Colour Factory Gallery
Charmwood
Todd Anderson Kunert, Warwick Baker, Linsey Gosper & Michelle Tran
Opening on Thursday June 3, 6-8pm

Exhibition dates June 3 – 26, 2010

Colour Factory Gallery
Charmwood
Todd Anderson Kunert, Warwick Baker, Linsey Gosper & Michelle Tran
Opening on Thursday June 3, 6-8pm

Exhibition dates June 3 – 26, 2010
Wardlow
Taiyo Onorato & Nico Krebs
The Secret Life of Plants
Opening May 26, 7pm

Open by appointment 28 May – 18 June
“Taiyo Onorato and Nico Krebs (*1979), originally from Switzerland, live and work in Berlin. Their practice involves Photography, Sculptures and Installation. After numerous shows in Europe and America (solo exhibitions in PS1 MoMA – New York and EX3 – Florence), this show at Wardlow is the culmination of the artists’ works made in Australia.”
Brunswick Street Gallery
Rachel Davidson
‘Breadcrumbs’

Exhibition dates 21 May – 3 June, 2010
George Paton Gallery
Linda Loh
Mark
Opening Wednesday May 19, 6-8pm

Exhibition dates: 19 May – 29 May 2010
“This work is about making our mark. Perhaps these marks are like the clutter of the mind, filling space, obscuring silence and emptiness.”
Centre for Contemporary Photography (CCP)
Greatest Hits- Faux Thrills
Photocopier (group show)
Event Horizon (group show)
Alison Bennett – Miss Carmichael’s View
Opening Thursday May 20, 6-8pm

Image: Greatest Hits
Exhibition dates: 21 May – 18 July 2010
There are some great photographic exhibitions coming up at CCP in the next few weeks including ‘Greatest Hits – Faux Thrills’.
With the Next Wave festival currently on in Melbourne, there are loads of great exhibitions and performances to check out this week!
Check out this website for a full listing of Next Wave events.

Gertrude Contemporary Art Spaces, Main Gallery
Mercy Street
Artists: Sherry McLane Alejos (AUS/MEXICO), CJ Conway (AUS/US), Kaori Kato (AUS/JAPAN), Alanna Lorenzon (AUS), Nicholas Waddell (AUS) Curator: Anusha Kenny
Opening Friday May 14
Exhibition runs from May 14 to June 12
“Mercy Street curated by Anusha Kenny is presented as part of Gertrude Contemporary Art Spaces (GCAS) and Next Wave Festival’s 2010 Emerging Curators program.
Mercy Street breaks apart the concept of ‘mercy’ exploring the conflicting forces of frustration, failure and forgiveness that are embedded within it. Approaching the concept from a legal perspective the works in this exhibition highlight the ways that these often amorphous, fluid concepts are formalised through public decision-making and ideas of justice.
The exhibition takes its title from Anne Sexton’s poem 45 Mercy Street, which explores the conflict embedded within ideas of mercy from a personal perspective. This exhibition identifies how these concerns operate both inside and outside the law, shadowing personal as well as public relationships. Mercy Street will explore how private understandings of mercy affect public decision-making and are formalised through the legal process.
Mercy Street features work by five artists who are distinguished by their acute awareness of the precariousness of ethics and morality. This awareness is inscribed heavily in their works and is made manifest through aesthetic fragility, constant motion, and intermittence. In contrast to the blunt finality of legislation, the works in the exhibition formalize emotion and address human frailty with compassion and flexibility. Ultimately, the exhibition is an elegy to those who have been able to show grace when revenge would be just as appropriate.”
Also on this Friday…
Light Projects ARI
Kristina Tsoulis-Reay
Submarine
Opening drinks: 6-9pm Friday 14 May, 2010
This exhibition will run from 14 May- 6 June, 2010
The exhibition may be viewed Saturdays and Sundays 12-5pm
Visit www.light-projects.com for more information.
There is loads of art to see this Thursday night…perhaps an art crawl is in order!
Plenty
Tim Handfield
Colour Factory Gallery

Exhibition opening Thursday May 6, 6-8pm
To be opened by: Stephen Zagala, Curator, Monash Gallery of Art
Artist floor talk: Saturday May 22, 2.00pm
Exhibition dates: May 6 to 29, 2010
Plenty explores the margins of Plenty Road between Bundoora and South Morang, where Melbourne’s outer urban development meets the grassy eucalypt woodland of the Victorian Volcanic Plain. The photographs reveal a strange and compelling mixture of excess and decay, opportunity and loss as the landscape undergoes dramatic change.
Tim Handfield’s work is held in local and international collections including those of the National Gallery of Victoria, the National Gallery of Australia, Artbank and the Museum of Photographic Art, San Diego, CA.
First Born
Robert Doble & Simon Strong
Block Projects
Opening Thursday May 6, 6-8pm

Exhibition dates May 6 – May 29, 2010
“English-born Robert Doble studied at the Chelsea School of Art in London but now resides in Australia. Doble paintings explore symbolism, mythology and folklore along with Politics and religion. Vietnamese born Simon Strong creates works that explore our perception of what is plausible. His intrigue for dreams and the constructs of the human memory.”
Fragments
Artists include: Clinton Hayden, Todd Anderson-Kunert, Ashley Kerr, Shannon Crowe, Anita Stevens
Guildford Lane Gallery
Opening Thursday May 6, 6 – 8pm
Exhibition dates May 6 - 30, 2010

