscape is left in the wake of urbanisation and as a result of the impact of tourism. Committed to tell this story, Nick self-funded the project, but he says it goes far beyond economics when you factor time and energy. “Everything else had to make way for this project as it was a priority”. 

Algiers, Algeria

“The work is very critical towards ourselves, how we treat our environment, how we treat refugees, how we respond to other humans. I feel very concerned about what is happening in the region and in the world in general. This is not a very sustainable way of living right now, both socially and ecologically,” he says. 

“This project is a mirror to ourselves, but I don’t want to dictate the story. Those who look at these pictures will pick out their own truths. I don’t believe in one truth, when I travel I always come back with more questions than answers. Some pictures might be confusing, but that’s good because people can think about the image and read into what they will.”

I ask Nick about the photograph of the three men standing above a massive hole in Cyprus with the caption: ‘The committee on missing persons in Cyprus” (below). 


“That’s great that you ask me about this picture, you are the first person, most people just turn the page and they don’t look at it. This is a picture that needs a caption of course. In the Civil War of Cyprus a lot of people disappeared from both the Greek and Turkish communities. They are still looking for human remains from 40 years ago. Often bodies were thrown in water wells. This hole is an old water well and they used big cranes to make this huge pit. It is unbelievable the amount of effort that is put into the process of trying to find the remains of one person. So there’s this committee for missing persons.” Nick tells that while he was there the remains of two people were found. At their funerals the remains were placed in tiny coffins. The funerals were highly emotional, years of uncertainty laid to rest with the bones of loved ones.

Serendipitous Moments
While Nick is an extensive planner he’s also open to opportunity and a number of photographs in the book point to being in the right place at the right time like the wedding reception in a gas station in Greece, which is one of my favourite pictures. 

Rio, Greece

“This was a present from the photography gods,” he laughs. “I was camping nearby and I saw this gas station where all these tables were nicely set with candles and flowers. The owner told me he had gotten married that day and to save money he decided to hold the party at the gas station instead of renting a hall. So it’s a story about the crisis and how the middle class is affected by the economic situation in Greece.”

Nick was invited to the party. “I stayed the whole night until 3 o’clock when everyone was completely drunk except me. It was the best wedding reception I’d been to. It was an extraordinary event. They said to me 'even if they take our last Euro cent we will not stop making party and dancing'. Later they sent me a letter thanking me for making them famous as the picture was picked up in Greece and was published in Japan, Asia and America too. It was a way of showing the crisis without stereotypes of people begging in the streets or waiting in line at ATMs so I think that was the reason it was picked up by the media”.

Another of my favourite photographs is the one of the Spanish families eating hamburgers in La Linea de la Concepcion, Spain on the border of Gibraltar.  Here the women are dressed in traditional flamenco outfits and the colours are vibrant evoking a true sense of celebration. It's also an idiosyncratic image; eating hamburgers in your finery. “Every year they celebrate the traditional flamenco and it is an amazing festival, with very loud music. I like loud music, but this was too much for me,” he laughs. “But it’s also very political and provocative and they have the national flag on display and I think they play the loud music as a signal to the British over the border that they are having more fun”.

Linea de la Concepcion, Spain

One of Nick’s favourite pictures is of an African man selling goods to a naked white woman on the naturalist beach in St. Tropez, France (at the top of this story). “It’s a picture full of contrasts between rich and poor, north and south, man and woman, African and European, naked and dressed. There are a lot of different layers and also it combines two big topics I photographed: tourism and migration”. He says he is very present on the beach and his camera is obvious. He doesn’t try to photograph secretly as people get the wrong idea. “While I was photographing I told them I was making a picture and the woman didn’t even react. I had met the guy earlier and he was aware of what I was doing. He was fine with that”.

Another of his favourites is of the couple in Spain having a picture in a long, thin shadow. “You feel the heat in the picture, they are very isolated in this tiny stretch of shadow as they try to escape the heat. It’s about tourism and environment. People go there to have a good time, but it’s too hot to enjoy”.

