June 09, 2017

Photojournalism Now: Friday Round Up - 9th June, 2017

This week on Photojournalism Now: Friday Round Up - photojournalist Martine Perret's new work draws focus on Australia's Indigenous languages, Lumina a new photographic collective launches with an exhibition in Sydney and Melbourne photographers take to the streets in a one day shoot, print and hang challenge to raise funds for youth homelessness.


Installation:
Ngala Wongga (Come Talk) - Cultural significance of languages in the Goldfields - Martine Perret



(C) Martine Perret

I first met French-born photojournalist Martine Perret almost a decade ago when she was working with the UN and based in Timor-Leste. While she still occasionally works with the UN on international missions, today she lives in Margaret River, Western Australia and is focusing her storytelling skills on examining the interconnectedness of people with the land and the significance of language in creating that bond.

For some months she has been working with the Elders of the Aboriginal community in the Goldfields in Western Australia creating a collaborative multimedia work - Ngala Wongga (Come Talk) - Cultural significance of languages in the Goldfields. This project combines documentary and photojournalism tropes with audio recordings to present a unique and immersive installation that addresses an important issue: the survival of Australia's indigenous languages. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander readers are advised that this story may contain images and voices of people who have passed away.
In Australia there are about 120 Indigenous languages, but only 13 are spoken by enough people as to not be endangered. The rest are in peril of disappearing and the Indigenous languages of the Goldfields are among those at greatest risk.

Perret says, “If you lose your language, you risk losing your culture, your oral history, your identity”.

Ngala Wongga features evocative multimedia portraits of Elders who share the significance of their experiences and stories through image and audio recordings. Perret’s Gungurrunga Ngawa (Look Above) series of aerial photographs capture the otherworldly visage of the Goldfield’s salt lakes adding another dimension to the narrative. Together these bodies of work present a compelling narrative. 

Keneisha and Levi – the grand-children of Glenys Williams pictured below
(C) Martine Perret



Glenys Williams (C) Martine Perret

Perret says, "as a young child, Glenys Williams (above) used to speak Putijarra language. She now speaks Mardu language. In 2004, there were estimated to be four speakers of the Putijarra language. It is a highly endangered language". 

Nyapala Morgan (C) Martine Perret

Nyapala Morgan (above) was born in Patjarr (Karliywara) in the Gibson Desert. “When I was young, my mother took me from rock hole to rock hole,” she told Perret. “We survived on bush food, digging the wichetty grub. We used to sit down under the wilja with my sisters, brother and my parents. In those days, we ran around naked. One night, I thought someone was throwing a spirit with a light or a flame, but it was the lights coming from a car. I saw white fellas. I was worried of being grabbed. They were standing around taking photos. It was the first time I saw white fellas”. This is an excerpt from one of the stories that Perret has recorded, and features in the audio installation.



If you're in Carnarvon or nearby, mark this show in your diary. Let's hope the show can also tour to the east coast to engage with an even larger audience.

June 15 to July 23
Carnarvon Library and Gallery
18 Egan Street
Carnarvon

Launch:
The Lumina Collective


(C) Sarah Rhodes

(C) Aletheia Cassey

(C) Anna Maria Antoinette D'Addario

(C) Donna Bailey

(C) Jessie Boylan

(C) Morganna Magee

(C) Lyndal Irons

(C) Chloe Bartram

This week a new Australian photography collective launched in Sydney. Lumina is the brainchild of
Morganna Magee and Aletheia Casey who were inspired to create the collective to provide a vehicle for newer voices to work alongside established, award-winning photographers. 

The initial group comprises eight women - Magee and Casey along with Donna Bailey, Chloe Bartram, Jessie Boylan, Lyndal Irons, Sarah Rhodes and Anna Maria Antoinette D'Addario - who are all recognised practitioners in the documentary genre.

To coincide with the collective's launch is a group show featuring work from all the members and curated by D'Addario at Sydney's Black Eye Gallery until 18 June.

I asked D'Addario what the thinking was behind the formation of Lumina, if it was intended to be a female only collective and what the objectives were for the immediate future.

"Initially the group was started in an attempt to bring together documentary photographic artists who are exploring new ways to tell stories and engage the public with them. We feel there is a real urgency for this right now and wanted to offer something different in regards to our approach. Traditional visual documentary practice exists within every one of the member's work but all of us are developing various long-term projects that combine different methods including art practice. each member is really trying to push the boundaries of the genre. And we aim to support this movement with the collective.

