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Murray Cammick - 'Flash Cars' - Photospace Gallery 13 November 2020-23 January 2021

22/10/2020

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Murray Cammick 'Flash Cars' at Photospace Gallery, Wellington, 13 Nov 2020-23 Jan 2021

Event: Saturday, 23rd January 2021, Murray Cammick will spin some discs in the gallery, from noon till 3pm
- a themed selection of period tunes to mark the last day of his Flash Cars exhibition
Photospace Gallery is pleased to present Murray Cammick's exhibition of 1970s photographs 'Flash Cars'.
The exhibition preview will be on Thursday 12th November 5pm to 7.30pm - the last gallery function here this year -  with the exhibition running from 13 November to 23rd January.
During this period, the gallery will be closed from 24th December to 10th January and will reopen with normal hours on 11th January. I will be in Wellington during most of the break and can arrange viewing by appointment.

video interview with Murray Cammick at Photospace Gallery, made by Hans Weston Films, Nov. 2020, murray cammick flash cars interview, video of Flash cars at Photospace gallery wellington new zealand, murray cammick video photospace gallery 2020, hans weston films wellington new zealand
Link to video interview with Murray Cammick at Photospace Gallery, made by Hans Weston Films, Nov. 2020
Links:
Murray Cammick's  'Flash Cars' in PhotoForum NZ magazines, Aug-Sept 1975 and Aug-Sept 1977

Murray Cammick Photo spread and article in Hot Rod New Zealand May 1977 edition
Murray Cammick video interview for 'Flash Cars' by Hans Weston Films

The legendary FLASH CARS photo story by Murray Cammick is showing in Wellington from November 13 at The Photospace Gallery, 37 Courtenay Place. Cammick shot over 3,000 images of the late-1970s Queen Street scene from 1974 to the end of the decade. In an era when New Zealand had two TV channels, youth culture was shaped by movies like Easy Rider (1969), Woodstock (1970) and American Graffiti (1973). FLASH CARS depicts a car culture and a youth culture with a big dose of American Graffiti in a series of photos that include carefully restored cars and unwarranted police bait.
Murray Cammick Flash Cars article in Photo Forum 1977, photospace Gallery contemporary New Zealand photography, car culture in Aotearoa New Zealand
Photo Forum article, 1977
Murray Cammick - 'Ray Fritchit (left) & his 1959 Ford CY31 - 1976', Flash cars exhibition Photospace Gallery 37 Courtenay Place Wellington Aotearoa New Zealand, New Zealand contemporary photography gallery Wellington NZ, NZ car culture, Auckland 1970s street photography
Murray Cammick - 'Ray Fritchit (left) & his 1959 Ford CY31 - 1976'

In 1974, while still a student at Elam School of Fine Art, Cammick began photographing people and their V8 cars as they congregated late at night in Auckland’s Queen Street. The city’s main street contained boring banks, office buildings and aging department stores that were all closed by 5.30pm. At night there were a few bars that closed at 10pm and the rare late-night club that opened as the evening movie theatre patrons headed home.
 
Queen Street was then taken over by the drivers of the rapidly diminishing fleet of New Zealand assembled V8 cars – some were old and barely road worthy – all were gas-guzzling dinosaurs as petrol prices sky-rocketed. Queen Street was their place to park-up or cruise. They didn’t have the place entirely to themselves – there were also transvestites wandering from their downtown bar to the mid-town nightclubs. By 1977 the street had a few punks and a new McDonalds restaurant.
 
