Auckland Festival of Photography 2021

Page 1

3 – 20 JUNE / PIPIRI 2021

17

DAYS

50

VENUES

photographyfestival.org.nz

FREE


Funding Partners

Festival Theme

Isolation As naturally social animals, humans living in a state of isolation suggests an abnormal circumstance or tragedy. To be in isolation is to be the exception to the rule, it is loneliness and solitude. For the first time in human history, populations around the world have been forced into this state, with as yet unknown longterm consequences. Yet often the exception to this notion of isolation is the artist, living and working in geographic remoteness or quietly alone as the city buzzes around them. A space of aloneness can suddenly be filled with the difficult

Festival Partners

questions in life too profound to confront in company, a space in which creativity can flourish. This is perhaps why we reserve a certain mythical and mystical belief in the isolated artist, living on the fringes, working outside the huddled masses and reflecting the world back to us. We believe they have confronted the questions. In the post-Covid world, as we all emerge from isolation and distancing, perhaps now more than ever we need the artist to help us navigate meaning in the void.

Festival Team

Camera Prizes

Community & Cultural Grants

International Partners

Public Participation Director: Thanks to: Cllrs John Watson, Wayne Wilson, Auckland Julia Durkin, MNZM Council. Julian Perry, Roger Brown at Core/Festival Projects: Winesearcher.com. Mark Roach, UNESCO. Elaine Smith Community Engagement Co-ordinator: Michael Itkoff, Daylight Media. Catherine George, Barbara Holloway, Auckland Rebecca Edwards Digital Content Producer: Council. Team at City Rail Link/Panuku Development/Ellen Melville Centre. Mindaugas Leesa Tilley Kavaliauskas, Kaunas Photo Festival. Talking Culture: Waterloo Foundation. Arigato gozaimasu Y. Lauren Heinz Rick Lin, Steven Lee, Kuala Lumpur Photo Media Liaison: Awards. Benjamin Fuglister, CAP. Alasdair Victor van Wetering Foster, APP Ambassador. Rhys at NZ Sites. Graphic Design: John Rutherford & Valerie Gill, XA. Festival Rachael Clark volunteers. Interns Amber + Theodore. Website provider: NZ Sites Cover Images: (clockwise from top left) Marek Lechowicz, Gianfranco Ferraro and Chiara Festival Trust: Panariti, Mark Scotting, Conor Clarke, Mitchell Jim He, MNZM, Rachel Qi, Julia Durkin, Moreno, Claudia Heinermann, Zaidy Ismail. Phil Edmondes-Rowe.

Please Note: Details subject to change, please check up-to-date information on our website. Follow us #aklphotofestival | #whakaahuahākari

09 307 7055 | photographyfestival.org.nz | 3


Isolation

Cameron McLaren & Cody Ellingham

Auckland Photo Blog

28 May – 16 June

28 May – 20 June

Cody Ellingham, NZ Nocturnes

Kristina Parchomchuk, Lockdown

Lockdown

Julia Fullerton-Batten Looking Out From Within 31 May – 20 June

Auckland Festival of Photography presents Lockdown – a curated selection of images by Auckland photographers, displayed as large-scale prints on Queens Wharf fence.

Cameron McLaren

Auckland Festival of Photography presents Isolation by Cameron McLaren and Cody Ellingham, displayed on light boxes on the Waterfront.

Jullia Fullerton-Batten, Chloe, Lockdown Day 19

Auckland Festival of Photography presents a small taste of Julia FullertonBatten’s award winning series Looking Out From Within, 2020 as part of the Festival's Isolation theme. Julia Fullerton-Batten created this series while London was in lockdown from Covid-19, finding participants by advertising on social media and in the local press. The resulting series are real-life constructions documenting in their own ghostly way the London lockdown with the sense of isolation palpable.

Silo Park, outdoors Wynyard Quarter Waterfront, City. 24 hrs/7 days

4

| Isolation

All of the subjects were photographed in their own homes, looking out through the imprisoning window. The photographs were organized over the phone and email before the day of shooting, then Julia, along with her son doing the lighting, photographed the subjects without any physical contact from inside the window on the day of the shoot. Looking Out From Within won the Fine Art category of the 2020 International Photography Awards: www.photoawards.com

From Lockdown to Re-Opening, a series for The Washington Post by Cameron McLaren. During New Zealand's Covid-19 lockdowns Cameron photographed his country at a standstill. Commissioned by Washington Post international photo editor, Olivier Laurent this work showcased New Zealand's approach to the pandemic as being at the absolute forefront. When international travel became impossible people continued to look to New Zealand as a place of progression and aspiration. This work proves to be an example of the power of a small nation on a global stage.

At an unprecedented time in our history, the Auckland Photo Blog invited submissions from Aucklanders experiencing Lockdown in 2020. The Blog provided a shared digital space for the community. It became a safe space for residents to use from home to express visually a mostly private experience. The Blog established a sense of camaraderie making lockdown more of a shared time, alone together. This exhbition shares some of the Blog images. The Auckland Photo Blog is an extensive archive of 10,000 photographs. Contributors based in Auckland share imagery in this important visual archive of the city and its inhabitants.

New Zealand Nocturnes by Cody Ellingham Home is the subject of Cody Ellingham’s latest photographic series – New Zealand Nocturnes. From farm houses along deserted country roads, decaying colonial villas reclaimed by the land, to concrete flats and the iconic state house, New Zealand Nocturnes explores the story of the places we call home under the mysterious glow of moonlight. Te Wero Island, outdoors Viaduct Harbour, Waterfront 24 hrs/7 days

Queens Wharf Fence, outdoors 89 Quay St, City 24 hrs/7 days 09 307 7055 | photographyfestival.org.nz | 5


Chiara Panariti & Gianfranco Ferraro

Lene Marie Fossen

Cronostasi

The Gatekeeper

28 May – 16 June

31 May – 8 June

Wednesday 8 April 2020, 12h51m25s – Milan, Italy

Auckland Festival of Photography presents Cronostasi by Italian photographers, Gianfranco Ferraro and Chiara Panariti. This series is displayed on 8 lightboxes in the heart of the city. Cronostasi is a photographic reflection on the contingent situation of the population in Milan during the lockdown period determined by Covid-19, with a gaze that invites us to meditate on the new time of the human condition. A time that is always physically

Lene Marie Fossen, Untitled Chios 2017

the same, where life continues suspended in the everyday routine of its own living space, while outside everything becomes foreign and unreal. The project focuses its attention on an intimate and universal search for a renewed perception of time, that is a moment of crisis and an opportunity at the same time. Presented in partnership with the artists, this project was part of the 2020 Kaunas Photo Festival, Lithuania.

