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Trent Parke, the first Australian to become a Full Member of the renowned
photographers' cooperative Magnum Photo Agency, is considered one of the most
innovative and challenging young photographers of his generation. Whilst
working as a press photojournalist during the first years of his career, he
received numerous national and international awards, including five Gold
Lenses from the International Olympic Committee, World Press Photo Awards in
1999, 2000 and in 2005.
In 2009 Trent Parke was commissioned by Sydney Opera House, as an artist in
residence, to shoot behind the scenes. With his characteristic originality and
imagination Please step quietly everyone can hear you takes us with him
backstage. Working amidst the darkness, with strictly choreographed logistics,
bizarre props and long hours, he captures, with frankness and affection a side
of Sydney Opera House few of us have ever seen. The images that resulted from
this exciting collaboration were exhibited in complementary exhibitions at
Sydney Opera House and at Stills Gallery.
Trent Parke’s dark and humorous series, The Christmas Tree Bucket,
described by Alasdair Foster (Director, ACP) as “a
gritty gothic tale of a nightmare lurking in the suburban shadows”, was
launched at the Australian Centre for Photography and was also premiered at
ParisPhoto by Stills Gallery in 2008. “I started to think how
strange families, suburbia, life…and in particular Christmas, really
was,” says Parke of his decision to focus on the joys and pitfalls of
family life.
Welcome to Nowhere, which was included in Magnum's 60th Anniversary
show New Blood, and exhibited at Stills Gallery in 2007, firmly
establishes his ability to work with spectacular results in colour as well as
his signature powerful black and white. Following the series Coming
Soon, an exploration of urban spaces in colour, Welcome to Nowhere
focuses on Australian backwaters, shot on medium format film to maintain fine
detail even when printed large-scale. With Welcome To Nowhere Parke
continues to create arresting tableaus that are magical in the stories they
tell. Often absent of human presence the strong colours and formal
composition, convey a stillness with surreal affect. Conversely, the humorous
Man Vomiting testifies to Parke's ability to capture unforeseen moments
of human behaviour, or in the case of the iconic Sharkbay WA, it is a
bizarre gang of emus who seem to think they own the town.
The Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney, acquired a selection of works from
Welcome To Nowhere in 2007. This is a wonderful addition to the
institutions he is held in, which include the National Gallery of Victoria,
Gold Coast City Art Gallery, Art Gallery of NSW, and the National Gallery of
Australia.
In 2003 Parke was awarded the prestigious international W. Eugene Smith Grant
in Humanistic Photography for his series Minutes to Midnight. Parke
documented his journey around Australia over a two-year period, examining 'the
current and changing state of the Australian nation'. Capturing the mood of a
still young and emerging nation, Parke examined the disjuncture between the
perception of the Australian 'way of life', with its nostalgia and
romanticism, and the more complex reality. Minutes to Midnight was
exhibited for the first time at the Australian Centre for Photography as part
of the Sydney Arts Festival in 2005. Works from the series were also included
in the 2005 Noorderlicht Traces and Omens Photo Festival in the
Netherlands and were featured by Magnum at Paris Photo in November 2005. In
2006 The National Gallery acquired Parke's thirty-piece suite of Minutes to
Midnight. The suite was included in the Australian Art Gallery's
exhibition Shoot: Five Australian Photographers in Focus and
more recently (2009), was part of the Children's Gallery at the NGA.
Parke's Dream/Life & Beyond, exhibited in 2001 at Stills Gallery,
presented a city seemingly peopled with spirits and shrouded in the mythical.
The play of light and shade, individuals and crowds, reality and dream,
elevates his works beyond the documentary. His book, Dream/Life, was
awarded second place in the 2000 American Picture of the Year awards for
photography books.
During 2000, Parke collaborated with Narelle Autio to exhibit The Seventh
Wave at Stills Gallery. Their powerful and lyrical images of bathers
captured the drama and otherworldliness that lies beneath the surface of the
water.
Images from The Seventh Wave and Dream/Life were exhibited in
2004 at Ariel Meyerowitz Gallery in New York, and at Foto Freo in Western
Australia. In 2003, works from The Seventh Wave were selected to be
part of the Summer Life exhibition at Alice Austin House Museum in Long
Island, New York.
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