Valencia, Spain

While most of the pictures in the series are made outside on the streets there is one exception: the prostitute and her client. “This is a prostitute in a cheap hotel room in downtown Athens. I was kind of shocked when I walked in this area because of the amount of prostitutes and junkies shooting up in broad daylight. You can see this in any big city, but I’d never seen this in Athens so openly. I wanted to have this in the project as well. I initially spoke to prostitutes in the streets, but they all sent me away; prostitution and photography is not a good combination! But this woman agreed to be photographed as long as she wasn’t recognisable and the client agreed too. So I ended up in this lousy hotel room with two people having sex in front of me. It was a very strange experience. This was the beginning of the encounter and I left shortly after as I didn’t need explicit photographs!”

Athens, Greece

Incorporating photographs like this breaks the rhythm of the book and makes you stop and think about what you’re looking at. Although Nick says some people have said they don’t like it, the image makes you pause and reflect.

I ask if he thinks photography can change social perceptions, attitudes. “I think the influence is very limited. People’s minds are not easily changed. When people look at my pictures and are touched by what I want to say, I think they are already aware of what is going on in our world. People who don’t have the same ideas as I have, I don’t think I can convince them, but I don’t think it’s my role to convince people”.

In conclusion he says, “Photography is an abstract language and there are a lot of people who are not able to read pictures, especially layered pictures such as I try to make. Video with sound and moving images are much more likely to have a direct emotional affect on people. It is the reflective nature of photography that attracts me. Quite literally I take a step back to see a broader context when I photograph. The environment, the surroundings and the relationship with people and how they shape their environment is what interests me. I hope people reflect more on a photograph and think about certain things just for themselves. But I don’t want to give answers, I want to raise questions”.

End note: When we met in Sydney at Head On Festival earlier this year Nick and I talked about all sorts of things including music. I learned that Nick was a fan of an Australian band, the Cosmic Psychos who I’d seen a couple of weeks before. As we wind up our interview Nick tells me the Cosmic Psychos are playing in Antwerp on the weekend and he’s going to their concert. The world is a very small place indeed.

Currently on show at:
Centro Andaluz de la Fotografia, Almeria, Spain until 11 September.

Visit Nick's website for future exhibition information. To buy the book visit Amazon.

August 05, 2016

Friday Round Up - 5 August, 2016

This week on Friday Round Up it's all about black and white photography. Morganna Magee takes a behind-the-badge look at police women, Markus Andersen's Rage Against the Light launches in Sydney, Andrew Chapman's Giving Life Special Event this Saturday and Diane Arbus: The Early Years in New York.

Exhibition: Melbourne
Behind the Badge: Women of Victoria Police
Above: Michelle

Currently on show at the Victoria Police Museum is "Behind the Badge", a series of portraits of ten women currently serving in Victoria Police. 

Melbourne photographer Morganna Magee has created this engaging series which depicts the women in their professional roles and “off-duty”. Shot over a 4 week period, Morganna says, “I was initially granted access to meet the women within their homes with the idea that the informal environment would allow me to create an engaging portrait. After speaking with my first subject I realised that rather than feel uncomfortable within their workspace, these women thrived on the work they did and the chance to make a difference within the community”.

Above: Sam

“Photographing these women at home and in the workplace enables the viewer to not only feel a sense of connection with the women in the images but also to begin to understand how being a Police member is more than just a vocation. The reasons these women joined the Police Force are varied, but a sense of pride and confidence in their work unites them.”

Above: Carlee


Victoria Police Museum
World Trade Centre
Mezzanine Level
637 Flinders Street
Melbourne
Check out more of Morganna's work here.


Exhibition: Sydney
Rage Against the Light - Markus Andersen


The official Australian book launch and exhibition of 'Rage Against The Light' by Sydney-based photographic artist Markus Andersen opens next week at Sydney's Black Eye Gallery and is definitely worth checking out. These images have multiple layers that draw you in and invite you to linger in the shadows. The longer you look the more you see.  

Markus says the work "explores my intoxication with natural light and the darkness/dark corners created from this light. Subjects caught in the dual forces of light and shadow remain at the heart of the work, the interplay of these elements within the architecture or landscape create order from discordance. 'Rage Against The Light' emphasises the dramatic nature of intense or subdued light and my continued relationship and fascination with the subject". 