Auckland Festival of Photography and Ellen K Willas present Lene Marie Fossen –The Gatekeeper. Lene Marie Fossen [18.08.1986 - 22.10.2019] Lene Marie Fossen sadly passed away on October 22nd 2019. She was only 10 years old when she decided to stop eating and struggled with anorexia the rest of her life. She chose to be open about her disease and is best known for her beautiful and revealing self-portraits. Her soulful portraits of victims of the refugee crisis on the island of Chios in Greece also bear witness of a unique photographer and artist. "My photographs are not about Anorexia", she said. "They are about human suffering".

Mitchell Moreno PANDEMANIAC 31 May – 8 June

Parental guidance advised

Ellen Melville Centre, outdoors Freyberg Place, cnr High St and Freyberg Pl 24 hrs/7 days 6

| Isolation

Studio One Toi Tū, 1 Ponsonby Rd, Grey Lynn 9am-5pm 7 days

Navigating a space between autobiography, therapy, and performance, PANDEMANIAC queers common motifs of Covid-19 as a means to explore mental health. Mitchell Moreno is an artist from Leicester, UK, working at the intersection of photography and performance.Their work explores the queer gaze, the construction of gender, and art as therapy. 09 307 7055 | photographyfestival.org.nz | 7


Claudia Heinermann, Cameron McLaren, Cody Ellingham & Kevin Bleakley 3 – 6 June (Ellen Melville) | 11 – 13 June & 18 – 20 June (Silo 6) 23 June – 4 July (Estuary Arts Centre) Auckland Festival of Photography presents projections of the following works:

Claudia Heinermann, The Frozen River

Cameron McLaren

Cody Ellingham

Kevin Bleakley, Milford Sound Bus Terminal

Ellen Melville Centre, 2 Freyberg Pl, cnr High St & Freyberg Pl. 9am-5pm Fri to Sun Silo 6, Silo Park, Wynyard Quarter 10:30am-4:30pm Fri to Sun

Estuary Arts Centre, 214 Hibiscus Coast Highway, Orewa. 9am-4pm 7 days 8

| Isolation

Siberian Exiles by Claudia Heinermann A project about the deportations from the Baltic States to Siberia under the Soviet regime. Claudia Heinermann published recently the first part of a trilogy entitled Siberian Exiles which focuses on the experiences of six Lithuanian survivors, who were deported as children to the Laptev Sea above the polar circle. During the first major mass deportation in 1941, their families were sent to the Altai region in the south of Siberia to cut down trees and work as farm labourers. In 1942, they were moved, along with three thousand other Lithuanians, to the delta of the Lena River to build up a fishing industry. The deportees had no housing, protective clothing, food or technical equipment. During snowstorms, they had to build their own huts with their bare hands. The exiles suffered from constant hunger and many illnesses such as scurvy. For many it became a death sentence.

Our Colour YOUR STYLE

From Lockdown to Reopening by Cameron McLaren Commissioned by Washington Posts international photo editor Olivier Laurent this work showcases New Zealand's approach to the pandemic as being at the absolute forefront. New Zealand Nocturnes by Cody Ellingham Home is the subject of Cody Ellingham’s latest photographic series – New Zealand Nocturnes. From farm houses along deserted country roads, decaying colonial villas reclaimed by the land, to concrete flats and the iconic state house, New Zealand Nocturnes explores the story of the places we call home under the mysterious glow of moonlight. Empty Sound by Kevin Bleakley "In mid-winter 2020, I drove to beautiful, isolated Milford Sound and stood in the middle of its huge bus terminal. It has space for twenty-eight buses. There were none; just one illegally parked Jucy van. I couldn’t help thinking that the pandemic was perhaps a good time for us as a country to reflect on whether three million international tourists a year was truly a good thing for us, money aside. There is also the uncomfortable truth that to get to and from New Zealand almost everyone flies: four billion kg of CO2 emissions per year from that alone."

Create more, carry less with the FUJIFILM X-S10

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Core

Harvey Benge

Kate Woods

Auckland – The 70s and 80s

Sites and Settings

16 June – 3 July

1 June – 27 June

Conor Clarke As far as the eye can reach 4 June – 3 July

Papercut, 2019, c-type photograph, edition of 4

Harvey Benge

Harvey Benge (1944–2019) was a prolific photographer and committed maker of photobooks. Working between Auckland and Paris he published over 70 titles, often in the form of limited editions. His photographs have also been shown in public and private galleries in the UK and throughout Europe as well as in New Zealand. He has twice been a finalist in the prestigious Prix du Livre at Arles Photography Festival, France.

Follow us #aklphotofestival | #whakaahuahākari

Keep in touch | 09 307 7055 photographyfestival.org.nz PLEASE NOTE: Details subject to change, please check up-to-date information on our website.

Opens: 4pm Sun 30 May

Benge's photographs explore the anthropology of cities, the nature of impermanence and the small moments of everyday life. Benge’s work, which became increasingly autobiographical, sought to make the viewer question what is overlooked or unseen. This body of work is of central Auckland in the 70s and 80s – Ponsonby, Grey Lynn, Parnell and and the City. Opens: 5:30-7:30pm Wed 16 June Melanie Roger Gallery, 444 Karangahape Rd, City 11am-4pm Wed to Fri and 11am-3pm Sat 09 366 7610 | melanierogergallery.com

10 | Core

Kate Woods is an Auckland based artist. She has exhibited in numerous artistic spaces including Te Tuhi, Auckland, XYZ Collective, Tokyo, and City Gallery, Wellington. In 2012 Woods was the recipient of the Asia: NZ Foundation Artist Residency in Beijing, China. Her artistic practice focuses on the intersection between art forms, combining elements of photography and painting to create innovative works that challenge our awareness of the natural world. Woods plays with the viewer’s perception through her combination of nature and artifice, presenting images that feel at once familiar yet unrecognisable.