While he documented the V8s, his mode of transport was a small Morris Minor that he politely hid in a side street. Cammick was a shy and naïve 20 year old when he first took photographs in Queen St and revellers would see his highly-visible SLR camera and hassle him to – “take our photo!” – unaware that they were giving the quiet photographer the opportunity he was looking for. They were 100% into it, as it was their idea to take the photo.
Murray Cammick - 'Steve Bliss (RIP) and five friends - 1974', Flash cars exhibition Photospace Gallery 37 Courtenay Place Wellington Aotearoa New Zealand, New Zealand contemporary photography gallery Wellington NZ, NZ car culture, Auckland 1970s street photography
Murray Cammick - 'Steve Bliss (RIP) and five friends - 1974'

The scene was about the over-sized 1950s and 1960s Ford, Chevrolet, Cadillac cars but inevitably the odd British “toy” slips into view at times – smaller cars with names like Zephyr and Anglia. As the new decade started, the Queen Street V8 scene faded, Cammick’s photos are sometimes of a single car, moving through the bleak environment, looking for a scene that is no longer there. The dark, empty street has a character of its own and starts to take over the images.
 
When Cammick ended his involvement with Rip It Up magazine in 1998, he set out to do a series of photographic exhibitions but was thwarted by the digital takeover of photography and the realisation that key negatives from his Flash Cars series were missing – last seen in the 1980s. In mid-2014, the missing negatives were found, allowing a comprehensive exhibition to be undertaken. Jenny Tomlin, a specialist in the field of silver-gelatin printing, has made the new prints for the show.
 
Selections from Flash Cars were exhibited in exhibitions at Snaps Gallery, Auckland in 1976 and 1977 and have also been included in group exhibitions including The Active Eye (Manawatu Art Gallery 1975), Drive (Govett-Brewster Art Gallery, New Plymouth 2000) and 40 Years of Photo-Forum (2014).

Murray Cammick - '1955 Chevrolet BH6092 & admirers, Flash cars exhibition Photospace Gallery 37 Courtenay Place Wellington Aotearoa New Zealand, New Zealand contemporary photography gallery Wellington NZ, NZ car culture, Auckland 1970s street photography1976', Flash cars exhibition Photospace Gallery 37 Courtenay Place Wellington Aotearoa New Zealand, New Zealand contemporary photography gallery Wellington NZ, NZ car culture, Auckland 1970s street photography
Murray Cammick - '1955 Chevrolet BH6092 & admirers 1976'

In 1977 Cammick, along with Alastair Dougal established Rip it Up, an independent music magazine which quickly gained traction with local bands and enthusiasts of the local music scene. Rip It Up’s support of the nascent punk and new wave scene and for iconic New Zealand labels such as Propeller Records and Flying Nun records saw the magazine become a seminal influence on the New Zealand music scene. Cammick photographed the local music scene for Rip It Up and continued to take photographs in Queen Street after gigs, but the V8 car scene faded away as the inner city evolved – no longer the late night wasteland that played host to a sub-culture that created their own small town in Texas or mini-Havana in the South Pacific.
 
Murray Cammick was born in 1953 and currently lives in Auckland, New Zealand, where he maintains his interest in popular culture and music as a contributor to AudioCulture “The Noisy Library of New Zealand Music” and as the presenter of his long-running radio show, Land Of the Good Groove which currently airs on 95bFM. His Queen Street photographs are included in the photography collection of Te Papa, the National Museum of New Zealand.

Murray Cammick on Queen St, Auckland, 1976. Photo: M Cammick, Photospace Gallery 37 Courtenay Place Wellington Aotearoa new Zealand, contemporary photography gallery wellington NZ
Murray Cammick on Queen St, Auckland, 1976. Photo: M Cammick