Image: Todd Anderson-Kunert
Plenty
Tim Handfield
Colour Factory Gallery

Exhibition opening Thursday May 6, 6-8pm
To be opened by: Stephen Zagala, Curator, Monash Gallery of Art
Artist floor talk: Saturday May 22, 2.00pm
Exhibition dates: May 6 to 29, 2010
Plenty explores the margins of Plenty Road between Bundoora and South Morang, where Melbourne’s outer urban development meets the grassy eucalypt woodland of the Victorian Volcanic Plain. The photographs reveal a strange and compelling mixture of excess and decay, opportunity and loss as the landscape undergoes dramatic change.
Tim Handfield’s work is held in local and international collections including those of the National Gallery of Victoria, the National Gallery of Australia, Artbank and the Museum of Photographic Art, San Diego, CA.
In the next month the Colour Factory will introduce museum quality archival packaging and storage solutions for large artworks to its service offering.
Cardboard flatpacks will be custom made, and available in the popular sizes of 1000mm x 760mm, 1200mm x 1200mm and 1200mm x 1600mm.
Artworks produced by the Colour Factory can be packed into these boxes, interleaved with Mylar or archival tissue ready for long term storage or for transportation. They will be available at very reasonable prices soon!
Often generic lens test articles can be lacking in definitive and non-biased information. Articles can read as a “cut and paste” of technical reviews and the specifications brochure. Although providing accurate information on technical specs, nowhere in the article is there a reference to print quality, which the Colour Factory team believes to be imperative in evaluating lens performance.
Accompanying test shots seem barely related and have little to offer in assessing the lens. Often the conclusive paragraph contradictorily sings its praise while suggesting it is only an amateur ‘family vacation’ lens. However, to be fair we must also keep in mind the target audience.
Optical Evaluations
After all our imaginations it is the ability to reconcile the differences of our ideas imagined to those of reality we have created. After all, often what you see is not often what you get.
Yet another lens review bogged down in the Holy Trinity of photographic equipment evaluation systems ( P.E.E.S.)
i. Design & Construction
ii. Optical or Image Quality (IQ)
iii. The Bottom Line
Design & Construction is generally just a green flag to spew verbatim, without prevarication, word for word the brochure of the manufacturer. This technique is used to expand the length of the article by focusing on features that are so numbingly commonplace one wonders if anyone actually cares that the product has a:
“0.95cm focus ring AND a 1.9cm wide zoom ring“ and also ” a (somewhat small) distance scale positioned at the extreme front of the lens barrel, and incorporates markings in both feet and metres. The focus ring travels slightly past the infinity mark, apparently to allow for the effects of ambient temperature variations.”
We have turned headfast now into the land of absolute babble and drivel!
Optical or Image Quality testing involves the now commonplace procedures of the almighty “Pixel Peeping” and “100 % zoom crops”. Our assemblage of image mercenaries will ravage and relish any signs of aberration, flaring, flanging, or fringing and mightily proclaim remedies for such inflictions much in the way of the travelling medicine man of the Old west would peddle snake oils and Indian pills.
“one product is all you need
“it’s an emergency room in a bottle” – Clayton Tedeton
Yeee Haaaa Photoshop cowboys lets lock -N- Load !!!!
The Bottom Line is where it hurts. Here we must marry our desire for the “Best freaking lens ever invented man! “ with the fundamental obligation to our existence……. our wallet. This is where our Bestman is “convenience” and our Bridesmaid is “multi-purpose”. 18 – 200mm superzoom compact best of the group single barrel burden free all round good time best buy bargain of the year. Only to be informed the “Serious shooters” would never hitch themselves to such an ambitious multi talented harlot of a lens! Thus wasting a large wad of the good stuff on something that could never be what it wanted to be.
“A different kind of view”
i. Design & Construction
ii. Optical or Image Quality ( IQ)
iii. The Bottom Line
Design & Construction
How does it feel?…quite simple really. Hold it in your hands and shoot. Does it excite and inspire you? Is it comfortable, can it be your new close companion? This is the vibe.
Optical or Image Quality. This is also the vibe
For this we need to materialize the image, then judge the elements that establish the basis of the work. Testing needs to take into account the ability of the lens to resolve detail that can be resolved by the media. Full screen zooms will not tell us how the image will appear once printed and displayed on a wall. Certain images will be definitely be off limits and or the lens will have flaws. However the computer will not tell us how the image will interact with materials used. Elements like size, scope, space and context cannot be transported via computer screens.
We do not want to become bogged down in matters that obstruct our ability to “see” the image. Our enemies here are the pixels. It is time to transform them into light or dots and evaluate their performance.
The Bottom Line
We must honestly ask ourselves ‘what kind of work are we shooting’ and do we really need the extra length for a compromise in quality? Does multi-purpose override beauty? What is more important? Will a ‘jack of all trades, master of none’ lens satisfy our desire in a long term relationship or should we divorce all round performance, walk the extra mile ourselves and not be lazy photographers. Is it worth paying a little extra to get a red hot number that continues to inspire and instill awe for a lifetime of rewarding photography?
And finally the bottom line is also the vibe and the print quality!