Conor Clarke University Oval Cricket Field (Described by Mark Flowerday), 2020 C-print with braille (PVC, UV ink) 980 x 790 mm Edition of 3

Conor Clarke (Ngai Tahu) has consistently explored nature as a constructed form, as a concept that we project our own ideas and perspectives onto. For this new body of work, Clarke collaborates with members of the blind and low vision community, inviting participants to share description of a landscape as they remember it. The contributors' texts are accessed by the viewer through a braille overlay and an app so that there is multisensory depth of engagement that extends beyond the visual, as something felt, heard and imagined. Clarke adapted this approach for the process of making these photographs, using a simple pinhole camera to respond to each description. You are invited to gently touch the surface of the photographs, to interact with these images in ways not usually allowed in an exhibition. She confronts the tradition of landscape photography and the norms of encounter in a gallery context. Opens: 5:30pm Thurs 3 June

Northart, Norman King Square, Ernie Mays St, Northcote 10am-4pm Tues to Fri & 11am-4pm Sat to Sun 09 480 9633 | northart.co.nz

Two Rooms, 16 Putiki St, Grey Lynn 11am-5pm Tues to Fri and 11am-3pm Sat 09 360 5900 | tworooms.co.nz 09 307 7055 | photographyfestival.org.nz | 11


Richard Maloy

Abhi Chinniah

Material Routine

A Migrant's Path

3 June – 19 June

3 June – 20 June

Cathy Carter

Shaun Waugh

Weird Fishes

Encounter

3 June – 25 July

4 June – 3 July

Shaun Waugh, a ruse (iv), 2020, archival pigment print

Richard Maloy artist studio, Vladivostok, Russia

Starkwhite presents a new photographic work by artist Richard Maloy. Maloy’s practice is attuned to the politics of space and time and explores process and production within the creative process. Material Routine was developed in 2019 when Maloy was the Martin Tate Wallace Trust Artist in Residence in Vladivostok, Russia. This body of work is a series of images that show the artist's material process in flux: recording his artistic process and daily studio routine.

Abhi Chinniah

Look at the journey one takes settling abroad, away from the notion of home and in search of belonging. Auckland photographer, Abhi Chinniah draws from her lived experiences to tell the stories of migrant women of colour. With poetry by published author Sudha Rao, and music by Karnan Saba this must-see photographic exhibition delves into the beauty of tradition, heritage and what it means to be a migrant in Aotearoa.

Cathy Carter, Waikiki Bathers Diptych

Weird Fishes considers the primordial relationship between water and humans. Through Carter’s imaginings, the exhibition considers ‘weird fishes’ as a metaphor for human beings, referencing our origins in the oceans and life’s beginning in a liquid pool. Carter’s photography investigates our complex relationship to water by playing with perception, perspective and geography to create new ways of experiencing these spaces. Weird Fishes also explores our individual and collective responses to the threat facing these fluid ecosystems in the Anthropocene. As ‘weird fishes’ we have an opportunity to immerse ourselves in this liquid world upon which we remain utterly dependent.

Encounter is a photographic installation made up of diverse components, including a largescale wall mural over-layered with images of simplified objects. In this new work Waugh continues to explore themes and motifs from past and previous works, to investigate emergent technological impacts on the medium and their effects on how we might reconsider and redefine what constitutes contemporary photography. Considering how a new picture consists of two or more things that we knew already combined, Waugh’s conceptual photographic practice highlights the fraught relationship between images and the world they profess to represent – a relationship defined by deception, reduction and seduction. Opens: 5:30pm Thurs 3 June

Opens: 6pm Wed 2 June Starkwhite, 510 Karangahape Rd, City 11am-5pm Tues to Fri, 11am-4pm Sat to Sun

The Tuesday Club, 42 Airedale St, City 10am-6pm Wed to Sun

Wallace Arts Centre – The Pah Homestead, 72 Hillsborough Rd, Hillsborough 9am-3pm Tues to Fri and 8am-5pm Sat to Sun

021 156 6503 | starkwhite.co.nz

021 2514 219 | ramiistudio.com

09 639 2010 | wallaceartstrust.org.nz

12 | Core

Two Rooms, 16 Putiki St, Grey Lynn 11am-5pm Tues to Fri and 11am-3pm Sat 09 360 5900 | tworooms.co.nz 09 307 7055 | photographyfestival.org.nz | 13


Wara Bullôt

Arne Loot

From This Land

Party in Piha

12 June – 26 June

29 May – 12 September

Stuart Clook Precious Landscapes

Mareea Vegas, Leon Rose, Ian Mcrae and Virginiejg

4 June – 20 June

SOURCE 8 June – 19 June

Ian Mcrae

Stuart Clook, Klondyke Corner

An exhibition of handcrafted New Zealand landscape prints in platinum-palladium, carbon, gum-bichromate and cyanotype.

Wara Bullôt

Portraits and stories of hope as farmers in Vietnam and Cambodia embrace research and sustainability. By Wara Bullôt, who in 2019 became the first Kiwi in 5 years with work in the world’s longest-running photography exhibition, RPS 161. From This Land is her intimate look into the lives of farmers, advisors, researchers and others via 18 portraits, smaller images and video. Text by Phil Johnstone. Wara: “This work explores people's lives and dreams as development reunites families, lifts income and improves the environment. It asks: if change can happen this quickly, what more is possible in the next decade?” Artist Talk: 11am Sat 12 June

Arne Loot

An exhibition of photographs by 97-year-old Titirangi photographer, Arne Loot, which document the legendary full-moon parties that took place in the remote coastal settlement of Piha in the 1950s and 1960s. At a time when bars closed at 6pm, young people from across the city dressed up (or down) and found their own fun on the west coast in an imagined island escape – a DIY Blue Hawaii. Loot established his own darkroom at the age of 11 in the wardrobe of his parents’ house in Holland. After travelling internationally, he settled in New Zealand in 1952 and initially worked as a portrait photographer, later finding work with Auckland Art Gallery, Peter Webb Galleries, Art New Zealand and the advertising industry.

Clook uses these labour and time intensive historical processes for their subtle tonal range and luminosity to make his prints with atmosphere and mystery that will stand the test of time. “I love the mix of science and hands-on crafting a print over several days and sometimes weeks.” Working with medium and large format film cameras, Clook’s prints are a unique expression of the beauty and the sublime that can be found in the NZ landscape where the viewer can find time for quiet and contemplation in today’s hectic modern world. Opens: 6pm Fri 4 June Artist Talk: 5pm Sat 12 June

Coming together for SOURCE 2021, contemporaries and friends Mareea Vegas, Leon Rose and Ian Mcrae reunite and welcome artist Virginiejg to the exhibiting group. Following the group's successes at previous exhibitions for the Auckland Festival of Photography, SOURCE 2021 will be an aesthetically diverse and contemporary show of fine art photographs, delicately printed for gallery and retail. Each artist will explore different yet complementary themes around light, landscape and perspective; the combined show a creative interpretation by the viewer. It will showcase the techniques and skills of the popular and established Auckland photographers. Artist Talk: 1pm-3pm Sat 12 June Leon Rose shares the experience working with an NGO in Africa and Bangladesh, to help children in poverty become educated.