EXHIBITIONS
1975 – The Active Eye – Manawatu Art Gallery
1976 ­– Flash Cars – Snaps Gallery, Auckland
1977 – More Flash Cars – Snaps Gallery, Auckland August 1 to 20. 
1980 – Pop-Shots Show – Closet Artists Gallery, Auckland
1981 – Pop-Shots Show No.2 – Closet Artists Gallery, Auckland
1998 – Folklore: The New Zealanders – Artspace, Auckland 8 July to August 1.
1998 – Folklore: The New Zealanders – Sarjeant Gallery, Wanganui 10 Oct - 22 Nov.
2000 – Drive – Govett-Brewster Art Gallery, New Plymouth 2000.
2014 – History in the Taking: 40 Years of Photo-Forum – Gus Fisher Gallery, Auckland.
2015 – Flash Cars – Darren Knight Gallery, Sydney 11 April to May 9
2015 – PhotoForum Show – Pingyao International Photography Festival 2015, Pingyao Ancient City, Shanxi Province, China 19 Sept to Sept 25
2015 – History in the Taking: 40 Years of Photo-Forum – Wellington City Gallery 14 March to 14 June.
2015 – History in the Taking: 40 Years of Photo-Forum – Dunedin Public Art Gallery 22 Aug to 15 Nov.
2016 – Flash Cars – The Black Asterisk – Ponsonby Rd, Auckland August 3 to 31
2017 – AK 75•85 (music photos) – Darren Knight Gallery, Sydney 4 March to April 1
2017 – AK 75•85 – The Black Asterisk – Ponsonby Rd, Auckland
2019 – Queens St – The Black Asterisk – Ponsonby Rd, Auckland May 31 to June 16.
2020 – Flash Cars – Franklin Arts Centre, Pukekohe, June / July
2020 – Flash Cars – Photospace Gallery, 13 Nov to 13 Jan 2021.
 
 
Published:
Into The Light: A History Of New Zealand Photography (2006) David Eggleton, Craig Potton Press.
Art Of Te Papa (2009) Edited by William McAloon, Te Papa Press.
Live (2010) New Zealand Concerts Edited by Bruce Jarvis & Josh Easby, Hurricane Press.
New Zealand Photography Collected (2014) by Athol McCredie, Te Papa Press.
PhotoForum at 40: Counterculture, Clusters, and Debate in New Zealand (2015) by Nina Seja, Rim Books / PhotoForum.
Stuff article from 2016 Black Asterisk exhibition
HOLIDAY PERIOD: Photospace Gallery will re-open on Monday 11th January, 2021. In the meantime, if you are visiting Wellington and would like to view the 'Flash Cars' exhibition, please email James Gilberd for an appointment  - j.gilberd@xtra.co.nz
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little Symphony Sax Quartet, 7PM friday 23rd October at Photospace Gallery. $10 door sales

15/10/2020

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Little Symphony Sax Quartet perform at Photospace Gallery, 7pm Friday 23 october, 2020
Little Symphony Sax Quartet perform at Photospace Gallery, 7pm Friday 23 october, 2020

Friday October 23rd, 7PM - Little Symphony Sax Quartet (...trio!)
Back by [a] popular demand to recreate the very last gig in Wellies before lockdown are the Little Symphony Sax Quartet!
Led by the venerable Mr. Latham on what will be his bday celebration, Lssq will be performing material from their successful Pyramid Club Covid Response Commission, as well as new original work designed for 3 fleet of finger Wind Practitioners (Alto Sax, Tenor Sax, Bass Clarinet, Clarinet, Bassoon).
Come and join Jake Baxendale, Oscar Laven and little Blast Blair Latham in the beautifully acoustically-suited Photospace Gallery for a menagerie of luscious sounds.
See Facebook event for updates.
$10 at the door - Bring cash. Eftpos payments can be made in the office. (All proceeds go to the band.)
First come first served regarding seating and space. The gallery space is not large.
Please be considerate and be seated on time as the performance will begin at 7pm. Coming in late disrupts the experience for others.

The exhibition around you is called 'A Moment of Quiet' Please sit a little clear of the large pinned up photos and don't touch them. They are very delicate and expensive to replace! Exhibition and artist info.

