Archive for the ‘Exhibitions’ Category
July 16, 2011 QCP Opening
We attended the opening of the latest QCP show featuring major works by Carolyn Lewens, Peter Charuk, Peter Annand, Vivian McLatchie and the Voicing Concerns group. It’s a diverse show with some remarkable works.
SEE the YouTube Video review: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XYwXDoYj3Ho
June 24 – Visiting the 2011 OLIVE COTTON
The Tweed River Art Gallery @ Murwillumbah is once again hosting the Olive Cotton Award for Photographic Portraiture – The exhibition will be on show until July 31, 2011.
This year the Judge was Naomi Cass from CCP in Melbourne and as usual the selected works present a comprehensive review of contemporary Australian photo portraiture from the best photographers in the country as well as the latest crop of emerging image-makers. The portrait remains one of the most fascinating genres of photography – there is something about the face that connects with the viewer.
Some observations
In this year’s Olive Cotton Award for Photographic Portraiture there was something for everyone. This exhibition always provides a broad overview of contemporary photographic practice as 2D wall presented images.
The process and media by which the works were made were described by didactic panels placed around the gallery —everything from cyanotypes to gliclee printing and from Type C to inkjet. Those looking for historical processes found large format (whole plate?) ambrotypes paying tribute to the soft romantic feel of 19th century photography. Sizes of the works ranged from the larger than life images of the famous and infamous to the small personal and the everyday through which we can all find some empathy and connection.
In this mix there seemed to be a trend towards the selection of the reinvented holiday or family album snapshot—mostly in black and white. Some of these images showed the poser/s as acting out or ‘hamming up’ personal moments which when placed on the gallery walls transformed these images into arcane representations of everyday life. Others, whether staged or seen images, were illustrations of current political and cultural issues reframed by utilizing the informality and familiarity of the snap shot and then presented as austere gallery-crafted images for the consideration of thoughtful viewers.
For me, the most successful portraits are the ones that draw upon a deep understanding of photographic quality (tone, colour, detail, time etc.) and aesthetics. Alongside this there needs to be a flexible and experimental approach to style embedded in the psyche of the photographer that is combined with an empathy and curiosity for the subject. For me the portrait is developed through time spent by the photographer in collaboration with the subject and created in a moment of synergy and intensity that distils the portrait concept. The strength, depth and intensity of this collaboration, if handled skilfully, can visually transfer an afterimage onto the viewer’s imagination and memory that transcends the gallery experience. For me all of these decisive factors came together in not only the winning image of Tamara Dean, Damien Skipper, but they were also very strong in Russell Shakespeare’s, Michael Zavros and Samantha Everton’s, Illusion.
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Victoria Cooper 25 June 2011
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TO ACCESS a list of the finalists and the winners visit:
http://www.tweed.nsw.gov.au/ArtGallery/ArtGalleryOliveCotton2011Exhibition.aspx
DOWNLOAD a copy of the catalogue for the 2011 Award here
June – SQIT Photo Student mosaic for Empire Theatre’s 100th
Students help celebrate the Empire’s 100th Anniversary
Students from my Commercial Photography class recently spent a couple of hours documenting Toowoomba’s Empire Theatre. The images were integrated by me into a 2.1 metre-long trans-luminated mosaic image. The work was integrated into the exhibition ‘100 years Empire Theatre: Historical items from the Theatre’s collection‘ at the Toowoomba Regional Art Gallery.
The Empire Theatre is well-known for the Art Deco architectural structure and decorative elements that were part of its 1930s reconstruction. The building is a photographer’s delight as at every turn there are new views and design elements that can create great abstract forms.
After photography the images were optimised by students and passed over for integration into the triptich’s 70 x 210cm design.
SEE the Toowoomba Chronicle details http://www.thechronicle.com.au/story/2011/05/17/evolution-empire-toowoomba/
The exhibition at the Toowoomba Regional Art Gallery includes a photographic exhibition of the reconstruction of the Empire that was undertaken in 1996-7. The photographer was Lucy Robertson-Cuninghame and the images were completed at the time as part of her Associate Diploma of Photography work.