"Morganna and Aletheia contacted everyone at the beginning because of the unique approaches and it turned out we all happened to be women. We are proud of this fact as it is unusual for a collective in Australia to be founded completely by all female members and we feel it brings a different voice to existing groups.

In discussions member Lyndal Irons said about Lumina: 'I think the most interesting thing about the collective of eight female voices together, is that you have a real opportunity to see the nuances and variety in the work women are making. By coming together we are indirectly inviting comparisons in what and how we approach our personal projects. And this is pretty powerful especially when you collect women together from across many states of Australia.'

It creates a unique national voice. We did question initially if the group should remain a female exclusive collective in the future but we have decided that who we are in regards to gender is not the main focus (although still an exciting one), It's how we tell stories and what we push for in the community to help develop the cultural landscape. We will remain open to a wide range of members down the track and eventually also not specifically Australian based artists, although there will always be a healthy dose of national members in the group. The idea as we evolve is to really support practitioners looking to push the boundaries of storytelling worldwide.

When we talk about the community we are talking on one hand about the community Lumina is creating within the collective, the support each individual practitioner will give to the other to help us push out work we feel is important. Yet on the other hand all of us really want to push Lumina to become a dynamic force in the community. We want to create projects in collaboration with other groups and platforms to expand the work we represent. We really want to build on the cultural community within Australia and internationally with our projects.

We'd like to engage other practitioners outside of the collective to develop projects with us also, to try and weave out and push forward some of the really great work out there that just does not get seen enough. Education and mentorship is a big aspect of our vision as well.

It is rather incredible to have such an amazing group of women to work with and there is some pretty powerful energy in the group right now," D'Addario concludes. 

To find out more visit Lumina Collective.
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Initiative:
Project Street 7:30


(C) Julie Ewing

Last weekend, 30 Melbourne photographers were given a few hours in which to shoot, edit, print and hang their image in an exhibition at Fox Darkroom & Gallery, where the photographs were auctioned off to raise funds for charity.

The challenge, posed by photographers Craig Wetjen and Steven Scalone, was enormously successful, raising almost $12,000 with all proceeds going to Kids Under Cover, an organisation working to prevent youth homelessness. What a fantastic effort Melbourne!! And what a fabulous initiative, one the pair hopes to take further afield.

Here are a few images from the day, which are now on show until 25 June. 


(C) Nicola Bernardi

(C) Don Chu

(C) Roland Dempster

(C) Silvi Glattauer

(C) Sarah Louise Jackson

(C) Glynn Lavender

(C) Ken Spence

(C) Michael Teo

(C) Craig Wetjen

 
(C) Andrew Chapman

To find out more visit the website here.

Until 25 June
Project Street 7:30
Fox Darkroom & Gallery
8 Elizabeth Street
Kensington

June 02, 2017

Photojournalism Now: Friday Round Up - 2nd June, 2017

This week Photojournalism Now: Friday Round Up is live from Auckland for the 14th annual Auckland Festival of Photography.


Coming in to land (C) Alison Stieven-Taylor

Special feature:
Auckland Festival of Photography

Turangawaewae
(C) Rona Ngahuia Osborne & Dan Mace
Until 16 July Corban Estate Arts Centre, Henderson

I arrived in Auckland yesterday for the opening night of the 14th annual Auckland Festival of Photography. The main event was at Silo 6, which is an amazing venue that is literally inside a disused silo down on the wharf. Remembering my past experience, I rugged up against the antipodean winter, made even colder by being inside a concrete silo! The wine flowed and the great turn out filled the silo with a heartwarming buzz. What a treat to view such extraordinary work curated by Bangladeshi photojournalist and activist Shahidul Alam on this year's festival theme of Identity.


Shahidul Alam pictured with work by Shahria Sharmin. This is my favourite in the Identity show Shahidul curated. This series "Call Me Heena" tells a very intimate story of the Hijras, people who identify as third gender. Helena (pictured) befriended Shahria and invited her to document her life and that of her community. Shahria, a Bangladeshi photographer who came second in the Alexia Foundation Student Grant category 2014, says this body of work is an "attempt to show the beauty in Hijras' lives" and breakdown prejudices and misperceptions.  
(C) Alison Stieven-Taylor

Also on show at Silo 6 is the work from this year's festival commission winner Janet Lilo. Really extraordinary and a definite must see on your exhibition list. Festival Director Julia Durkin is pictured below with part of one of Janet's pieces.


