One of my favourite art quotes is from the legendary American photographer
Diane Arbus: “A photograph is a secret about a secret. The more it tells you, the
less you know.” I enjoy telling stories and am influenced by the work of Gerard
Rancinan – who juxtaposes architypes and creates disorderly dreams.
Over the past couple of years, some of my more coveted work has been staged.
The wolf in the bar in Montana has virtually sold out and the apocalyptical
image of a gang in abandoned Detroit is now doing well. These intricate images
take a restless mind to conceive and then intense emotional engagement to
execute.
Every so often I allow myself an indulgent assignment and try to follow a bold
creative idea linearly through to conception. The final image is a result of
creating a scene rather than recording a scene and this, in itself, demands a
great deal of cognitive processing. Staged imagery demands exhaustive
attention to detail, exactly because they are staged. The photographer cannot
really blame nature for a flopped shot, as the dynamic of the random walk of
nature is largely eliminated.
I was due a little self-indulgence this summer after my trip to North Korea and
so several months ago, we started to plan a staged shoot in the vast wilderness
of the Namib Desert – surely one of the most visually intoxicating locations in
the world. My concept was to build a fully stocked bar in the desert and then to
fill it with a hotch potch of disconnected characters. Mad Max was set to meet
Burning Man. The composition had to be painterly and perfectly backlit – and
perfect lighting in the desert is no easy task.
I knew enough fixers and friends in Namibia for the project to gain momentum.
In particular, I had worked before with Namibia’s leading conservationists –
Rudie and Marlice van Vuuren – who alongside many other notable endeavours,
look after orphaned big cats. Their Na’an/ Ku Se sanctuary outside Windhoek is
world renowned and they are something of a golden couple in this vast but
sparsely populated country. Marlice was happy to collaborate on the project
and bring two of her cheetahs down to the Namib.
An intricate image started to emerge in my head – one that was disorderly and
full of visual double takes. I am in awe of the crew, led by Alex Ames, which
made the site under the hot Namibian sun and took my ever changing
directions with good humour and a smile. Finding the enormous and somewhat
haunting dead tree in the desert was a key moment in our location scouting.
I think that the end result, despite the intended visual chaos, has that painterly
composition that I was striving for. The fabulous Erica Lawrence from New York
makes the image pure “bad ass”. Without her, we had no image. As she herself
said “dope”.
Digital Pigment Print on Archival
315gsm Hahnemuhle Photo Rag Baryta Paper
Frame included
Hand signed and numbered on the front by the artist
Includes a Certificate of Authenticity
Available Sizes (Framed Size)
Large: 71” x 116” (180 cm x 295 cm)
Standard: 52” x 87” (132 cm x 221 cm)
Available Editions
Large: Edition of 12
Standard: Edition of 12
Art Curation, Collaboration and Activation for Private, Commercial and Corporate Spaces.
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Shop 5/81 Macleay St, Potts Point NSW 2011