9 - 21 August
Black Eye Gallery
3/138 Darlinghurst Road
Darlinghurst 
Check out more of Markus' work here.

Talk:
Giving Life - Magnet Galleries Melbourne



This Saturday Professor Bob Jones (who is one of the good guys) incredibly intelligent, but also super approachable, is giving a talk about how organ transplant works. Get along to Magnet Galleries at 2pm for this rare opportunity and at the same time check out Andrew Chapman's amazing images from his Giving Life series. There's good coffee to be had too! 

640 Bourke Street
Melbourne

Exhibition: New York
Diane Arbus: In the Beginning



In this expansive exhibition more than 100 photographs of Diane Arbus’ early career (the first seven years from 1956-1962) are on show, many for the first time. Jeff Rosenheim, Curator in Charge of the Department of Photographs at The Met says, “Arbus’s early photographs are wonderfully rich in achievement and perhaps as quietly riveting and ultimately controversial as the iconic images for which she is so widely known”.  









Until 27 November
2nd Floor
1000 Fifth Avenue
New York


July 29, 2016

Friday Round Up - 29 July, 2016

This week on Friday Round Up a review of the exhibition Mongolian Lens 1 curated by Jerry Galea and the opening of Andrew Chapman's Giving Life exhibition at Magnet Galleries Melbourne.

Review:
Mongolian Lens 1
Curated by Jerry Gal
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(C) Otgonsuren: "Imagine relying on wood or coal-burning stoves for cooking and heating, with fuel costs eating up 40% of your income. Then imagine the discomfort of having to get up in the middle of the night when it's minus 35 C to go to the bathroom, outdoors. Worst of all, imagine you and your children breathing the thick, toxic smog from thousands of stoves everyday."

A criticism often levelled at documentary photography is that it tends to be western-centric where a photographer will enter a community and capture it from an outsider’s perspective.

One of the things that is so refreshing about the collection of images that formed the exhibition Mongolian Lens 1 is that the vast majority have been taken by Mongolian documentary photographers who show the audience the issues they want to focus on within their own communities. While many of the tropes that appear in Mongolian Lens 1 – poverty, environmental pollution, industrialisation and substance abuse – are common subjects for documentarians, the view from the inside gives greater depth; these are issues the locals want to talk about rather than the emphasis being imposed or assumed.

While the capturing of images is today more straightforward and more accessible given there is no requirement for film, developing and printing, gaining exposure for work can prove problematic even for the most seasoned photographer let alone those on the margins of the industry.

The work in this exhibition would not have made it to the walls of Magnet Galleries in Melbourne without the commitment of Australian documentary photographer and academic Jerry Galea, whose PhD research centres on how Mongolian society is transforming in the wake of globalisation. Using the lens of documentary photography, Galea examines the cultural significance of the photograph in Mongolian society and how local documentary photographers are using the medium as a vehicle through which to understand their own story. 






Above: Winter Horse Racing (C) Davaanyam Delgerjargal: "The Naadam festivals, particularly the horse racing, will certainly, always be my subject of shooting. For years, I took photos at the finishing line of horse racing...During the racing, lots of children fall down, often due to other people's wrongdoing. We, Mongolians - old and young - run to the winning horse to touch its sweat for luck. This creates such chaos that horses startle and rear. Often their child riders are tossed off as a result".







Above: Gold Rush (C) Ganzorig Lkhamsuren: "The Khuvsugul province is well-known for its natural beauty and Lake Khövsgöl is one of the country's major tourist attractions. The largest forest areas of Mongolia are located around and to the north of this lake...'Ninja miners' dig small unauthorised mines or pan for gold. They are so named because they carry the green bowls they use for panning on their backs...Locals say there are now around 5000 people attracted to the region by gold. Wild and untouched before only tsaatan (reindeer nomads or hunters) would travel this far". 

Mongolian Lens 1 is an insightful, and engaging, exhibition that reveals a culture of great depth and complexity. These images enable us to move beyond the fascination of the ‘other’ because we are seeing through the eyes of locals. This view delivers a perspective that is rich with meaning. While there are images that are unique to this part of the world, there are universal themes also. This combination creates an immersive experience and for those with an inquisitive mind, it builds knowledge and fosters understanding.


