Showing posts with label Sydney Photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sydney Photography. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 28, 2020

Photography art Gallery Friday Round Up - 20 June, 2014|Photography Art Definition

This week on Friday Round Up last chance to see two fantastic exhibitions in Sydney, World Refugee Day in Melbourne and a new exhibition at Monash Gallery of Art explores the notion of 'the road'.

Exhibitions: State Library NSW

Ends 22 June

(C) Phillipe Lopez - World Press Photo 2014

This weekend is your last chance to see two exhibitions currently showing at the State Library of NSW in Sydney - World Press Photo and Sydney Morning Herald Photos 1440.

I saw both of these exhibitions at the State Library, which is a brilliant setting for these large scale shows. Viewing the works with me were high-school students who had the opportunity to learn about the images and their makers, as well as a large cross-section of the general public. While I was there  a steady stream of people moved through the exhibitions, and many left via the bookshop. Clearly there is a market and an audience for quality photography in this country and it was heartening to see such attendance.

Sydney Morning Herald Photos 1440

(C) Nick Moir

With 1440 minutes to the day this exhibition presents photographs taken by Sydney Morning Herald photographers in the course of their daily jobs. When this show went up all of the exhibiting photographers were in the employ of Fairfax Media, the Herald's publisher. With the recent decimation of the photography department at the Herald, these former staffers are now swimming in the overcrowded freelance pool while the Herald takes its images from agencies. More cost-cutting measures marking the continued demise of original, quality content made even more depressing by the exhibition's narrative that reinforced the important work that these photographers do in capturing unique views of Sydney and its people.

(C) Anthony Johnson

(C) Jenny Evans

(C) Kate Geraghty

World Press Photo 2014

I really admire the way the World Press Photo (WPP) exhibitions are presented. With clear information panels that support the large scale images the WPP is all encompassing. Having viewed many of these winning images on screen it was fantastic to see them in reality and to gain an understanding of scope. John Stanmeyer's winning photograph (below) was even more impressive in print. While this photograph has attracted controversy, for me it speaks volumes about the world today, our reliance on technology and above all, our will to hope.

(C) John Stanmeyer

(C) Alessandro Penso

(C) Julius Schrank

Until Sunday 22nd June

State Library of NSW

Sydney

Screening:

Beyond Borders

MAPgroup

(C)Silvi Glattauer

On Sunday at 12noon on the Big Screen at Federation Square the film 'Beyond Borders' will be aired as part of the activities to celebrate World Refugee Day. 'Beyond Borders' is a collaborative project with refugees and asylum seekers and members of the MAPgroup; MAP stands for Many Australian Photographers.

“Beyond Borders presents an alternative view around some of the issues relating to asylum seekers and refugees in Australia. The topic of asylum seekers and refugees dissects our community, yet few of us have met, befriended or shared stories with people in the unenviable position of having to seek asylum in another country. If we believe Australia is the sum of all her parts, we as citizens all benefit from knowing more about this topic and about the people in this position" - MAPgroup.

(C) Ponch Hawkes

(C) Naomi Herzog

(C) Joseph Feil

(C) Joyce Evans

(C) Juanita Wilson

(C)Silvi Glattauer

MAPgroup members involved with the 'Beyond Borders' project include Silvi Glattauer, Julie Bowyer, Tobias Titz, Ponch Hawkes, Morganna Magee, Nicole Marie, Joseph Feil, Andrew Chapman, Naomi Herzog, Jenny Hodge, Jim McFarlane, Helga Leunig, Juanita Wilson, Julia Millowick and Joyce Evans.

World Refugee Day

Sunday 22nd June

Beyond Borders screens 12noon

Federation Square

Melbourne

Exhibition:

The Road - Group Show

(C) Micky Allan

The ‘road’ has long been the subject of artistic expression, a symbol of the physical and allegorical paths we follow. In this group exhibition featuring eight artists - Micky Allan, Virginia Coventry, Gerrit Fokkema, John Gollings, Tim Handfield, Ian North, Robert Rooney, Wes Stacey - the archives of the Monash Gallery of Art have been mined to uncover works taken in the 1970s and 1980s. These photographs examine the meaning of the road in modern Australian life through the exploration of the relationship of photography and the experience of road travel.

MGA Curator Stephen Zagala says, "The road has often provided Australian photographers with a means to an end, whether a landscape or a picturesque community in some distant part of the country. But as this important exhibition shows, during the 1970s, the road took on a whole new meaning for Australian photographers. It provided a space for innovation and experimentation, and also a photographic reconsideration of Australian life."

