‘There is nothing so stable as change’ - Bob Dylan Grant Douglas lives in Motuaka and has exhibited at Photospace Gallery numerous time since his first exhibition here in 1999. Following a period of hand-colouring his black & white silver-gelatin (darkroom) prints with oil paints, Grant has made the move from film-based to digital colour photography. This exhibition, 'Going Electric' was meant to show in 2021 but Covid-19 disrupted the schedule. We are very pleased to have it now. Opening: Friday 9th September, 5pm-7pm. ARTIST'S PROFILE - GRANT DOUGLAS
I was born in 1951 in Upper Hutt, in the Hutt Valley, surrounded by hills and the nearby (at that time untamed) Hutt River. I quickly became a child gardener. In the late sixties I attended the then very liberal Wellington Teacher's College, where I picked up a camera, under the mentoring of Des Kelly. I was influenced by the photographers Edward Weston, Minor White, Paul Caponigro and Harry Callaghan but decided my personal vision was to get closer to smaller subject matter. Photography became a spiritual pursuit, a chance to explore the "otherness of things". I left Training College and continued gardening growing vegetables and plants in a variety of situations, including 18 years at Riverside Community in Lower Moutere, while also in my spare time pursuing photography. A few years back, my one and only camera, a Pentax Spotmatic, died, so I went digital, exploring colour instead of black and white. It was an exciting new world. In 2019 I produced a monograph of black and white photos, covering the full period of my photography, accompanied by found texts - "Hunter of Beauty". [Copies are for sale at Photospace Gallery, $65.00] My method in producing my current digital work is not too dissimilar to when I was producing film-based black and white. The subject excites me, and the technique (fairly basic editing) is only there to enhance what I have seen - to communicate better with the viewer, who may interpret the image just as I saw it, or in their own way. All works are untitled to free the viewers mind from the constraints of words and labels. This is my first solo exhibition of digital-based photographs. All works are archival pigment prints in limited editions of four. "The only constant is change" - Bob Dylan
0 Comments
Your comment will be posted after it is approved.
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorPhotography Matters II Categories |