Festival Director Julia Durkin (C) Alison Stieven-Taylor

Looking around the venue, for a moment I thought I was in Australia, there were so many familiar faces! Moshe Rosenzveig from Head On was there along with the festival's general manager Anita Schwartz and team member Stephen. Photographer and poet Judith Crispin (pictured below) was also there, which blew me away given I'd just finished reviewing her book on the flight over! Ingetje Tadros (from Broome) was there also minus her luggage, including her books. Her work is on show as part of the Identity projections series and she was a speaker at Photobook Friday at the Auckland Central Library. Luckily her books arrived in time! Jim and Sue Dooley were also in attendance. They're from New York, but we're claiming them as our own as they've been to Australia numerous times and we had a great catch up in Melbourne last week.



Opening night at Silo 6 (above). Festival Director Julia Durkin (left) needed a stool to see above the crowd. (C) Alison Stieven-Taylor

Alexia Foundation's Jim Dooley and Shahidul Alam (C) Alison Stieven-Taylor

Australian photographer and poet Judith Crispin (C) Alison Stieven-Taylor

Sue and Jim Dooley (C) Alison Stieven-Taylor

One of the highlights of the evening was meeting Mayumi Suzuki whose handmade book The Restoration Will is exquisite in its use of beautiful Japanese papers, found images, textures, and hidden folds. The haunting story behind the book, the loss of her parents in Tōhoku in the 2011 tsunami, makes the work even more extraordinary and incredibly brave.  

Mayumi Suzuki (C) Alison Stieven-Taylor

Friday heralded a clean, crisp morning. A few showers and patches of blue. I felt right at home, the weather not dissimilar to Melbourne. By the end of the day it was raining so heavily I thought I was in the tropics, minus the warmth!

In the afternoon Jim Dooley, of the Alexia Foundation and I were guests of radio personality Wallace Chapman. We pre-recorded an interview about the challenges and opportunities facing photojournalism and social documentary photography, which airs this Sunday on Chapman's show (Radio NZ 7am-midday). What fun! I love talking about photojournalism and being able to engage with Jim, who is a font of knowledge, and Wallace who was an entertaining host, gave me an ideal opportunity to indulge in one of my favourite subjects.

Friday afternoon I sat down with Shahidul Alam to catch up with his news - last time we spoke was at Head On Photo Festival in 2014 when I interviewed him about his work Crossfire. Look out for my review on the Auckland Festival of Photography in Pro Photo magazine where my interview with Shahidul will feature in part. I'll also post the full interview here in the coming weeks.

To wrap up today's post, here are a selection of random photographs from various exhibitions. I'm looking forward to seeing more over the weekend and encourage Aucklanders to get out and see as much of this amazing festival as you can. At the opening night one of the city councillors spoke (can't recall his name as when politicians usually talk I zone out). But this speech was engaging and heartfelt and clearly demonstrated the City of Auckland's commitment to the festival, which is great to see.

Real Pictures: Imaging XX 
Until 30 June
Gus Fisher Gallery
74 Shortland Street,
Auckland City


(C) Jenny Tomlin 


(C) Sue Gee



(C) Deborah Smith

Dreaming in the Anthropocene
Trish Clark Gallery
1 Bowen Avenue
Auckland
13 June - 28 July


(C) Chris Corson-Scott


(C) Chris Corson-Scott


(C) Chris Corson-Scott


Aftermath
Studio 541
541 Mount Eden Road
Auckland
Until 12 June


(C) Dan Kerins


(C) Dan Kerins


(C) Dan Kerins

Ghost South Road
Nathan Homestead Gallery
70 Hill Road
Manurewa
Until 25 June


(C) Paul Janman, Ian Powell and Scott Hamilton


(C) Paul Janman, Ian Powell and Scott Hamilton


(C) Paul Janman, Ian Powell and Scott Hamilton

Auckland Festival of Photography
Until 24 June

May 26, 2017

Photojournalism Now: Friday Round Up - 26 May, 2017

This week on Photojournalism Now: Friday Round Up - the 14th Auckland Festival of Photography, farewell to Stills Gallery in Sydney, and last days to see #dysturb's exhibition in Melbourne.