The exhibition is being accompanied with platinum printing workshops on the weekends during the exhibition.

Opens: 4pm Sun 6 June

Studio One Toi Tū, 1 Ponsonby Rd, Grey Lynn 9am-5pm Mon to Fri and 10am-4pm Sat

Te Uru, 420 Titirangi Rd, Titirangi 10am-4:30pm Tues to Sun

Studio 541, 541 Mount Eden Rd, Mount Eden 11am-4pm Wed to Sun

The Grey Place, 37 Scanlan St, Grey Lynn 10am-3pm Tues to Sat

09 376 3221 | studioone.org.nz

09 8178 087 | teuru.org.nz

027 6722 776 | studio541.co.nz

021 98 77 66 | thegreyplace.nz

14 | Core

09 307 7055 | photographyfestival.org.nz | 15


Education Thievery: The Execution Agency with Garth Badger RED 4 June – 6 June

Caryline Boreham, Jacob Hamilton, Kim Lu, Timothy Mackrell, Saynab Muse, Celine Saye, Yvonne Shaw, Tim Veiling, Terje Koloamatangi

Sue Jowsey, Len Gillman and Andrew Denton

Whitecliffe postgraduate students

Time's Strange Tissue

Where we are now

2 June – 8 June

4 June – 12 June

Together Alone 2 June – 8 June

Gillman/Jowsey/Denton

Tim Veiling, Untitled, from Pre-Marital Bliss, 2007

The theme is RED. Love, lust, wickedness, bloodshed, anger or courage – step into our world and discover what this word means to our artists. A collaborative exhibition from Garth Badger and all the creative minds behind Thievery: The Execution Agency. Opens: 6pm-10pm Fri 4 June

The tension between separateness and connection describes an existential continuum that we all traverse. The way we meet these often opposing needs can shift according to our circumstance and time. These photographers each represent a way and a moment in the constant flux between being alone and being together. Curated by Allan McDonald. Opens: 6pm Thurs 3 June

Standing by the margin of the Ross Sea at Botany Bay, one of Earth's most isolated places, one is confronted by physical isolation subservient to time's isolating touch. In this place, ghosts of struggle and survival are ever-present. A winter of darkness marks one of the most desperate and prolonged ordeals of human endeavour; though eight men survived, the traces of Scott's expedition remain caught in Zephyr's frozen breath. This body of work explores aura using images captured by Len Gillman during a scientific expedition to Antarctica, working mostly alone setting up GPS points, his photographs record the omnipresent terrain that is Antarctica. Artists Sue Jowsey (of F4 Collective) and Andrew Denton collaborate with Gillman to create an exhibition exploring physical and psychological isolation.

Mahalia Rush

New work from Whitecliffe post graduate students. Opens: 5:30pm Fri 4 June

Opens: 6pm Wed 2 June

The Ever Room, 203 Karangahape Rd, City 10am-6pm Sat to Sun 09 2139 804 | thievery.co.nz 16 | Core

Gallery One, Unitec Institute of Technology, Gateway 4 Carrington Rd, Mt Albert 9am-4pm Mon to Fri 021 0825 3385 | galleryone@unitec.ac.nz

Ngā Wai Hono: WZ Building at AUT, 6–24 Saint Paul St, City 7:30am-9:30pm 7 days, viewable from street 24/7 09 307 7055 timesstrangetissue.wordpress.com

Form Gallery – Whitecliffe, 67 Symonds St, Grafton 1pm-3pm Mon to Fri and 11am-3pm Sat to Sun 09 3077055 | photographyfestival.org.nz 09 307 7055 | photographyfestival.org.nz | 17


Digital Screens Projections

Maybe Tomorrow Palo Markovic

Movement

We View Things Differently Now Julie Cassels

Nabeel Hassan

Architecture of Waiting

SALT

Simon Cuthbert

Phil Yeo

The Contemporary African Photography Prize

Kuala Lumpur International Photoawards

3 June – 11 June (Ellen Melville Centre) 8 June – 22 June (Estuary Arts Centre)

12 June – 20 June

Gambo Rahima

Auckland Festival of Photography and The Contemporary African Photography (CAP) Prize present the 2019 and 2020 winners. The prize is directed at photographers whose work engages with the African continent or its diaspora. It consists of a series of exhibitions produced in collaboration with major photography festivals in Africa and the rest of the world.

Alexander Klang (Germany), Loejjie

Presented by Auckland Festival of Photography Trust and Kuala Lumpur International Photoawards. Kuala Lumpur International Photoawards (KLPA) are once again excited to participate in the Digital Screens Initiative with a projection of the 2020 winners and finalists portraits selected by an international jury panel. KLPA has been rewarding top portrait photographers since its inception in 2009. Palo Markovič (top left), Nabeel Hassan (top right), Simon Cuthbert (middle left), Julie Cassels (bottom left), Phil Yeo (bottom right)

Ellen Melville Centre, 2 Freyberg Pl, cnr High St & Freyberg Pl 9am-5pm Fri to Sun Estuary Arts Centre, 214 Hibiscus Coast Highway, Orewa 9am-4pm 7 days 18 | Digital Screens Projections

11 – 13 June Ellen Melville Centre, 2 Freyberg Pl, cnr High St & Freyberg Pl 9am-5pm Fri to Sun

Ellen Melville Centre, 2 Freyberg Pl, cnr High St & Freyberg Pl 9am-5pm Fri to Sun See our website for full details

12 June – 20 June Lake House Arts, 37 Fred Thomas Dr, Takapuna 9:30am-3pm Tues to Fri and 10am-3pm Sat to Sun 09 307 7055 | photographyfestival.org.nz | 19


What to do with the inbred and spoonfed?