Above: Rural Schools (C) Davaanyam Delgerjargal 




Above: Fashion (C) Davaanyam Delgerjargal



Above: Ulaanbaatar Borders (C) Rentsendorj Bazarsukh: "At the edes of the capital, Ulaanbaatar, are the city's ger districts, where more than half of the capital's residents live without access to basic public services such as water, sewage and central heating. In 1989, 26.8% of Mongolia's population lived in Ulaanbaatar and by 2010 it was 45%... thousands of herders left the steppe for the ger districts building hasta - small fenced enclosures - and erecting gers and tin-roofed brick houses."

Above: Ger District (C) Khash Erdene

Mongolia is a fascinating country that is rapidly developing at the expense of many of its citizens. In these images we can see the rise of modern industry juxtaposed against a more ancient way of life and the struggle inhabitants have in trying to hold onto traditions that are dear to them. As progress continues apace more people are driven into the cities where new settlements lack basic services such as sanitation and fresh water and employment opportunities are slim. The environmental impact of progress can also be seen in the billowing towers of toxic smoke that choke cities and in the hillsides ravaged by mining. Yet it would be incorrect to assume all the images in this collection are focused on the negative. To the contrary, they show life in all its multiple truths. There are celebratory images, quiet family moments, and idiosyncratic portraits that convey the complexity of the human condition. 

Above: Alcoholism (C) Injinaash Ing: "In Gobi Altai province, in the Biger district, children are checking to see if the drunk passed out in the middle of the steppe is someone they know."

Above: The Route the Forest (C) Davaanyam Delgerjargal: "The route to the forest is getting longer and longer. To collect wood for fires one needs to set off before light and get back well after dark".

Mongolian Lens 1 offers a contemplative view of modern life in a country that, beyond its borders, is still largely shrouded in mystery. The photographs that accompany this review are of my choosing and demonstrate the strong storytelling skills of the Mongolian documentary photographers. I look forward to following this project as it develops. To find out more visit Jerry Galea's website.


Above: From Jerry Galea's series A Wandering Life, the project which became the foundation and inspiration for his PhD research. "Early in the fieldwork I realised I had to take two distinct approaches to photography. For myself I wanted to work like a fly on the wall...(but) the photographs the nomads wanted me to take were very different. For them the photograph was an occasion, a formal event. My subjects carefully considered their clothing, chose their background and structured their pose; it was a reminder of a past when photographs were considered and a very formal event."

(C) Injinaash Ing: "On the Way to the Ovoo - in Bayankhongor province, in the Bogd district, we were taking the train with some lamas going to an Ovoo (dedicated to the holy one) worship ceremony. Ovoos are often found at the top of mountains and in high places like mountain passes. They serve mainly as Tengriism religious sites, used in the worship of the mountains and the sky as well as in Buddhist or Shamanist ceremonies, but often Ovoo are also landmarks. Almost all researchers say that originally all ovoo were made from holy woods, as well as rocks, and to this day they must include wooden elements."

End Note: This exhibition also featured a silent auction to raise funds for the Batzorig Foundation of Documentary Photography in Mongolia, which was named in honour of Tsevegmid Batzorig, a Gamma Agency pioneer Mongolian photographer who met an untimely death in the course of his documentary work in 2001. The money raised will fund a documentary project in Mongolia chosen by the Foundation. I’m excited to have been the successful bidder for "On the way to the Ovoo" (above).

Exhibition: Melbourne

Andrew Chapman - Giving Life


Award-winning Australian photojournalist Andrew Chapman knows firsthand what it's like to benefit from organ donation. Chapman received a liver transplant after being diagnosed with Haemochromatosis an inherited disorder in which iron levels in the body slowly build up over many years and destroy your liver. So when Donate Life Victoria asked him to shoot a series of pictures to promote Donate life Week (1st August) he didn't hesitate.

Shot at the Austin and Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospitals in Melbourne, Giving Life charts the pathway of organ transplant and it is hoped the exhibition, and publication of the images, will motivate people to register as an organ donor. 




















(C) All images Andrew Chapman

Find out more at Donate Life.

Opens this Sunday at 2.30pm
Exhibition runs 2-10 August
Level 2, 640 Bourke Street
Melbourne