Covid-19 safety:
  • Please check in using the QR code poster in the hallway outside the gallery.
  • Manual check in is available in the office if you can't do the above
  • Don't come if you are feeling unwell or have cold- or 'flu-like symptoms
  • Follow the rules for Alert Level 1
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'A Moment of Quiet' - Massey photography grad. students' exhibition, 17-29 October 2020

12/10/2020

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'A Moment of Quiet' - is a group photographic exhibition by graduate students of Massey University's photography degree programme; Alexander Jago, Hendrix Hennessy-Ropiha, Jake Giles, Mckayla Woodroffe, Oliver Foster., Photospace Gallery contemporary New Zealand photography, photography in Aotearoa New Zealand
'A Moment of Quiet' - Massey University grad. students at Photospace Gallery, 17-29 October 2020

'A Moment of Quiet' is a group photographic exhibition by graduate students of Massey University's photography degree programme; Alexander Jago, Hendrix Hennessy-Ropiha, Jake Giles, Mckayla Woodroffe, Oliver Foster. The exhibition runs at Photospace Gallery, 1st floor 37 Courtenay Place, Wellington, Aotearoa NZ, from 17th to 29th October, 2020
‘The Waiting Room’ by Alexander Jago examines the quiet mundanity of life under lockdown. created in response to the Covid-19 pandemic, the photographs encourage a comparison of interior and exterior, restriction, and freedom. Photography’s ability to convey emotive information is central to the work with the images of the series straddling the gap between positive and negative, presenting the viewer with an opportunity to project their own experience.
Photo: Alexander Jago
Photo: Alexander Jago
'Stray Dog' by Jacob Giles explores the mundane and daily experiences through a process-based and self reflective lens. This project draws direct inspiration from making a photograph with a 4x5 view camera. Viewing the world projected on a sheet of glass has a luminous quality that can also be found and photographed when observing the everyday. 
Photo: Jacob Giles
Photo: Jacob Giles
OVERRIPE ORANGES by Oliver Foster photographically explores the individual experience of the quotidian. Foster takes a diaristic approach to capture the ephemeral moments of his everyday life. The photobook is composed to juxtapose images with each other, adding a new meaning to the moments. This project is an exploration into observing the fleeting quality of life and aims to present each moment elegantly.
Photo: Oliver Foster
Photo: Oliver Foster
There is very little visualisation of the experience of young mothers in New Zealand, they are often represented as a statistic or problem to be solved. How to walk with a baby is an 80 page photobook created by Mckayla Woodroffe. It explores the experiences of two women who gave birth to their daughters as teenagers, 20 years apart. The subjects homes and memories are photographed to create a portrait of them and narrate individual experiences. The book utilises archival imagery and after photography alongside text pulled from conversations between the photographer and subjects to encourage a deepened understanding of the experiences of young mothers.
Photo: Mckayla Woodroffe
Photo: Mckayla Woodroffe
We can travel only a short way together

We stood in the intersection and talked yet neither of us opened our mouths. You appeared younger, similar to when we first met, surrounded by a group who shared a closeness with you. It was strange, fading from a dream while simultaneously realising that for now, this would be our final farewell. 

Utilising the photograph as a tool for discussion, ‘We can travel only a short way together’ examines the underlying issues of taboo, restriction and invisibility when discussing suicide in New Zealand. 
- Hendrix Hennessy-Ropiha, 2020
Photo: Hendrix Hennessy-Ropiha
Photo: Hendrix Hennessy-Ropiha
Where to find help and support: 
Shine (domestic violence) - 0508 744 633
Women's Refuge - 0800 733 843 (0800 REFUGE)
Need to Talk? - Free call or text 1737 any time for support from a trained counsellor
What's Up - 0800 WHATS UP (0800 942 8787)
Lifeline - 0800 543 354 or (09) 5222 999 within Auckland
Youthline - 0800 376 633, text 234, email talk@youthline.co.nz or online chat
Samaritans - 0800 726 666
Depression Helpline - 0800 111 757
Suicide Crisis Helpline - 0508 828 865 (0508 TAUTOKO)
Shakti Community Council - 0800 742 584
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