Videre Collective

Rachel Allan

featuring Tony Reddrop, Marty Walker and Simon Ross

Covid-19 Anxiety Project

Positive Disintegration

Tatsiana Chypsanava

Charlotte Johnson

LATE HARVEST

Proudly sponsored by Wine-Searcher.com This is the 5th award for exhibiting artists and photographers WINNERS RECEIVE A CASH PRIZE & CERTIFICATE AWARD WINNER $1500 + AWARD RUNNER UP $750 Entries Open 16 April 2021. Deadline for eligible entries is 27 May 2021. You must be in a show in the 2021 Festival to qualify to enter any of your theme photographs to be judged. See photographyfestival.org.nz – terms and conditions apply.

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Rachel Allan (top left), Tatsiana Chypsanava (top right), Charlotte Johnson (bottom right), Marty Walker (bottom left)

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3 June – 11 June Lake House Arts, 37 Fred Thomas Dr, Takapuna 9:30am-3pm Tues to Fri and 10am-3pm Sat to Sun See our website for full details 20 | Digital Screens Projections

18 – 20 June Ellen Melville Centre, 2 Freyberg Pl, cnr High St & Freyberg Pl 9am-5pm Fri to Sun

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09 307 7055 | photographyfestival.org.nz | 21


Auckland Photo Day • Sat 12 June 24 hour photo challenge across Auckland

Celebrate • Shoot • Submit • Win

How to participate: All images must be taken on the day itself. It must be new, not existing, work. See photographyfestival.org.nz for prizes, judges, terms & conditions and how to submit PHOTO WALK: SATURDAY 12TH JUNE 12PM–2PM WITH BERNIE SHORE, FUJIFILM TRAINING MANAGER. MEETING POINT: SILO PARK

Prizes

HIGASHIKAWA

PINGYAO

sponsored by FUJIFILM 1st Prize

CHOBI MELA

X-S10 kit + $1000 cash

GUATEPHOTO

OBSCURA

A W A RD W INNER 2021

SINGAPORE

BALLARAT SHIMMER

BOGOTA

HEADON

Auckland Festival of Photography New Zealand Ballarat International Foto Biennale Australia Chobi Mela Photo Festival Bangladesh Fotografica Bogota Columbia Guatephoto Guatemala Head On Photo Festival Australia Higashikawa International Photo Festival Japan

AUCKLAND

Obscura Festival of Photography Malaysia Singapore International Photography Festival Singapore Shimmer Photography Biennale Australia Pingyao International Photography Festival China

www.asiapacificphotoforum.com

FUJIFILM X-S10 Mirrorless Camera with XF 18-55mm Lens kit

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3rd Prize A W A RD W INNER 2021

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2nd Prize AW AR D W I NNER 2021

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FUJIFILM X-S10 Mirrorless Camera with XC 15-45mm Lens kit

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People's Choice Prize A W A RD W INNER 2021

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FUJIFILM X-T200 Mirrorless Camera with XC 15-45mm Lens kit

The X-T200 blends FUJIFILM's retro-inspired aesthetics with a versatile imaging system suited for both photo and video. Capture incredible quality images any situation, the X-T200 utilises FUJIFILM'S legendary color reproduction technology for vivid images. The 2021 1st, 2nd, 3rd prize winners including Top 30 runners up and People's Choice winner will be displayed on the Festival website, generate social media exposure plus the public are invited to vote online for the People's Choice winner for one week later in June.


Talking Culture

ATTEND WATCH

Opening Weekend

New Zealand photography tours with New Zealand’s best landscape and wildlife photographers.

Julia Fullerton-Batten Photobook Friday 11am–3pm Fri 4 June Panel Discussion We are pleased to bring to Auckland, for the 5th year running, our Photobook Friday event, kicking off the festival on the opening weekend. Come along to see presentations from photographers, international and local, who have published some of the best photography books over the past 12 months, while viewing a selection of these books in person. Our International artists will be joining us online.

Join us on our next adventure to help you to get the most from your photography.

10am–11am Sat 5 June Artist Talk, 45 mins + Q&A To coincide with the exhibition of her project, Looking Out from Within, Julia Fullerton-Batten will speak about how this work came about as a reaction to the strict lockdown throughout the UK and the creative necessity of capturing such a moment in time. Fullerton-Batten is an internationally-acclaimed, award-winning art photographer.

Diana Markosian, who's book Santa Barbara was chosen as one of the top ten photobooks of 2020 by renowned photo blog 1000 Words. The book, published by Aperture, represents the photographer’s incredible personal story of immigration, adapted into film and photography.

• 1 Day Workshops • 2 Day Weekend Workshops • 4 Day Weekend Masterclass

Eiji Ohashi, a photographer from Japan who's book Roadside Lights Seasons: Winter is a beautiful tome of photographs of vending machines dotted around Japanese landscapes, ubiquitous in their strangeness and solitude. The book is part of a series and is published by Case Publishing.

• 4 & 7 Day Expressive Retreat • 7 + Day North & South Island Tours

www.photographyworkshops.co.nz info@photographyworkshops.co.nz 021 0845 7322

Chris Leskovsek’s self-published book Not Too Bad is made up of fragments of his life in New Zealand, as he attempts to make sense of a place far from his home country of Chile. Sara McIntyre presents her book, Observations of a Rural Nurse (Massey University Press), reflections on her time working in Kākahi, both as a nurse and doing rounds as a photographer.

Claudia Heinermann 11am–12pm Sun 6 June Artist Talk, 45 mins + Q&A German photographer Claudia Heinermann will be joining us to discuss her project Siberian Exiles. The work is a look at six Lithuanian survivors who were deported as children to Siberia in the 1940s, forced to work as labourers and fend for themselves. 09 307 7055 | photographyfestival.org.nz | 25


Second Weekend

Closing Weekend ATTEND Visit Ellen Melville Centre to view a live screening of the talk, (level 1 and 2 only). 2 Freyberg Pl, City

Chiara Panariti and Gianfranco Ferraro 11am–12pm Mon 7 June Artist Talk, 45 mins + Q&A Italian photographers Chiara Panariti and Gianfranco Ferraro will be joining us to discuss their project Cronostasi, exhibited as part of this year’s festival. Their work is a reflection on the Covid-19 lockdown in Milan last year. Seeing it as a moment of both crisis and opportunity, their work is a window onto a city that was momentarily suspended in time.

The Contemporary African Photography Prize – Benjamin Fuglister and Cesar Dezfuli

WATCH

11am–12pm Sun 13 June In Discussion, 45 mins + Q&A The CAP prize is awarded annually to five photographers whose work is created on the African continent or engages with the African diaspora. Join us to hear from CAP artistic director, Benjamin Fuglister, about the importance of this award and how it came about, as well as one of the 2020 winners, Cesar Dezfuli. A projection of the 2020 CAP award winners will be on display at the Ellen Melville Centre.

