A quartz abstraction made whilst on a poodlewalk along the coastal rocks west of Rosetta Head:
The location is a set of on the western edge of Dep's Beach.
A quartz abstraction made whilst on a poodlewalk along the coastal rocks west of Rosetta Head:
The location is a set of on the western edge of Dep's Beach.
This was made whilst on a poodle walk at the Coorong in South Australia
I was there scoping for a photoshoot.
Another sea abstract from the time we stayed at American River on Kangaroo Island.
I spent the last morning on the local jetty making a number of abstracts using both digital and film cameras.
As a concept, abstract photography is often seen as a contradiction in terms. Photographs, after all, always represent some trace of physical reality, even if it is not immediately recognizable. The medium's inherent knack for representation paradoxically makes it an ideal instrument for probing and challenging the language of abstraction.
Consequently, abstraction has never been anything like orthodoxy in photography. It’s always been peripheral to the medium and dropped in and out of vogue and critical prominence.
Is there a movement of contemporary abstraction in todays art photography? Art photography has been dominated by a factual, relatively unemotional work: water towers, suburban developments, and austere portraits ruled within the prevalent movements of New Topographics and the Dusseldorf School of photography.
Is there a movement of non representational photography that makes make visible the tension between abstraction and camera representation, and which has it roots in post-modernism? What is over, after postmodernism, is the narrow view of photography — the idea that the camera is a recording device, not a creative tool, and that its product is strictly representational — not manipulated, not fabricated, not abstract.