SEE the Chronicle story for details http://www.thechronicle.com.au/story/2011/05/23/theatres-rich-history-on-show/
May 23 – Re-New[s]ing the news Exhibition
Chronicle Zine: Re-new[s]ing the news
An exhibition of artists’ zines based on the Toowoomba Chronicle newspaper
http://www.thechronicle.com.au/story/2011/05/25/chronicle-artists-toowoomba-tafe-students
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On Saturday 5 March 2011, nine artists all bought a copy of the Chronicle newspaper. Their challenge was to read, interpret and make an artists’ statement by reading between the lines.
In doing so they find a place where their artistic view collides with the truth of the newspaper. Now these re-used newspapers are presented to the public for viewing at an exhibition in the Flexilearn Centre (library) at the Southern Queensland Institute of TAFE (SQIT).
The publication form chosen by the artists to present their statements is the informal pamphlet format commonly known as the ‘Zine’. This ubiquitous newspaper form has its origins in the ‘free’ press and personal expression.
The contributing artists are all art photography students from SQIT and Teacher Doug Spowart set the project as part of course work.
“The zine task has resulted in some insightful commentary about Toowoomba. Interestingly, whilst each artist made their own statement about news items, in many ways they have retold the news with their own spin on it,” Mr Spowart said.
Curator of the exhibition, SQIT Artist in Residence Lorelei Clark describes the works as almost anything you can imagine.
“The Chronicle newspaper has been cut-up, ripped and torn, spray painted, words cut out and reassembled, with some works having a ransom note look about them,” Ms Clark said,
The exhibition was opened by local arts identity Beverley Bloxham who said
As the name implies, the brief for this project was to take back copies of Toowoomba’s Chronicle as the source material to creatively refashion it with new geometries and to invest it with new meaning as artist’s zines.
According to Wikipedia, “a zine (an abbreviation of fanzine, or magazine) is most commonly a small circulation publication of original or appropriated texts and images. More broadly, the term encompasses any self-published work of minority interest usually reproduced via photocopier.
A popular definition includes that circulation must be 5,000 or less, although in practice the significant majority are produced in editions of less than 1,000, and profit is not the primary intent of publication.”
This exhibition gives me a giggle in choice of source material: repurposing an ephemeral object: ie: yesterday’s news, as a creative exercise. It is many moons since I was so engaged in reading the Chronicle, having decided long ago that it was not the most efficient use of my news gathering time since I became a devotee of Radio National & SBS. However, I do dip into it from time to time to get my fix of local news.
But here, fresh from the minds and hands of creative people, is another reason the read the print emanating from our local daily purveyor of news which had its beginnings as a four penny weekly on July 4, 1861 in a coachbuilder’s shop in James Street with founder Darius Hunt.
The newsprint, however, in these artists’ hands, has been sliced, spliced, torn and shorn, with realigned and juxtaposed journalism, hacked (not hackneyed) headlines, dubious by-lines, reinvented meaning, and re-contextualised content in a manner unintended by the founder and original authors.
The zines are available for viewing from May 24 to June 5, 2011 at SQIT Flexilearn Centre in A Block at 100 Bridge Street. Open Monday and Wednesday 8am to 6pm, Tuesday to Thursday from 8am to 5pm and Friday from 8am to 4pm.
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May 17 – NEW VIDEOs – QCP ALT & Japanese Pinhole Opening
Uploaded two Video presentations from the Queensland Centre for Photography shows – ALT and Seven Japanese Pinhole Photographers.
THE ALT + PINHOLE OPENING
SEE THE OPENING VIDEO:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WYAY3zXQrfI&feature=mfu_in_order&list=UL
SEE THE JAPANESE PINHOLE PHOTOGRAPHERS VIDEO (Note: Mainly in Japanese language)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ewUTYY2enKc&feature=mfu_in_order&list=UL.
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May 7, 2011 ALT Exhibition opens @ Qld Centre for Photography
SEE TWO NEW EXHIBITIONS @ QCP – Our video work “CARCAMERA” is on show
SEE <http://www.qcp.org.au/exhibitions/current/album-603/28>
SEE OUR VIDEO <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wg8zdvr1nfY&feature=mfu_in_order&list=UL>
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We wrote the exhibition catalogue text – See below
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Somewhere between the making, the idea and dreaming: Post-technology Photography
Ban lenses and viewfinders. Ban your auto-wind buzzy-flashing built in obsolescence jewellery.
Give up aspiring to the conventional. Play with light, rediscover your vision and party.