Mitchell Moreno with Louise Fedotov-Clements 11am–12pm Sat 19 June In Discussion, 45 mins + Q&A In their 2020 body of work, PANDEMANIAC, UK photographer Mitchell Moreno used their time in self-isolation to consider what a visual language of mental disorder might look like. The resulting self-portraits are a playful and upsetting comment on not only the current crisis but wider themes of fear, desire and mental illness. Moreno will be joining us via Zoom to discuss the creative necessity behind this series and how the past year has changed their way of working. Moreno will be in conversation with Louise Fedotov-Clements, curator of Format Festival Derby (UK), where PANDEMANIAC was recently exhibited.

Held on ZOOM – free to attend no bookings required, simply follow the steps below: • Download Zoom app on your phone or computer. • Please logon a few minutes before the scheduled start of the session; we will 'accept attendees from the waiting room' at the start time. • You will be able to listen through your computer speakers and view the presenter(s) – please turn off video sharing and your microphone • You will be able to ask questions through the 'live chat' type function during the session. We will answer the questions towards the end. • All online login details are listed on our website: photographyfestival.org.nz

Cameron McLaren with Olivier Laurent Stuart Clook and Dale Rio Out with the New: Historical Photographic Processes 1pm–2pm Mon 7 June Panel Discussion, 45 mins + Q&A Join us as we hear from photographers who are adopting historical photographic techniques to create their own take on contemporary practice. New Zealand photographer Stuart Clook will present his work that he prints using platinum and palladium processes, amongst others, to enhance the drama of his landscapes. US-based Dale Rio, who has also embraced historical processes in her own portraiture work, has cofounded a non-profit organisation in Philadelphia, The Halide Project, to foster appreciation and continued practice of these processes. 26 | Talking Culture

1pm–2pm Sun 13 June In Discussion, 45 mins + Q&A As the world went into lockdown in 2020, New Zealand-based photographer Cameron McLaren turned his lens to the eerily abandoned city of Auckland. New Zealand quickly became a place of intrigue for the rest of the world which led photo editor of the Washington Post, Olivier Laurent, to commissioning McLaren to highlight what was happening here. McLaren and Laurent will speak about their collaboration to bring this work to an international audience.

Please Note: Details subject to change, please check up-to-date information on our website. Follow us #aklphotofestival | #whakaahuahākari

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Documentary

Satellite NZ Royal Tours – Archival work Steve Taylor

A lasting Impression | 5 June – 29 August Auckland photographer Steve Taylor rescues antique film cameras, restoring them to their former glory and functionality. He has refurbished close to 150 and film tested every one. A selection of Taylor's cameras from the early 20th century to the 1970s will be on display in the ballroom at historic Alberton, with examples of photographs taken with them, revealing the richness and detail of film images. Artist Talk: 2pm Sun 6 June. Alberton, 100 Mount Albert Rd, Mount Albert 10:30am-4:30pm Wed to Sun 09 846 7367 | alberton.co.nz

Sampford Cathie

Retrospection: 100 Years of Devonport 3 June – 20 June Sampford Cathie’s Retrospection captures Devonport, an iconic village’s transformation across 100 years. Embedding his contemporaneous photographs within historical images drawn from the Auckland Libraries heritage collections, Cathie’s composed photographs capture the effects of cumulative change and the magic of buildings and streetscapes. Devonport Library, 2 Victoria Rd, Devonport 9am-5:30pm Mon to Fri, 9:30am-5pm Sat to Sun 09 377 0209 | sampfordcathie.com/retrospection

Royal Family Meets Aotearoa people 6 June – 4 August The selection of exhibition photographs show members of the Royal Family on a visit, meeting New Zealanders, and displays diverse members of the Royal Family interacting with New Zealanders in a number of events on various cultural programs. Sponsor – NZ Royal Commonwealth Society.

John Kinder House, 2 Ayr St, Parnell 12pm-3pm Wed to Sun 022 098 5477 | kinder.house.org.nz

Marek Lechowicz and Archival work New Zealand Defence Force photographers

Follow us #aklphotofestival | #whakaahuahākari

Keep in touch | 09 307 7055 photographyfestival.org.nz PLEASE NOTE: Details subject to change, please check up-to-date information on our website.

28 | Satellite

Standing Apart, Together as One 1 March – 12 September Life as a New Zealand Defence Force (NZDF) photographer requires courage, flexibility, and tenacity in the pursuit of the perfect shot. Eight of our photographers have selected their favourite images of 2020, showcasing everything from daily life in the NZFD, to ceremonial, training, operations and responding to humanitarian crises. Foyer Gallery, National Museum of the Royal New Zealand Navy, 64 King Edward Parade, Devonport 10am-5pm 7 days 09 445 5186 | navymuseum.co.nz

Bernie Harfleet and Donna Turtle Sarten

Give a Kid a Blanket: Documented 4 June – 18 July Give a Kid a Blanket started as a grassroots response to help kids and families living in cold, damp conditions in Aotearoa. This exhibition presents the community activated art project lead and actioned by West Auckland artists Bernie Harfleet and Donna Turtle Sarten. Artist Talk: 11am Sat 19 June Corban Estate Arts Centre, 2 Mt Lebanon Lane, Henderson 10am-4:30pm 7 days 09 838 4455 | ceac.org.nz

Isolation and the GULAG | 3 June – 20 June Ordinary people, families and political prisoners survived trauma, degradation, forced deportation, and hard labour camps in the hauntingly beautiful wilderness of the Soviet Union. Millions of innocent people were incarcerated in the hard labour camps of the GULAG prison system. The GULAG’s main function, implemented in the Soviet Union after 1929, was to gain control over the entire population. Although this is one of the most shocking periods of twentieth century history, it is not well known. Witness images of this forgotten history, its landscapes and legacy in 'Isolation and the GULAG'. Polish Heritage Trust Museum, 125 Elliot St, Howick 10am-4pm Tues to Fri and 12pm-5pm Sun 09 533 3530 | polishheritage.co.nz

