DECEMBER 2015
18
developments in photography
BETA developments in photography ISSUE 18 editor: Jeff Moorfoot design: Penelope Anne contact: beta@ballaratfoto.org All content in this magazine is Š 2015 of the Ballarat International Foto Biennale and participating artists, and may not be reproduced without the express written permission of the BIFB. Inc save for fair dealing for the purposes of research, study, criticism, review, reporting news. All other rights are reserved.
OFFICE ADDRESS Upstairs, Mining Exchange 12 Lydiard Street North, Ballarat VIC 3350
MEMBER FESTIVAL
POSTAL ADDRESS PO Box 41, Ballarat VIC 3353 Australia
T +61 3 5331 4833 E info@ballaratfoto.org W www.ballaratfoto.org
Assn No A0045714L ABN 70496228247
08
WALK OF LIFE, KUALA LUMPUR Che’ Ahmad Azhar
38
ABSTRACTS Kim Keever
58
SURFLAND
Joni Sternbach
76
CROSSINGS: PROMENADES IN THE ARABIAN DESERT Arko Datto
100
24 FROM 48
Gary Cockburn
Beta Alumni AL RAWI Basil ASFAR Hoda BACON KIDWELL Angela BARKER Mandy BIRD Leon BLACKWOOD Christa BLANCH Alice BODIN John BOGUE Terence Stewart BONANNO Simona BURNSTINE Susan CAGA Jan CARLILE Brad CARTIER F & D CASH Neil CATO John HE Chang Alejandro CHASKIELBERG CONROY Juliette CRAVER Neil CRESPO Carlos CRISPIN Judith DAWSON Alec DE MAAR Marrigje DECYK Slavo DHERVILLERS Nicolas DIAZ Francisco DINIZ Jose DOBSON Susan
#4 #2 #5 & #16 #13 #11 & #16 #10 #5 #10 #6 #7 #9 #15 #12 #10 #1 #6 #15 #16 #10 #8 #11 #1 #10 #6 #1 #16 #6 #4 #13
DUNPHY Peter DUPONT Stephen DYACHYSHYN Yurko ELMS Greg FAHRENKEMPER Claudia FOURNET Annette GLATTAUER Silvi GOLDFINCH Karena GOLLINGS John GRIES Patrick GRIFFITH Tim HARDING PITTMAN Robert HARRIS Sam HARSENT Simon HAY John HEWITT Tony HOLLOWAY Craig HOPE Tim HORAN Keith JACKSON Tony JOREN Gerhard JOSLIN Russell KANASHKEVIC Mitchell KATSAROVA Boryana KEARNEY Tony KELLNER Thomas KIRKPATRICK Bear KOZHANOVA Mariya KRUGH Kent
#4 #16 #4 & #16 #5 #6 #14 #17 #1 #1 #3 #1 #9 #16 #15 #12 #6 #7 #3 #9 #8 #1 #6 #16 #16 #2 #16 #12 #11 #12
view back issues at issuu.com/ballarat_foto_biennale/ KURLAT Galina LECHNER Jurgen LIPSKY Clay LONG Jane MACAK Sonia MACRAE Sheena MALEONN MARCIN Ben MARSHALL Steve MASON Belinda MASTERS Michael McCAIG Amber MELDER Keith MILLER Nathan MILLOTT Richard MORAN Robert NORTON Michael O’SHEA Meredith PAGE Colin PAINE Jeff PERETTI Viviana RANKEN Jackie RASMANIS Kara ROGERS PRITZL Michelle ROPP William ROSS Doc ROTHE Frank RUOTED Robert SCHAFFER Rod
#4 #13 #3 #16 #6 #6 #1 & #5 #3 #8 #16 #8 #16 #17 #7 #16 #14 #1 #6 #1 #17 #2 #6 #1 & #6 #13 #14 #6 #9 #5 #2
SCHEURWATER Hester SCIBELLI Anthony SCRIBA J SHAYEN Vikk SHEPPARD Gary SHERROD Judy F SHIM Jai Yon SIMONUTTI Lauren SMALLMAN John STEVENS S Gayle STONEMAN Emma SUNDET Dida TACON Dave TADROS Ingetje THOMSON Matt VANNIER Michéle VANWALLEGHEM Frederick VERSTEEG Greer VINCIGUERRA Guy VLASENKO Vsevolod VUKOBRATOVIC Rina WADDINGTON Rod WERTHEIM Andres WILLIAMS David A WILLIAMS Michelle WITMAN Deanna WRIGLEY Ben PANG Xiang Liang ZAMMIT LUPI Darrin ZEILON Elisabeth
#6 #9 #16 #2 & #6 #7 #5 #2 #1 #17 #5 #7 #17 #16 #14 #17 #16 #3 #11 #6 #15 #4 #5 #13 #16 #17 #3 #16 #16 #16 #6
In this edition of BETA developments in photography we bring you five artists who participated in the Projections Program at the recent 2015 Ballarat International Foto Biennale. The BIFB’15 Projections Program was shown daily on a video wall in our key venue for the festival, the Ballarat Mining Exchange, and comprised 53 shows by 44 artists. A total of 78 invitations were made by the curatorial team of myself, Mark Avellino and Jennifer Dean. We were looking for shows that mirrored the same curatorial premise that underpins the whole festival, as well as this online magazine - namely a spread of genres and styles that demonstrate the broad