Justin Quinnell[1] talking about pinhole photography
Who would have thought that age old processes along with out dated technology would have any relevance in the seamless slick technological digital image world. Or even that the latest digital technology could become hijacked as a mere emulator of the appearance of old time photos. With its arcane history of chemicals, darkrooms and focussing cloths photography is now morphing into a brave new emancipated world where everything old can be new again and anything goes.
Many photographers find this review of processes and technologies liberating—providing an alternative avenue for exploring photography often resulting in the excitement of discovering new visions. A recent popular photobook on the Holga[2] camera illustrates a kaleidoscope of visual imagery created with this simple plastic camera. In the introduction to the book Adam Scott exemplifies this method of working, “I had already been shooting for many years with single lens reflex cameras and was beginning to get bored of photography, but the Holga reopened my eyes and injected me with new love, I felt as though I had discovered a new sense or a new colour.”[3]
Into this argument steps curator Ian Poole with this exhibition entitled ALT. Photographers in this show are similarly enamored by this technological tinkering as Scott and dust off old junk cameras like the Russian Lubitel or dislocate a Diana lens and relocate it onto a DSLR sensor. Some photographers may use new technology like the ubiquitous iPhone as creative stimulation for follow-up imaging. But is it the technology that lubricates creativity in these photographers work? As in Justin Quinnell’s challenge in the opening quote “give up aspiring to the conventional” these image makers aim to subvert the ‘conventional’ and reinvent photography for and by themselves.
The images made by photographers in the ALT exhibition exalt and capitalise on the vagaries and flaws arising from technology, uncontrolled serendipitous moments and the slowing of time. All of these questionable qualities are commonly regarded as poor technique from faulty and inadequate equipment. Through their experimentation these photo-rebels appear to be reacting against technological control by preferring the serendipity and imperfections of real human experience.
It seems that these processes allow a space for pure wonderment much like that of children at play. Here the photographer’s imagination is stimulated by ‘tinkering’ with technology and the conventions of photographic practice from which new approaches to subjects and concepts arise. Critically the act of making, discovery and reflexive action is fundamental throughout the process. In other words the photographer makes the photograph—not the technology.
Pinhole photography is another malleable medium for the tinkerer. The exhibition, Seven Japanese Pinhole Photographers, brought together by Hideharu Matsuhisa a respected graphic designer and pinhole photographer, shows the diversity and commonalities of the pinhole experience. In the catalogue specially produced by Matsuhisa for this show, Reiji Kanemoto comments, “These pinhole views of restless waves show me the passage of time, condensed into a single moment that lives forever.” This is an experience that is common to many pinhole photographers as long exposures are inherent in the process. In a recent exhibition of Matsuhisa’s pinhole photography at Caloundra Regional Gallery, the Director, John Waldron referred to pinhole photography as “part of the Slow Revolution”[4]
Slow cameras: slow photography—creates a kind of image making approach that is just as satisfying and as good for you as slow food. For some Japanese pinhole photographers the work is meditative as Michihiro Ueno finds when working with pinhole cameras that, “I’m made to be more conscious to face time and objects.”[5] Alternatively Yasuko Oki is motivated by the pure wonderment of capturing unseen visual phenomena as she photographs fluids in glasses (water, juice and beer) that she drinks everyday.
As the camera, the lens and the darkroom/computer are increasingly open to subversion, the photograph maybe now free from connection to a specific technological time and place and it’s associated obsolescence. Although there has always been a cult following for the “alternative” in photography, what we see strongly from this exhibition series, and more broadly in the electronic medium, is that photographers are well equipped and ready to grasp, shape and fiddle with any means to extract images. Is this the sign of the onset of a post technology condition? Has the “alternative” contagion gone viral? Can technology or iPhone apps keep pace with the imagination and the inventive nature of the photographer? Certainly, photography has loosened up. Rather than being the keeper of secret knowledge and technological proficiency, the photographer is now more . . .
Victoria Cooper and Doug Spowart
Victoria Cooper and Doug Spowart are visual artists working in the fields of photoimaging, artists’ books and photo education. Victoria and Doug have collaborated on many art projects and exhibitions including pinhole, projections, the room and car camera obscura. Their images and artists’ books are included in major national collections.
