Start Date | 28 August 2023 |
End Date | 31 August 2023 |
Individual Price | APS Members $335, non-APS members $435 |
Location | Broken Hill |
The Broken Hill Meet Up will start with a informal welcome event on the evening of Monday 28 August and conclude with a formal farewell event on Thursday 31 August 2023.
There will be 3 exciting days of photography covering the popular locations in the area including Broken Hill itself, Silverton, Mundi Mundi Lookout and the Living Desert. There will also be opportunities for lesser known places to photograph and above all else, the opportunity to meet with fellow photographers in one of Australia’s remote but accessible areas.
This Event will be capped at 50 participants.
The program provides more detail on the event. There are still some details to be finalised as is normal for this type of event; however, we do now need to lock in participant numbers and names so people can confirm and finalise their travel and accommodations arrangements.
Given the relative remoteness and associated logistics of organising this event, we have decided to use an all-inclusive fee. You are encouraged to read in detail the key points listed in the attached draft Program.
We are so excited about this amazing destination to Broken Hill and we believe the photographic opportunities and experience for participants will be well worth the journey, we look forward to seeing you all soon!
Ticket Type | Price |
---|---|
APS Members | $335.00 |
Non APS Members | $435.00 |
Bio
At almost 96 years of age, Graham is a living legend in the photography world with two books under his belt and another in the pipeline. His photographs are held in many institutions around Australia, including the National Library in Canberra.
His illustrious career includes being a founding member of the Australian Photographic Society in 1962. Since that time, he has contributed enormously to the Society and its members, has been involved in the organisation of national and international exhibitions and has been represented in many solo and group exhibitions. He is a past president and was the APS Print Division chairman for ten years.
He began photographing at the age of seventeen, having been introduced to it by his younger brother, Sydney, who had joined Toowoomba Grammar School’s camera club. Thus began a lifelong passion for the artform and a commitment to its promotion through the photographic movement – the latter seeing him recognised by an Order of Australia medal in 2004 for his services to Photography. The first Queenslander to do so, he has achieved a Fellowship in each of the Australian, British and American Photographic Societies. After 60 years membership, he is patron and life member of the Toowoomba Photographic Society.
As one would expect, he continues to photograph using film and creates prints using gelatin silver.
Contact Details
www.grahamburstow.com.au
Bio
Martyn Jolly is an Honorary Associate Professor at the Australian National University School of Art and Design. He is an artist and a writer.
As an artist he has participated in several major curated exhibitions and developed solo exhibitions which creatively re-use archival photographs. Works from Wonderful Pictures and 1963: News and Information are in the collections of the National Gallery of Australia, the National Gallery of Victoria and the Canberra Museum and Gallery. In 2006 he was one of three artists commissioned to design and build the Act Bushfire Memorial. He completed his PhD on fake photographs and photographic affect at the University of Sydney in 2003.
In 2006 his book Faces of the Living Dead: The Belief in Spirit Photography was published by the British Library, as well as in the US and Australia. In 2011 he undertook a Harold White Fellowship at the National Library of Australia and a Collection Scholar Artist in residence Fellowship at the Australian National Film and Sound Archive. In 2014 he received an Australian Research Council Discovery grant along with Dr Daniel Palmer to research the impact of new technology on the curating of Australian art photography. In 2015 he received an Australian Research Council Discovery Grant to lead the international project Heritage in the Limelight: The Magic Lantern in Australia and the World.
Since 2015 he has developed a series of collaborative magic lantern performances around Australia, available on the Heritage in the Limelight website. In 2020, with Elisa deCourcy he co-edited The Magic Lantern at Work: Witnessing, Persuading, Experiencing and Connecting, and co-authored Empire, Early Photography and Spectacle: the Global Career of Showman Daguerreotypist J. W. Newland, both published by Routledge. His book, co-authored with Daniel Palmer, Installation View: Australian Photography Exhibitions 1848-2020, was published by Perimeter Editions in 2021. He is also researching Australian illustrated magazines, Australiana photobooks, colonial spectacle and modernity, colonial photography, the history of Australian media art, and early Australian visual education.
Contact Details
www.martynjolly.com/
Social Media
facebook.com/martyn.jolly.39
twitter.com/martyn_jolly?lang=en
@martyn_jolly
Bio
Libby co-founded Australia’s first print-on-demand photo book company, Momento, in 2004. Since then she has helped establish the Australia & New Zealand Photobook Awards and the APS Photobook Competition, as well as the first photo book festivals in the region - Photobook Melbourne and Photobook New Zealand. She regularly curates content and hosts events to enable photographers to design and self-publish successful books, and passionately promotes antipodean photo books to the local and international community.
Contact Details
www.momentopro.com.au
Bio
No journalist bridged the worlds of journalism and entertainment more successfully than Ray Martin. He was a New York correspondent for the ABC, a star reporter in the heyday of Channel 9’s Sixty Minutes, hosted the television variety show Midday for eight years, presented the nightly news programme A Current Affair and hosted federal election debates and counts. He broke big stories and along the way collected five Gold Logies for the most popular personality on television and is a member of the Australian Media Hall of Fame.
His philanthropy is evident in his support for the Fred Hollows Foundation and his work in this and other areas is to be applauded.
Less well known is the fact that he is a passionate photographer with a special interest in outback landscape. Not one to take himself too seriously, he describes himself as a mad photographer, Rabbitohs fan and occasional journo.
Ray Martin's Photography Journey
Veteran journalist & award-winning TV personality Ray Martin has been, what he calls, “ a closet photographer” for over half a century.
Paid to TELL the story - not take the pictures - Ray was always being told to “ put the damn camera down” by producers & tv cameramen at Four Corners & 60 Minutes.
Thankfully, he didn’t. To prove it, there’s a catalogue of photographs, a number of exhibitions & a book with his pictures, published by Melbourne University Press
a few years ago, called "Ray Martin’s World". Martin says he’s like 'The Man from American Express' - he never leaves home without his camera! Photos from commercial planes at 37,000 feet have become a specialty. He’s got a million stories to tell of exotic places he’s been, and strange people he’s met; including some truly great photographers.
What’s Ray Martin going to reveal ? Well, as they say in the news business …"Watch This Space".
Social Media
twitter.com/raymartin
Bio
John has been a member of APS for more than 40 years. He is a former President and was a member of the executive for 10 years. He is currently Chair of the APS AV Group. Over his years of membership he has been awarded many photographic honours in still images, AV and for service to both APS and FIAP. He has also judged and made photographic presentations in all Australian states and Territories as well as in New Zealand, England, China and South Africa.
In 2006 John was appointed Patron of the South Australian Photographic Federation and continues to serve in that position. He regularly runs courses in landscape photography and audio visual making for members of clubs affiliated with the Federation and continues to be active as a judge and presenter. His principal photographic interests are audio visuals, landscape, architecture and wildlife.
Contact
Email John Hodgson
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