spectrum of the photographic idiom. The final selection included audio visuals by artists from 19 countries around the world, and ran in a continuous loop of just over 3 hours duration every day throughout the festival. The BIFB’15 Projections Program supplemented a Core Exhibition Program of 21 major shows, backed up by a supporting cast of 121 further exhibitions in the Fringe Program. In any man’s language, that’s a lot of photography! In this edition of BETA it is my pleasure to present images from five shows that featured as part of the BIFB’15 Projections Program. Che ‘Ahmad Azar is recognised as one of the 20 most respected Asian photographers, and his
Walk Of Life, Kuala Lumpur CHE’ AHMAD AZHAR
10
I have been wandering the streets of Kuala Lumpur for as long as I can remember. As the years go by, I find myself becoming the very streets I walked. In 2007, I took a more avid interest in my found friendships and started photographing them with my small camera.
Che’ Ahmad Azhar is a lecturer at the Faculty of Creative Multimedia, Multimedia University, Malaysia. A passionate photographer, his work has been featured on the Invisible Photographer Asia (IPA) and LENS Blog The New York Times. He has also held solo exhibitions at the Obscura Photo Festival, Leica Gallery in Kuala Lumpur and Singapore as well as projection at 10th Angkor Photo Festival. Currently, he is working on a personal project entitled ‘Walk of Life’ – a visual documentation on the street life of Kuala Lumpur, the capital city of Malaysia. website: cheahmadazhar.com 11
12
13
14
15
18
19
20
21
22
23
26
27
28
29
32
33
34
35
Abstracts KIM KEEVER
I always made art as a child but it wasn’t until my last year of graduate school in Engineering that I realized you only have one life you know of and you might as well live it the way you want to. Obviously, I am talking about living life in a positive manner. I dropped out of school and have been an artist ever since. This was one of those ultimate decisions one makes in life and I was determined not to turn back. It has been a rough ride but I can finally say I am successful.
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
54
55
Kim Keever studied Engineering at Old Dominion University, Norfolk, VA and was briefly a thermal engineer working primarily on NASA projects. Keever changed career in the late 1970s to become a full time artist. Yet he has always drawn on his original vocation by retaining a scientific and investigative process in his work, while at the same time displaying an astute awareness of historical landscape art. Keever lives and works in New York City and his work is in numerous collections, including: the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Museum of Modern Art, New York; Brooklyn Museum of Art, Brooklyn; Hirshhorn Museum, Washington, DC; Virginia Museum
of Fine Arts, Richmond, Virgina; Chrysler Museum, Norfolk, Virginia; Nassau County Museum of Fine Art, Roslyn, New York; Patterson Museum, Patterson, New Jersey; George Washington University Gallery, Washington DC; Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art, Kansas City, Missouri and Elgin Community College, Elgin, Illinois. website: kimkeever.com
09.08.25 #9 Tony 8x10 Tintype, Montauk, NY 2009
SurfLand JONI STERNBACH SurfLand is an on-going series of contemporary tintype portraits of surfers made with large-format cameras and the historic wet-plate collodion process. Surfland images are all made on location and involve community participation while plates are prepared and processed. The photographs in this series were shot in Australia, England and on both coasts of the United States.
