Galleries
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23 imagesBloodwood A study of fallen leaves of the Red Bloodwood tree, Corymbia gummifera. A native Australian hardwood tree, occurring predominately on flats and low hills along the coastal strip between the extreme eastern corner of Victoria and south-eastern Queensland. It grows best on moist, rich, loamy soil, but is also commonly found on poorer sandy soils. Since white colonisation it has been used for rough construction purposes, such as poles, sleepers, fencing and mining timbers. It was the kaleidoscope of colours and patterns of the fallen leaves that caught our eye. The project commenced with the simple idea; to document the leaves as their colours faded within hours of falling from the tree; and to produce large scale prints, in a changed context. These spent excreters of oxygen are even in death, tightly entwined with ecologies and bio-systems. We see the images as portraits, each leaf individual, in possession of a unique character but all of the one species, born of the wilderness. In Victoria, we continue to enable the clearfelling and ‘harvesting’ of ancient Australian forest. Perhaps only history will inform us as to how tightly the wilderness is truly interwoven with our own collective health and wellbeing.
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29 imagesThere is something playful about the shoreline, or perhaps more accurately, it is somewhere I like to play. Constant, changing, at the edge, but connected. A curtain, closing on the day, or opening on a new beginning. When I was young I used to stand in the shallows and think I was standing on the edge of the world. Limited edition prints are available; Printed on Canson Photographique Rag, Museum-grade textured Fine Art Giclee paper. Guaranteed archival quality for 100+ years or on Hahnemule Daguerre Canvas 400gsm, coated with a protective spray that seals the print. Guaranteed archival quality for 120 - 150 years. Supplied with certificate of authenticity to provide limited edition provenance. Instagram @sharoncutajar
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28 images
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19 imagesOur tribute to the wonderful and wierd flora of Australia. Instagram, @cutajardelaney
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60 imagesTropism; the involuntary inclination of an organism in response to an external stimulus. I chose this title as it describes quite well the somewhat visceral approach I have to image making in the landscape. I started photographing the Australian landscape after arriving here in 1998, fresh with excitement and awed by the ancient diversity of the remote places I have been fortunate to visit. The work continues, shooting on Hasselblad and Mamiya 7 medium format film cameras and 400 iso Kodak & Ilford film stock. The Tropism images are available as archival giclee prints in editions of 10; please contact us for further details. Many thanks, AD Instagram, @alan.delaney
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47 imagesThe London night series was photographed between 1984 and 1998 on 5x4 inch large format cameras, onto black & white negative materials. The images are available as archival giclee prints in editions of 10. This edition also includes 5 artist proofs which are available to accommodate custom size requests. Many thanks, AD Instagram, @alan.delaney
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14 images