(C) Wesley Stacey

(C) Tim Handfield

The exhibition features Wes Stacey's visual travelogue of the trips he made in the early seventies around Australia in a Kombi. "The Road" also includes John Gollings’s monumental, ten-metre long streetscapes of Surfers Paradise Boulevard from 1973, and Robert Rooney’s iconic Holden park, featuring Rooney's Holden parked in 20 different locations across Melbourne. "The Road" also features work by "two of Australia’s most important feminist photographers, Micky Allan and Virginia Coventry, who both challenged many of the gendered assumptions about the road, automotive travel and Australian life during the ‘70s and ‘80s".

Opens Saturday 21st June at 3pm

Until 31 August

Monash Gallery of Art

860 Ferntree Gully Rd, Wheelers Hill

(Melbourne)



















Monday, July 13, 2020

Photography art Gallery Head On Photo Festival Awards - The Winners|Photography Art Definition

Friday Round Up - Special Update: 1st May, 2015 8pm Sydney

Head On Photo Festival Awards...And the winners are:

PORTRAIT PRIZE

Being Sandra

Molly Harris

?Sandra turned into born as John but started dwelling as Sandra 6 years in the past. When she have become Sandra she left in the back of a profession that spanned 37 years within the Air force. In this image Sandra is getting ready for Anzac Day.?

LANDSCAPE PRIZE

Urban panorama. Central Jakarta, Indonesia

Alfonso Perez

?Jakarta is a closely populated town complete of contrasts with few inexperienced spaces. Shepherds from neighboring villages bring their sheep to graze at Karet Bivat cemetery; one of the largest in Jakarta. In the background stands Wisma forty six, which at 250 metres tall, is the tallest building in Indonesia.?

MOBILE PRIZE

Life

Laki Sideris

?Found it on my telephone sometime after my mom's funeral. I cannot take into account taking it.?

STUDENT PRIZE

Shattered Euphoria

Paul Philpott

?It's my northern lighting fixtures.?

MOVING IMAGE PRIZE

Stereotypes - What are you taking note of?

Dan Gray

?Headphones can provide a world of comfort and manage inside the disconnected and chaotic environment of a busy metropolis. Far from tuning-out of the arena, we observed our subjects have been trying to track-in and be tuned-in to. Music now not handiest provides a soundtrack to city existence, it also provides a soul.?






Thursday, May 28, 2020

Photography art Gallery Friday Round Up - 29th April, 2016|Photography Art Definition

This week it's all approximately Head On Photo Festival which opened in Sydney tonight. A crowd of around 1000 packed the Lower Sydney Town Hall to find out who have been the winners of the distinguished Head On Photo Awards which are subsidized by Fujifilm this 12 months. Congratulations to...

HEAD ON PORTRAIT PRIZE

First area: Antonio Heredia - Survivor

?Some years in the past, 29 yr-vintage legal professional Oscar Prieto was recognized with mind cancer. Following surgical procedure, chemotherapy and radiotherapy, Oscar become capable of beat the sickness. Nowadays, he's the president of ASATE, an corporation which gives assist and steering to the ones stricken by mind cancer. By showing his personal scars, Oscar tries to inspire and exhibit that you can triumph over cancer.?

Second location Giles Clarke - Toxic Trespass

?Sameer, sixteen, is held through his mother Wahida at home in Bhopal's Jamalpura community. Sameer become born to parents contaminated through carcinogenic and mutagenic water stemming from the 1984 Union Carbide fuel tragedy which has claimed 25,000 lives to date. For many years thousands of families have used infected water main to severe contamination and delivery defects, as Sameer. The name refers to scholar-activist Sandra Steingraber's concept of poisonous trespass, wherein toxic chemical compounds input our our bodies with out our consent.?

Third place Kristian Taylor-Wood - HighScroller, Lauren Winzer

?Lauren is one of the shining lighting fixtures of the an increasing number of fashionable tattoo enterprise. Her quirky and unique pop-art tattooing fashion and expertise at running a blog and social media have made her one of the most known names within the tattoo recreation. Lauren presently has 205K followers on Instagram, with the likes of Katy Perry and Miley Cyrus banging on her door to get inked. This portrait is a part of a larger collection named HighScrollers.?

LANDSCAPE PRIZE

First area David Chancellor - Giraffe, Blue Sheet, Eastern Cape South Africa

?The Fallen. There's a moment between existence and death, snoozing and waking that passes in an instantaneous. For the briefest of moments you possibly can see the beast at peace, calm and in a international that most effective he inhabits. All the chaos and trauma that went before is no longer bothersome; even as vets regroup or hunters excessive five he waits patiently for life to begin all over again, or for some this is the end, and as I watch, the attention not is the gateway to the soul, however as a substitute a mirrored image of the sky.?

Second area Paul Hoelen ? Vanilla Sky

?Mining get entry to roads constructed via the salt pan lake of Lake Lefroy, south of Kalgoorlie, Western Australia.?