60
10.02.11 #3 Kassia, Donald+Jen 8x10 Tintype, Oceanside, CA 2010
11.03.07 #7 Kazzie Mahina 8x10 Tintype, Byron Bay, AU 2011
61
62
13.02.10 #6+7 Los caballeros 2-8x10 Tintypes, Goleta, CA 2013
63
64
13.02.18 #7 Matt 8x10 Tintype, Ventura CA 2013
13.02.23 #6 Morro Rock 8x10 Tintype, Morro Bay CA 2013
65
66
67
68
14.08.31 #5 Izzy+Lucy 8x10 Tintype, Cornwall, UK 2014
14.07.24 #1 Robert+Wingnut 8x10 Tintype, Montauk, NY 2014
69
14.09.05 #2 Ben 8x10 Tintype, Cornwall, UK 2014
72
15.01.29 #3 Drake 11x14 Tintype, Goleta, CA 2015
14.07.08 #4 Lily 8x10 Tintype, Montauk, NY 2014
73
15.02.22 #4 Sky 11x14 Tintype, Goleta, CA 2015
Joni Sternbach was born in the Bronx and currently resides in Brooklyn, NY. She is a visiting artist at The Cooper Union and faculty member at ICP and the Center for Alternative Photography in NYC where she teaches wet plate collodion. Sternbach’s work is part of many public collections including the Maison EuropÊenne de la Photographie, Nelson Atkins Museum, and National Portrait Gallery, London.
She is the recipient of several grants including NYFA and CAPS. Her recent monograph Surf Site Tin Type was published in Spring 2015. She is represented in NYC by Rick Wester Fine Art
website: jonisternbach.com
CROSSINGS: Promenades in the Arabian Desert Arko Datto
My travels to Europe began 13 years back. While transiting through the Gulf States, I became fascinated with the bustling megalopolises of Arabia, a cold post-apocalyptic vision of towering megaliths seen across the hazy abrasive heat. Modern civilisation in Arabia was built with the sweat and grime of countless unremembered migrants. They travelled from the southern climes of the Indian subcontinent and South-East Asia, lured by dreams of better lives for themselves and those they left behind, fellow men from familiar lands, all setting forth westwards like me, towards their unknown destinies. Tricked by agents back home and cheated by the law of the land: lives lived on meagre food in unsanitary cramped quarters,
women raped and locked away in dingy rooms, men dead from exhaustion or dehydration or both, lives where basic human rights are stripped away to their very core. CROSSINGS is created with the help of Google Maps and Google Earth, wherein the images were taken. I show the society that the migrant diaspora has helped construct, shape and maintain while occupying the bottom echelons of society. The narrative is woven around quotations found in Academic Reports and Journalistic Articles on the existing state of affairs in Arabia. The quotations primarily deal with individual experiences of human rights abuses in Saudi Arabia, but also include the Emiratis and the Western expatriate population.
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
Arko Datto‘s works push boundaries in his practice to question what it means to be a photographer in the digital age, while simultaneously playing the role of observer and commentator on critical contemporary social issues. While studying for his doctorate in the theoretical sciences he decided to change course and explore the burgeoning field of contemporary photography. He has been ‘promenading’ across the globe for the past few years and now awaits the next adventure in his travels Apart from working on his own photography related projects, Arko has also curated exhibitions and has been associated with the Kochi Biennale and OBSCURA Festival of Photography.
website: arkodatto.com
24 from 48 Gary Cockburn Originating in the urge to undertake a continent-wide travelogue in the manner of Robert Frank’s The Americans, the project 5000 Streets instead uses a single postcode as a metaphor for urban Australia. The series 24 From 48, presented here, draws on a single 48-hour period of work on the project.
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
After graduating with a degree in Maths and Physics, narrowly avoiding a career in cosmic ray research that would have meant relocating to Antarctica, Gary Cockburn worked as a journalist, editor, copywriter and graphic designer in London, Sydney and Adelaide. Along the way he studied Social Documentary photography at the University of Westminster. Though Cockburn’s route to photography may appear disjointed, his career moves have all centred on a single, essential discipline – communication – and all have informed his approach to photography. He is currently working on the final stages of two book-length projects, 5000 Streets and Into The Fringe. website: garycockburnphotography.com