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Posts Tagged ‘pinhole photography

JULIE MILLOWICK’s ‘Surrounding’– Intrinsically Local

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Drought Continuing Drought El Nino year Drought Millowick with son Christian McArdle at Crocodile Dam

Continuing Drought El Nino year – Julie Millowick with son Christian McArdle at Crocodile Reservoir  PHOTO: Courtesy of the artist

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SURROUNDING

The beauty of Central Victoria’s landscape in tumult and recovery

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An exhibition by Julie Millowick at Castlemaine Art Museum

CAM Website

CAM – Surrounding Julie Millowick

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“Photography is my life; it is the very core of my being”

                                                                                    Julie Millowick

 

Surrounding is an exhibition by Julie Millowick surveying her lived experience over 36 years in Fryerstown, Victoria. Over time this celebrated documentary and commercial photographer, driven by a curious and creative mind, has created a photographic archive both cataloguing her visual inquiry and providing a chronicle of her life within this place. Millowick’s work is multifaceted where the poetic and psychological is interconnected with an almost scientific aesthetic thus sharing deep insights into the land that has both nourished and challenged her.

The curator, Jenny Long, has written a sensitive and informative essay for the book Surrounding that accompanies the exhibition. Long discusses Millowick’s process and conceptual thinking along with observations to provide background and framework for the viewer to consider this extensive project. Along with the book there is promotional material and didactics that proposes the exhibition will ‘show us the devastating effects of mining, drought, flood and invasive plants, but also remind us of the interconnectedness that links all parts of this ecosystem including its human occupants.’ And that there is a, ‘capacity for renewal … that offers a spark of hope for the future.’

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Surrounding exhibition installation PHOTO: Supplied by the artist

Surrounding House and domestic installation PHOTO: Supplied by the artist

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In the first gallery space, the ‘house and domestic’ body of work is presented as twenty-three individual framed works including an 1870s photograph an original owner, Mrs King, standing outside the home. In this work Millowick’s subject matter includes botanical still-life works, images of the detritus of past inhabitants unearthed in the house grounds and there is also a large print of a section of a house wall interior etched with the marks of habitation and the patina of age. Images of washing drying on the clothesline refer to the domestic space of the past and present habitation of this home. Far from being prosaic records of domesticity, the photographs of the washing have an ethereal perhaps even ghostly appearance.

Washing in Horse Paddock pinhole image PHOTO: Courtesy of the artist

Washing in Horse Paddock pinhole image 1996 PHOTO: Courtesy of the artist

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There is also a kind of haunting in the walls and surrounds of the house, which continues through the shadowy and dramatically lit scenes of this exhibition. The appearance of a selectively illuminated tree branch or the enchanted presence of Millowick’s horse Goldie, imbues the place with a mythical spirit that beckons the viewer to follow into the mysterious dark forest.

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Contrasted with a sense of wonder and fairy tale mystery, Millowick’s work is also deeply grounded in the reality of place, which is as sharp and unadorned as the land itself. In the larger exhibition space, there are groupings of unframed images that explore both topographical and psychological aspects of specific spaces and themes including mine sites, the Castlemaine Diggings National Heritage Park, ecological thinning, the Crocodile Reservoir Drought and horse paddock. A constant subject for Millowick is her son Christian whose activities are documented in many of these themes. images within the groups are placed together to form clues and evidences that suggest larger narratives. It is also interesting to consider the installations as visual representations of the conversation between artist and curator piecing together the rich collection of work and the resonance or dissonance between images and concepts.

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Invasive Thistles Lumen print by Julie Millowick 2022

Invasive Thistles 2002  Lumen print by Julie Millowick

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Goldie, 34yrs old horse PHOTO: Julie Millowick 2009

Goldie, 34 year old horse 2009   PHOTO: Julie Millowick

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Horse Paddock Post Goldrush Uniform Regrowth PHOTO: Julie Millowick

Horse Paddock Post Goldrush Uniform Regrowth   PHOTO: Julie Millowick

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Fryerstown, Isolation, Lockdown, Orchard, Chinese Pistachiola Tree, last moments before midnight on 21 October, and first moments on 22 October, 2021 ©juliemillowick 2021

Fryerstown, Isolation, Lockdown, Orchard, Chinese Pistachiola Tree, last moments before midnight on 21 October, and first moFryerstown, Isolation, Lockdown, Orchard, Chinese Pistachiola Tree, last moments before midnight on 21 October, and first moments on 22 October   PHOTO: Julie Millowick

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Original Cottage Wall with inroduced Invasive Blackberry 2023 PHOTO: Julie Millowick

Original Cottage Wall with introduced Invasive Blackberry 2023   PHOTO: Julie Millowick

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Fryers Diggings, Sluicing, Heron”s Reef 2023 PHOTO: Julie Millowick

Fryers Diggings, Sluicing, Heron’s Reef 2023   PHOTO: Julie Millowick

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Crocodile Reservoir 2006 PHPTO: Julie Millowick

Crocodile Reservoir 2006 PHOTO: Julie Millowick

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Drowned Kangaroo PHOTO: Julie Millowick