Festival:
Auckland Festival of Photography
1-24 June

Next week I'll be blogging live from the 14th annual Auckland Festival of Photography. This week a few images from two feature exhibitions, one curated by noted Bangladeshi photojournalist and activist Shahidul Alam on this year's theme, Identity.

The other, a group show Ata Te Tangata curated by Rosanna Raymond and featuring works by indigenous Aoteroa New Zealand photographers including two of the past recipients of the Festival's annual commission, Russ Flatt and Tanu Gago. The Festival opens Thursday 1st June. See the Festival website for all the details.

Group Show curated by Shahidul Alam.
Featuring: J.D. Okhai Ojeikere, Dina Goldstein, Pushpamala N, Kim Hak, Çağdaş Erdoğan and Shahria Sharmin.


(C) Dina Goldstein - Gods of Suburbia


(C) JD Okhai Ojeikere 


(C) Kim Hak - Alive


(C) Pushpamala N - Native Women of South India: Manners and Customs


(C) Shahria Sharmin - Call Me Heena


(C) Çağdaş Erdoğan - Night Blind

1-20 June
Silo 6, Silo Park, Auckland City


Ata Te Tangata


(C) Aitu Falencie by Pati Solomona Tyrell


(C) Natalie Robertson Driftwood


(C) Ena Ena by Tuafale Tanoa'i aka Linda T


(C) Tanu Gago - Raukawa


(C) Siliga Setoga - Oki fa’a kama Samoa moni lou ulu

(C) Russ Flatt - Spoon

Until 15 June
Studio One Toi Tu
1 Ponsonby Road
Ponsonby


Farewell: Sydney
Curtain Call - Stills Gallery, 




After 16 years Stills Gallery in Paddington (Sydney) is to close its doors. It's a sad day for photography, another nail in the coffin, and perhaps indicative of the maturity of the photography collector market in this country. I have enjoyed many shows at Stills, a marvellous space and one I hope may continue as an art space. Congratulations to the team at Stills for flying the flag for so long.

In the gallery's final exhibition Curtain Call, "we are taking the opportunity to look back over the history of the gallery to present the mother of all salon hangs featuring over 70 artists from over the 26 years of exhibitions. Here is a selection of the works on show.

Michael Light, The Moon Seen From 1000 Miles, Showing Farside Highlands; Photographed by Kenneth Mattingly, Apollo 16, April 16-27, 1972, 1972/1999, digital type C print, 100 x 100cm. Courtesy of the artist and STILLS Gallery, Sydney.

Pat Brassington, Going, 2010, pigment print, 100 x 72cm. Courtesy of the artist and STILLS Gallery, Sydney.

Brenda L Croft, full/blood, pigment print, 111.2 x 90.5cm. Courtesy of the artist and STILLS Gallery, Sydney. 

Justine Varga, Carry-on, type C hand print, 97 x 78cm. Courtesy of the artist and STILLS Gallery, Sydney.

Mark Kimber They never, never wake again who sleep upon your bed!, 2012, pigment print, 40 x 40cm. Courtesy of the artist and STILLS Gallery, Sydney.

Robyn Stacey, Surrender (blue), 2001, type C print, 183 x 123cm. Courtesy of the artist and STILLS Gallery, Sydney.
Until 30 June
Stills Gallery
36 Gosbell Street
Paddington

Exhibition: Melbourne
#whereilaymyhead - #dysturb
Last Days 

This exhibition features the work of nine photojournalists, in paste-ups on the street and on the walls of Hillvale Gallery in the inner Melbourne suburb of Brunswick: Ismail Ferdous, Malin Fezehai, Barat Ali Batoor, Daro Sulakauri, Emin Ozmen, Ashley Gilbertson, Jane Hahn, Laura Boushnak and Alexandra Rose Howland. (Below: photos from the opening night)




And at McKinnon Secondary College (below)
 
© Benjamin Petit

Ends 28 May
Hillvale Gallery
342D Albert Street
Brunswick

Check out Dysturb's new website for more information on what this innovative group is doing.