Third location Yasmin Mund - Rooftop Dreams, Varanasi

?It was five:30am and I had just arrived at my guesthouse in Varanasi and instinctively climbed the 7 flights of stairs to peer the dawn over the well-known river Ganga. As I appeared over the aspect of the rooftop terrace my jaw dropped in disbelief. Below have been moms, fathers, children, cats, dogs, monkeys all slumbering at the roofs. It turned into mid-summer season in Varanasi and sound asleep without AC become difficult.?

Landscape NSW Award Ireneusz Luty - Manly Beach, Sydney

?Part of the collection City de Noir. City de Noir assembles a collection of black and white snap shots that focus on offering intimate moments extracted from the city surroundings. Through this, the selection draws interest to and captures both fleeting moments and particular contexts that might constitute the unseen and omitted existence within the metropolis of Sydney. Pictures appoint lengthy-exposure infrared strategies to seize the dynamism with a touchy restraint of palette and temporality.?

MOBILE PRIZE

First vicinity Andrew Robert Morgan - Losing Independence

?My grandfather, Albert, is compelled to take a lower back seat experience home after a own family dinner due to the fact he's not allowed to pressure at night. He is an exceptionally independent 87 12 months vintage guy, but the truth is that he cannot continue doing the whole thing himself.?

Second place Markus Andersen - Veil

Third region Ako Salemi - Freedom

?A lady included by a burqa passes with the aid of the Roze Sharif holy shrine in Mazar-e-Sharif, where white pigeons often congregate. The pigeon is the symbol of freedom in Afghanistan.?

STUDENT PRIZE

First location Isabelle Sijan ? Girl See?S All

?Girl Sees All depicts the average teenage female searching at lifestyles?S barriers. This is represented through the snow-caps of New Zealand?S Mount Cook, which may be visible as a double exposure within the challenge?S eyes. While the mountain may also seem out of area, especially considering the really empty heritage, it acts as a representation of the barriers in one?S lifestyles ? Whether or not a physical undertaking or mental ? And for this reason isn't always equally contemplated in the placing behind the woman.?

Second location Pia Wylie - Fac?Ade

?My artwork entails putting a physical item within the shape of a reflect into the natural surroundings, blending and blurring the lines between fact and the mirrored image of fact via the artifical. I love the idea of permitting a photograph, some thing this is 2D to expose multiple facades. I aim to awaken a experience of contemplation and permit the target market to create their own private reflection thru the complex and nearly surreal picture.?

Third place Ana Burenkova - Stunned

?The water turned into colder than they idea it would be. I controlled to seize the precise second that they both realised that they had made a horrible mistake.?

To discover extra approximately Head On Photo Festival that's on in Sydney at diverse venues visit the internet site right here.

Monday, May 11, 2020

Photography art Gallery Photojournalism Now: Friday Round Up - 26 May, 2017|Photography Art Definition

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

Festival:

Auckland Festival of Photography

1-24 June

Next week I'll be running a blog live from the 14th annual Auckland Festival of Photography. This week some pix from two function exhibitions, one curated by means of referred to Bangladeshi photojournalist and activist Shahidul Alam on this year's topic, Identity.

The other, a group show Ata Te Tangata curated by means of Rosanna Raymond and presenting works by way of indigenous Aoteroa New Zealand photographers such as of the beyond recipients of the Festival's annual fee, Russ Flatt and Tanu Gago. The Festival opens Thursday 1st June. See the Festival website for all of the information.

Group Show curated by Shahidul Alam.

Featuring: J.D. Okhai Ojeikere, Dina Goldstein, Pushpamala N, Kim Hak, ?A?Da? Erdo?An 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) ?A?Da? Erdo?An - Night Blind

1-20 June

Silo 6, Silo Park, Auckland City

Ata Te Tangata

(C) Aitu Falencie by using Pati Solomona Tyrell

(C) Natalie Robertson Driftwood

(C) Ena Ena with the aid of 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 sixteen years Stills Gallery in Paddington (Sydney) is to close its doors. It's a unhappy day for images, another nail within the coffin, and perhaps indicative of the adulthood of the images collector market on this united states of america. I even have enjoyed many shows at Stills, a marvellous space and one I wish may additionally retain as an art space. Congratulations to the team at Stills for flying the flag for goodbye.

In the gallery's very last exhibition Curtain Call, "we're taking the possibility to appearance again over the records of the gallery to offer the mother of all salon hangs providing over 70 artists from over the 26 years of exhibitions. Here is a choice 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 functions the work of 9 photojournalists, in paste-americaon the street and at the partitions of Hillvale Gallery within the internal 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: snap shots from the outlet night)

And at McKinnon Secondary College (underneath)

© Benjamin Petit

Ends 28 May

Hillvale Gallery

342D Albert Street

Brunswick

Check out Dysturb's new internet site for greater records on what this revolutionary group is doing.