Drowned Kangaroo PHOTO: Julie Millowick

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Lumen Buried Paper Under Blackberry Bush Lumen by Julie Millowick

Lumen Buried Paper Under Blackberry Bush by Julie Millowick

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Castlemaine Diggings National Heritage Park Cherry Ballart 2022 PHOTO: Julie Millowick

Castlemaine Diggings National Heritage Park Cherry Ballart 2022 PHOTO: Julie Millowick

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A photographer with less time moving over the space would document the superficial surface of things and create a record time-locked to when they were there. Millowick has set for herself the challenge of distilling a life of experience of time and place by using her comprehensive knowledge of photographic techniques* that, when combined with personal vision, can present to the viewer something deeper. As Millowick explores the environment or found objects, she reveals deeper layers and meanings through her experimentation with the visual language of each process and technique. The depth and complexity of this work tells of the unwavering commitment to her art, the community and the environment.

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Image grouping

Image grouping

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When introducing Julie Millowick at a recent artist’s talk about her exhibition the Gallery Director Naomi Cass described her as a ‘Localist’. ‘Localist’ is indeed an appropriate term not only for the work in this exhibition but also for Millowick’s continued photographic activity in the community. As a localist Millowick’s activity is part of the growing contemporary global movement for living locally and telling local stories particularly since the impacts of the Covid Pandemic. As it was 36 years in the making, this exhibition could only be just a fragment of Millowick’s creative visual documentation of her surroundings and community. Further digging or mining of her extensive archive will potentially reveal new perspectives and meanings on these powerful local stories of her place. Surrounding is just a beginning, there are so many other stories yet to be told …

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A commentary on the exhibition by Victoria Cooper and Doug Spowart

Surrounding was part of the PHOTO2024 program

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Surrounding – the book

Surrounding – the book

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P.S.  The Surrounding exhibition is complemented by an illustrated book copies of which can be purchased from Castlemaine Art Museum or directly from Julie Millowick

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IMAGES FROM THE IN CONVERSATION EVENT | Julie Millowick and Kyla McFarlane

Sunday 10 March, 11:30am — 12:30pm

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* Photographic techniques that Julie Millowick employed in the exhibition include – pinhole photography, lumen printing, added lighting (painting-with-light), double exposure, cyanotypes, out-of-focus capture, re-photography, progressive sequencing, documentary and personal narrative.
We wish to thank Julie Millowick and congratulate her on the exhibition and for the images of her photographs and the exhibition installation. Photographs of the IN CONVERSATION event were by Doug Spowart.

Castlemaine Art Museum is a member of the Public Galleries Association of Victoria

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This site is archived by PANDORA, Australia National Library’s Web Archive

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POETICS OF LIGHT: Pinhole Book and our work

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It’s not everyday that you wander into an art gallery bookshop and you stumble across a book with your work in it…! A favourite gallery bookshop for me is the QAGOMA bookshops in Brisbane – it’s always worth spending a little time there to see the latest books, to do a little in-store pre-reading, and to check out the ‘Specials’ table where the unaffordable book often becomes affordable.

The other day I’d escaped from some research work at the State Library of Queensland by walking through the preparations in QAGOMA for the 8th Asia Pacific Triennial to drop by the gallery bookshop. I held and flicked through a few books when a large volume entitled Poetics of Light with a big white reduced price label – $99.95 to $59.95.  The title seemed familiar to me – then I saw the sub-title Contemporary Pinhole Photography, ‘yes, I remember that’, I thought to myself.

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The book "Poetics of Light'

The book Poetics of Light

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I flicked a few pages at the front of the book and one of my pinhole/zoneplate photos … a few pages on there was one of Vicky’s … I kept turning pages and I witnessed a compendium of amazing lensless imagery …

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My 'The Sentinel' page

Doug’s ‘The Sentinel’ page

Vicky's 'Banksia lineup'

Vicky’s Banksia lineup

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

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The last couple of years for us have been full of life-changing experiences and dealing with the issues of the moment, my being made redundant at TAFE and the subsequent time spent job searching, selling our house, lecture and writing commitments and amazing house-sit opportunities for friends – I’d completely lost track of this book and the exhibition that it compliments.

The Poetics of Life exhibition and book celebrates the donation of the pre-eminent Pinhole Resource Collection to the New Mexico History Museum (NMHM). The Pinhole Resource was founded by Eric Renner in 1984 and became the world’s centre for all things pinhole. Through personal research, workshops, networking and publishing Renner led the resurgence in pinhole photography, its techniques, images and its discourse. In 1989 Renner was joined by Nancy Spencer as a co-director of Pinhole Resource and co-editor of the Pinhole Resource journal.

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The Poetics of Light Exhibition

The Poetics of Light Exhibition

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Over the years Renner and Spencer amassed a unique collection of pinhole and camera obscura images, cameras both old and contemporary and texts, books and references about the art and practice of pinhole photography. Much of this material was donated by practitioners as a way of contributing to the ‘Resource’.