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Wara Bullôt Phil Johnstone

Youth Documentary

Studio One Toi Tū, 1 Ponsonby Rd Artist talk - 11am Saturday 12 June

David Smith and HighJinx Youth Company

Butterfly Feelings | 19 June – 20 June Butterfly Feelings shares moments of circus-art making around Auckland and provides a glimpse into the creative processes of young performing artists that usually remain unseen. The work explores themes of vulnerability, connection and imagination. Throughout the weekend an installation will be performed by HighJinx, presenting an observable real-time creative process in the space. Artist Talk: 3:30pm Sat 19 June & 3:30pm Sun 20 June Thievery Studio – Level 2, 203 Karangahape Rd, City 9am-5pm Sat to Sun 021 0229 5795 | instagram.com/highjinxco

Art Centre Helensville – Community Photographers

Synthesis: the combination of elements to form a connected whole | 5 June – 19 June In response to Covid-19 and following the Festival’s isolation theme for this year we encouraged artists to consider the nature of synthesis which "combines elements to form a connected whole", just like communities! Expect a diverse range of interpretations to delight and perhaps challenge your own. Opens: 6pm Fri 4 June Art Centre Helensville – Basement, 49 Commercial Rd, Helensville 10am-4:30pm Wed to Fri and 10am-2pm Sat 021 1586859 | facebook.com/artcentre.helensville

Groups-CollectivesClubs

Toi Ora Photographers

Most of our planet’s 570 million farms are small and family-operated. Come visit their world.

It's a Little Bit Handmade | 10 June – 25 June After all the recent uncertainty and foreboding artists share a series of images, embracing chance in the making process of photographic production. A series of photograms, illustrations and images using Sun Activated Dye, reliving some of the fun, chaos and experimentation of Cyanotype photography and the darkroom experience. Opens: 5pm Thurs 10 June Toi Ora Live Art Trust Gallery, 6 Putiki St, Grey Lynn 10am-4pm Mon to Thurs and 10am-1pm Fri 09 3604 171 | toiora.org.nz

Jazmin Belle Snoswell and Lou Corry Untitled Body of Work | 9 June – 27 June Our installation of photography and sculpture gives a space to our COVID lockdown experiences. The work is not a means to explain anything. Rather, it is a vehicle for working through embodiment, trauma, materiality, the concept of the body, and the way that sexuality plays into creativity. Opens: 5pm-7pm Fri 11 June ArtHAUS, 228 Orakei Rd, Remuera 11am-3pm Tues to Sun 021 217 8561 | arthauso.org

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Groups-Collectives-Clubs

Murray Noble, Ethan Rush, Joshua Noble and Dylan Rush

Something old something new 19 June – 25 June Something old something new is an exhibition of recent work referencing artists in different stages of their creative careers. Some works capture teenage ventures into photographic expression, others the development of a mature mind with the use of colours and patterns. Opens: 4pm Sat 19 June

Mt Eden Village Centre, 449 Mount Eden Rd, Mount Eden 10am-2pm 7 days 021 975 244 | mtedenvillagecentre.co.nz

Lake House Arts Members

Community Photo Exhibition 30 May – 18 June View photography submitted by Lake House Arts' community members, spanning over a variety of styles and techniques – from landscapes of the North Shore, to intimate portraiture, capturing the essence of fleeting daily moments. Opens: 4pm Sun 30 May

Lake House Arts, 37 Fred Thomas Dr, Takapuna 9:30am-3pm Tues to Fri, 10am-2pm Sat to Sun 09 486 4877 | lakehousearts.org.nz

Female photographers using film

Henderson Photographic Society

Members Collection | 4 June – 20 June View images local and international, capturing the West and beyond. Henderson Photographic Society members are an eclectic group of photographers ranging from beginner to professional, from under 18s through all ages. Waitakere Central Library – J.T. Diamond Room, 3 Ratanui St, Henderson 9am-5:30pm Mon, Tues, Wed, Fri and 9am-7pm Thurs and 10am-4pm Sat to Sun 09 377 0209 | hendersonphoto.org.nz

The Video's Suitcase Walk | 3 June – 20 June The Video's Suitcase Walk! is an urban/ performance art project designed and conceptualised by Australian artist and writer Martha Ackroyd Curtis. The artist shares a project that brings cutting edge video art to the street in a clever non-obtrusive way. The Artist creates a ‘moving screen’ that quite literally is carried around streets and street corners, with a strolling pedestrian. Online, 7-8pm (AKL) Sat 12 June: Virtual performance. 24hrs/7days: Re-watch live performance +61 40583 5730 | marthaackroydcurtis.com

32 | Satellite

They Were Young Once | 5 June – 20 June Great artists start somewhere and it is their passion and commitment over time that imbeds their work in our cultural psyche, sense of place and belonging. They Were Young Once brings together the works of NZ photographers, both iconic and emerging in recognition of the creative journey and its origins.

Depot Gallery, 28 Clarence St, Devonport 10am-3:30pm Tues to Sat and 11am-3pm Sun 09 9632 331 | depotartspace.co.nz

Kumeu Arts, 300 Main Rd, Huapai 10am-5pm Tues to Sat 09 412 9480 | kumeuarts.org

Faye Norman, Brendan Kitto, Vanessa Green and Sanji Karu

The Harakeke Project The Stroll Collective & Martha Ackroyd Curtis

Analogue | 3 June – 19 June The process of shooting film is somewhat a state of mind. It slows us down and makes us more intentional. We are forced to think about our exposure, shutter speed and aperture before we press the shutter on a limited number of frames on a roll. This exhibition is to explore the feeling, the experimentation and the process of shooting, developing and printing film by women. Opens: 5-7pm Fri 4 June

Howick Photographic Society

Members Collection | 6 June – 20 June Howick Photographic Society (formerly Howick Camera Club) was formed in the Eastern Suburbs in 1956. It caters for people of all ages from absolute beginners to experienced photographers happy to share their knowledge and expertise. Our Society is affiliated with the Photographic Society of New Zealand. Opens: 6pm Wed 2 June Uxbridge Arts and Culture, 35 Uxbridge Rd, Mellons Bay 9am-4pm Mon to Sat 09 5356 467 | uxbridge.org.nz

The Cell Block Collective | 10 June – 20 June If the walls could talk. Cell block resident photographers along with photography colleagues exhibit a varied collection of personal work on the walls of this unique, heritage building – formerly a police cell block at the rear of Studio One Toi Tū. Opens: 5-7pm Wed 9 June

Cell Block Studio – Studio One Toi Tū, 1 Ponsonby Rd, Grey Lynn 10am-4pm 7 days 021 2631 494 | studioone.org.nz

