Tuesday, April 17, 2007

[Exhibition] Wastelands by Juha Tolonen, Perth Centre for Photography


Opening night: 6pm, Thursday 19 April: Perth Centre for Photography: 91, Brisbane Street, Perth.

Wastelands is a journey into abandoned and transitory spaces in Australia and Europe. Tolonen has explored spaces such as family fun parks in abandoned nuclear power stations creating large format images recording some of the unusual ways that buildings decline, and ways that space is reordered. Tolonen writes:

"Large format photography has had a long association with architecture and landscape. It expands detail, corrects perspective and allows almost infinite depth of field, satisfying our desires for topographical accuracy.


"I have always enjoyed the images of the New Topographers, like Lewis Baltz and Robert Adams, who in the 1970s photographed the impact of suburbia encroaching on the frontier of the American West. Their images harboured a strange tension between banality and beauty.

"The New Topographers depicted the (dysfunctional) marriage between a young civilisation and an ancient landscape. What I feel I am doing is looking at landscape after the divorce. Some spaces fall to ruin, in others new unexpected relationships are formed.

"Commonly, defunct industrial landscapes are transformed into modern centres of consumption. But family fun parks in abandoned nuclear power stations and the prospect of a European wilderness in Chernobyl reveal that landscape is never a finished project, nor what we always expect.

"I do not want to cast these images simply as documents of particular spaces or countries; I also feel that there is an element of fantasy in them, sometimes dark, at other times playful. Large format photography tends to record more than we can actually see, compelling us to look longer. The matter of fact appearance is also its mystery."

Gallery hours: Thursday to Sunday -12-5pm.

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

[Competition] IRIS Award 2007 for Portraiture

The Perth Centre for Photography (PCP) is calling for entries for the IRIS Award 2007.

The IRIS Award is a national prize recognising unique and outstanding portraiture in a photo-based medium. 35 entrants will be short listed to exhibit their work at the IRIS Award exhibition, to be held in September 2007 at the Perth Centre for Photography, Western Australia.

The selection of finalists will be based on images that are original, visually stimulating and particularly those that challenge traditional notions of portraiture.

This year, the PCP is pleased to introduce the Perth Fashion Festival portraiture prize of $500, recognising fashion photography that incorporates strong elements of contemporary portraiture.

The closing date for entries is 5pm Friday, July the 20th . For the entry form and terms and conditions of entry, please visit: pcp.org.au/irisawards07.html

Monday, April 02, 2007

[Exhibition] Pictures Of A Changing Climate, WA Museum, 30 March to 29 April

Pictures of a Changing Climate connects our actions with the livelihoods of others in distant places through four photographic displays. Each display demonstrates climate change from a global to a local perspective with award-winning professional and amateur images.

Included in the exhibition is NorthSouthEastWest, an international photographic display from Magnum Photos, coordinated by The Climate Group and The British Council. This section contains 22 images with text and comments by world leaders, thinkers and identities such as Kofi Annan, Arthur C Clarke, Leonardo DiCaprio, Tony Blair and David Suzuki.

Complementing this exhibition is Natural Australian Icons which highlights the effect that climate change is having on Australia. The images shown depict five areas across Australia including the Great Barrier Reef and the Murray Darling River.

Western Australians have been invited to submit their own images showing the effect of climate change from a local perspective. From the entries received, ten winning images will go on display in the Western Australian Climate Change Photographic section.

Pictures of a Changing Climate will also show the changes Western Australians are making to tackle climate change. In particular this exhibition will highlight the State’s achievements and initiatives towards a better tomorrow.

[Competition] The Olive Cotton Award for Photographic Portraiture

I think it's testament to the absolute Lord of the Rings fan that I am (yikes) that I first read this competition to be: "The Rosie Cotton Award..." - Rosie Cotton being the hobbit lass whom Samwise Gamgee wooed and married upon his return from the adventures in Mordor.

:-)

On to the competition:

The Olive Cotton Award is an annual award for excellence in photographic portraiture offering a $10,000 major prize, funded by Cotton’s family in memory of “one of Australia's leading twentieth century photographers” (Art Gallery NSW, 2000). In 2005 the Friends of the Tweed River Art Gallery have sponsored additional Directors Choice awards to the value of $2,000. All awards are acquisitive with the winning works becoming part of the Tweed River Art Gallery’s “Australian Portrait Collection”.

The exhibition is selected from entrants across Australia and is a significant opportunity for both emerging and established photographers. Photographer Sally McInerney, daughter of Olive Cotton, is the inaugural judge.Entries will close at 5pm on Friday 5th August 2005.

Interested artists should contact the Gallery to obtain an entry form and conditions.Phone 02 6670 2790 or email tweedart@tweed.nsw.gov.auThe exhibition of finalists will be shown at the Tweed River Art Gallery from Thursday 13 October to Sunday 13 November 2005.

More information: http://www.tweed.nsw.gov.au/ArtGallery/ArtGalleryOliveCottonDetail.aspx?Doc=pdfs/2005OliveCottonAwardGeneralInformation.pdf

[Exhibition] Mary's Hotel - by Kevin Ballantine


Kevin Ballantine's exhibition - Mary's Hotel - presents images from an Easter spent in Sicily. Ballantine's photographs are on show at the Temple Dog Gallery, 301 Onslow Road, Shenton Park. Exhibition runs rom April 1 - April 15; Gallery opening hours: Tues-Fri 10am to 5pm.


For more information about the gallery, please visit: http://www.templedog.com.au/