[1] The World through a pinhole (catalogue) curated by Diane Stoppard and Ellie Smith, Wellington, New Zealand, 1998.
[2] Lomographic Society International (ed), 2006. Holga, The world through a plastic lens, compiled by the Lomographic Society International and Adam Scott. Lomographic Society International, Vienna, Austria.
[3] Introduction by Adam Scott, Holga, The world through a plastic lens, Page 17.
[5] See catalogue, Japanese Seven Pinhole Photographers, by Hideharu Matsuhisa
SCU Acquisitive Artists Book Award – February 26, 2011
The 2011 Southern Cross University’s Acquisitive Artists Book Award was announced at the Next Gallery in Lismore on February 26. Shortlisted works represented a cross section of the discipline from sculptural books to the ephemeral oddities, readymades, recycled, sticks ‘n’ feathers and solidly traditional weighty codexes. The exhibition was a ‘something for everyone’ sampler of contemporary approaches to the art—whatever that may be.
The exhibition venue, whilst modest in size, amply accommodated the works and gave an intimate viewing experience to the books. Importantly the gallery places the works within the centre of the Lismore Central Business District enabling a very public connection to artists’ books as art gallery presentation content. This is contrary to the almost secular way in which this kind of work is presented in libraries and specialized venues.
Professor Ross Woodrow, from the Queensland College of Art, as this year’s judge was charged with the responsibility of selecting works to compliment the books already held by the university’s library that are used not only for exhibition and reading, but also for lecture discussion samples.
Woodrow listed his three principal criteria for selection; (1) the best books for the collection, (2) personal taste and (3) books that look like books and acted as books. His selection of 3 books confirms this criteria:
- Lyn Ashby: The Ten Thousand Things, digital prints, Arches Watercolour paper, boards, 24 x 30cm closed, Edition 50.
- Peter E Charuk: Glacies Lux, digital photographs, 21 x 34cm
- Peter Lyssiotis + Ann-Marie Hunter: A Modern Forest, screenprint, 26.3 x 17.5cm Edition 10, Publisher: Mastertheif / Psyclonic Studios
As usual the judge’s selections have created some contention in the artists book scene. Some commentators on the awards seem to miss the point that this is an acquisitive award that contributes to the university’s teaching library of artists books. Each acquisitive award event is presided over by a different judge and different areas of artists book practice will be represented in their selection. Ultimately the winner is everyone interested in artists books as the collection will quite possibly become one of the most diverse, in terms of examples of exemplary practice, in the country.
An online catalogue is available for viewing on the Next Gallery Site
Check it out!
Cheers
Doug
Judging the Myrtle Street 2011 Pinhole Photography Competition
Over the last few days we’ve been involved in the judging of a new and unique photography award – The Myrtle Street 2011 Pinhole Photography Competition. Initiated and organised by artist and gallerist Jay Dee Dearness of Myrtle Street Studio this is a new and exciting opportunity for pinhole photographers to present their best works.
Our comments on the judging were:
TWINSCAPES Opening – March 12, 2011
Japanese pinhole photographer Hideharu Matsuhisa presents the exhibition The TwinScapes @ the Caloundra Regional Art Gallery – March 9 ~ April 10.
Hide has been a regular visitor to Australia for many years – staying with Brisbane photographic identity Ian Poole. For 7 years Hide has been working with pinhole film cameras in Japan, the US and Australia. The Caloundra gallery exhibition is a selection of his color pinhole images made over this period.
As pinhole photographers and friends to Hide we supported his exhibition by providing pinhole cameras and other resources. We were invited by Hide to include two camera obscura images to be included as visiting artists in his show. On the morning of Saturday 12th we presented a lecture on pinhole photography to around 40 participants. After lunch John Waldron, (Cultural Heritage & Collections Manager, Creative Communities, Sunshine Coast Council) presented a commentary on Hide’s approach to pinhole photography (SEE http://lucidamagazine.com/?p=414). We officially opened the exhibition.
The TwinScapes exhibition features color pinhole imagery that has the profound feeling of a memory – in encountering the works the viewer may have a sense of looking at the image of a past experience. Hide’s feeling for the sweeping expanse of the Australian landscape is complimented by the tight compositions of urban Japanese buildings.
Thanks Hide for sharing your “light” with us.

