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Portraits

Landscape and Nature

Emma Farmer

Aotea – The colour of water 14 June – 27 June Aotea (Great Barrier Island) 100k from Auckland City is a world apart. This exhibition explores the island from the perspective of the water that surrounds it. The surprisingly diverse geography creates deep harbours, sheltered coves, sandy beaches and renowned surf breaks all these create the colours that are Aotea. Opens: 4pm Sun 13 June Great Barrier Island Community Art Gallery, 80 Hector Sanderson Rd, Great Barrier Island 10am-4pm Mon, Tues, Fri, Sat | 11am-5pm Sun 09 4290 580 | gbicommunitygallery.org

Jenny Tomlin

Lens Free | 22 May – 13 June Jenny works with early analogue techniques; pinhole, solargraphy and the lumen/photogram processes to investigate micro environmental transformations. The strength of light and the reaction of plant juices on the paper all contribute to a transformation. Artist Talk: 1pm Sun 23 May

The Upstairs Gallery – Lopdell House, 418 Titirangi Rd, Titirangi 10am-4pm Tues to Sun 09 8174 278 | jennytomlin.co.nz

34 | Satellite

Roger Brown Jiongxin Peng

Awarded works – International salons 3 June – 30 June Enjoy viewing a collection of landscape and nature, and some documentary photographs. The showcase of twenty photographs are awarded images in International salon exhibitions

Lobby – Te Manawa, 11 Kohuhu Lane, Westgate 9am-5pm 7 days 021 454 235 | facebook.com/TeManawaAC

Desiree Hirner

WILD | 3 June – 17 June This planet is a gift and should be treated that way. Desiree is fuelled by her passion for wildlife and travel. Her images aim to show the wild in a creative way and to create conservation awareness. When not working as a wildlife photographer Desiree shoots portraits and works as a mixed media artist. Opens: 6:30pm Thurs 3 June Archibald & Shorter, 550 Great South Rd, Greenlane 8am-6pm Mon to Fri, 9am-5pm Sat, 10am-4pm Sun 09 8844 834 | instagram.com/desihirner

A view through a different lens 4 June – 20 June Fascinated by experimenting turning the pure image into something different – looking into through another lens. An intentional blurring, shadow, colour shift, multi exposures, fantasy and others. Images are often created 'in camera' and sometimes during post-production. Encouraging the audience to think outside of the box and allow their own life experiences and imagination take them to wherever the photo leads them. Opens: 6pm Fri 4 June Binet Gallery Studio, 35 Hillcrest Av, Hillcrest 10am-4pm Fri to Mon 021 972 845 | rogerbrownphotographer.co.nz

Auckland Sea Kayaks – Community Photographers

Paddling the Hauraki Gulf / Tīkapa Moana 3 June – 20 June Auckland Sea Kayaks share inspiring photographs of Paddling the Hauraki Gulf / Tīkapa Moana. Heartening imagery of Auckland’s Waitemata harbour, meaning ‘sparkling waters’ including our backyard’s friendly marine wildlife, beautiful landscapes captured from the ocean, and images that share our passion of the exciting, action-packed and educational side of sea kayaking. Online, 24hrs/7 days 09 213 4545 aucklandseakayaks.co.nz/festival-of-photography

Ilan Wittenberg

Faces of Cairo | 5 May – 4 June Faces of Cairo is a unique collection of photographs that take you on a tour of the land and its people. Cairo is chaos at its most magnificent, infuriating and beautiful. Enjoy street and documentary photography in timeless monochrome by 2020 Auckland Photographer of the Year. Opens: 5pm Wed 5 May Artist Talk: 11am Sat 15 May Studio One Toi Tū, 1 Ponsonby Rd, Grey Lynn 9am-5pm Mon to Fri 09 376 3221 | ilanwittenberg.com

Anna-Maria Bribiesca

La raza | 5 June – 26 June "My purpose is clear when creating imagery: culture, community and social justice align. It is crucial to weave together all of these things. When these elements merge, there is resonance, momentum and change. These photographic- print-collages are about Mexico, a gathering of spirits and a very proud raza who continue through their resilience to grow in grace and power." Crumb Café, 37 Ariki St, Grey Lynn 7am-2pm Mon to Fri and 8am-2pm Sat to Sun 027 523 355 | photographyfestival.org.nz

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Travel and Street

Yasser Saeed Tony McCarthy

The Stallholder | 20 May – 15 June Their trade is written on their faces, etched into their hands and even stitched into their clothes – sometimes in the most surprising ways. This collection is a peek into the lives and souls of those men and woman around the world who eke out a living crafting and selling goods that are most often as colourful and diverse as the stallholders themselves. Opens: 5pm-8pm Thurs 20 May Railway Street Studios & Gallery, 8 Railway St, Newmarket 10am-3pm Tues to Sat 021 419 292 | railwaystreetstudios.co.nz

Structure Alone | 30 May – 18 June Saeed's art has been noted for its abstract compositions, and his architectural photography is no different. Taking photos, not of buildings, but made of buildings, not wanting to relate any understanding at all of the design or functionality, only of materials, structure, layers and their interplay with light within the arrangements aligned in frame. Opens: 4pm Sun 30 May Artist Talk: 11am Sat 5 June Lake House Arts, 37 Fred Thomas Dr, Takapuna 9:30am-3pm Tues to Fri, 10am-2pm Sat to Sun 09 486 4877 | lakehousearts.org.nz

Walk • Skate • Cycle

Mt Eden + Hopetoun St Outdoors Images T-B: Hyekyeong Choi, Honglin Xu, Bin Bai

36 | Satellite

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AOTEAROA MUSIC PHOTOGRAPHY AWARD WHAKAAHUA PUORO TOA 2021

WATER 12 April – 28 May 2021 Queens Wharf, City

$1500 CASH PRIZE! ENTRIES OPEN 1-24 MAY

AWARD PRIZEGIVING Friday 28 May STUDIO 58 | Scott Lawrie Gallery 2 Murdoch Road | Grey Lynn AK

For more info & entries visit: photographyfestival.org.nz/awards/ UNESCO-city-of-music.cfm

EXPLORE THE WEALTH OF OUR

HERITAGE

COLLECTIONS

Visit Kura Heritage Collections Online at kura.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz Auckland Libraries Heritage Collections, 1572-800, photographer C P Dawes.

AUCKLAND COUNCIL LIBRARIES 38 | Isolation


Auckland Council is proud to support the Auckland Festival of Photography.

Connecting our communities through arts and culture.

Find out more: aucklandcouncil.govt.nz/arts


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