The Pinhole Resource Collection became part of the permanent collection of the Photo Archives of the New Mexico History Museum in 2012. This research archive is has the largest collection of pinhole photography and paraphernalia in the world with over 6,000 photographs, cameras, documents and books, as well as an entire run of Pinhole Journal. The NMHM has a website with images available to be searched by author’s/artist’s name, and also includes education resources and a blog.

So what is it about the pinhole image – why would anyone want to make photographs with a lens-less camera…? Renner and Spencer, in the book comment that: ‘describing the mystery of pinhole images is difficult, the concepts of soul, depth, yearning, timelessness, and archetypal feeling all contribute to the kind of visual reality produced, one perhaps only seen in a dreamlike state.’

We both felt privileged to have been selected for this book and exhibition and felt excitement at the opportunity to be recognised for our long practice in this worldwide movement.

Whilst much of our contemporary work centres on the camera obscura each year we participate in the yearly World Pinhole Day in late April – SEE our 2015-submission post HERE.

In the late 1990s I (Doug Spowart) was to state that: “pinholing creates images by simplicity, there is no techno-pretence; the images speak as murmurings, incantations of nostalgia, of mystique and memory; they are incisive and nebulous simultaneously; the process is an enigma.”

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The Sentinel, Mt Buffalo

My pinhole (zoneplate) image from the Poetic of Light exhibition and book was taken at The Sentinel at Mt Buffalo using a modified 4×5 Graflex camera. In 1999 ILFORD featured the image in a PROPHOTO Magazine feature on my work. A story about the image is featured on our old website HERE

In a statement about the body of work, The Rocks of Ages, Victoria Cooper discusses her view that image is a result of the connection of technology, process, photographer and subject in the space/time of pinhole photography.

“These images formed part of an ongoing documentation of my corporeal and psychological experiences with the land. They were created using an ancient imaging device, the Pinhole, and analogue photographic materials. Each handcrafted image was then selectively toned to identify with memories other than the eidetic captured within the film. This process is slow and considered – the subject’s light remains on the photographic paper as not a direct document but rather as a visual exegesis of a time and place.”

 

What follows is a selection of pinhole images made by Cooper+Spowart

 

Vicky's shortbread biscuit tin 6x17cm panorama roll film

Vicky’s shortbread biscuit tin 6x17cm panorama roll film

 

Myall-trees-pano prom Dodo land Young-boulder

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Other pinhole works by Vicky from film boxes and other cameras …

Myall-Trees Myall-lake

4x5 Chrome film exposed in a film box

4×5 Chrome film exposed in a film box

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Doug’s pinhole/zoneplate work from the 1990s

Doug's Graflex 4x5 fitted with a zone plate

Doug’s Graflex 4×5 fitted with a zone plate

Hand Dmarbles Girraween

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The CarCamera

From 2000-2008 we converted our Toyota Tarago into a travelling camera obscura and completed a transcontinental crossing from Adelaide to Darwin in what we called our CarCamera Obscura. Here is a small selection of work from this project…

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The CarCamera in the field

The CarCamera in the field

The CarCamera on the Barkly Tableands during the transcontinental crossing

The CarCamera on the Barkly Tableands during the transcontinental crossing

cc-BarklyDuo

 

VIEW A DIGITAL MEDIA PRESENTATION OF CARCAMERA IMAGES

 

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In a time where digital photography has impacted upon old analogue technologies we saw digital as just another opportunity to explore. When we were loaned a Fuji S1 Pro camera in the later part of 2000 we fitted a pinhole and made images…

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A pinhole digital photo made with a Fuji S1 Pro camera in late 2000.

A pinhole digital photo made with a Fuji S1 Pro camera in late 2000.

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There are still more challenges … photography has some more to give, and, be discovered …

 

Oh!! And I bought the book too …

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All images (except the NMHM exhibition instalation) © Doug Spowart and Victoria Cooper

 

Judging the Myrtle Street 2011 Pinhole Photography Competition

with one comment

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:

‘It was a great pleasure to judge this competition for Jay Dee and the Myrtle Street Gallery. We enjoyed the variety and quality of the images presented.
We approached the judging of this work from the point of view that, as there are endless devices, methods and materials for the capture and production of pinhole photographs the image had to utilize the qualities of the pinhole in support of a visual concept. These image qualities include; long exposure subject movement, maximum depth of field and a softness of image that evokes mystery and an appearance like a memory. These elements are characteristic of lensless photography and form the basic ‘language’ of the pinhole image.
The image, for the pinhole photographer in the landscape, encapsulates the experience and the ‘feeling’ of ‘being there’ during the extended time of exposure. For other pinholers the image evokes a kind of romantic softness and sometimes a mystical immanance within rather than precise detail of the subject’s features. With this in mind we chose the images that satisfied these criteria, although all of the images entered have many of these qualities.’
The winners can be viewed at  http://www.myrtlestreetstudio.com/blog. An exhibition will open from Saturday 9th of April.  You can also vote for a People’s Choice Award.
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Vicky+Doug
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Written by Cooper+Spowart

April 8, 2011 at 8:21 am