Centre for Contemporary Photography
CCP has a number of exhibitions this month concerning people: their history, identity and displacement. Peter Milne, Deborah Paauwe, Jenny Bolis, Keely O'Shannessy.
CCP has a number of exhibitions this month concerning people: their history,
identity and displacement.
Peter Milne is one of Australia's best known photographic artists. His new
exhibition, When Nature Forgets (GALLERY ONE) is an exploration of the
physical representations of the human form in historical and cultural
displays. It focuses on dummies, mannequins and dolls in museums and
historical theme-parks, the places where history and culture are recreated
and presented back to us as entertainment.
Recently voted one of Australia's top ten collectable photographic artists,
Deborah Paauwe's CCP exhibition, Beautiful Games (GALLERY TWO) represents
Paauwe's first foray into video art. Beautiful Games explores female
identity and burgeoning sexual awareness through images involving cascades
of hair, a glimmer of gold, a length of ribbon. The filmic, highly directed
quality of Paauwe's photograpy has been animated as the anonymous girls of
Beautiful Games enact adolescent rituals of dressing up, grooming and
dancing - interactions which pave the way for an understanding of the
private and public realms of intimacy.
Buildings Are Lonely People, exposes the loneliness behind ordered space.
Jenny Bolis has created beautiful black and white images of mundane objects
liberated into worlds of symbolic and emotional intensity. Female figures
slip between light and shadow, appearing stunned or frozen. Tree branches
become like raw nerve endings against a white sky. Derelict buildings
signify emotional detachment, while shuttered houses suffer quietly in
suburbia. (PROJECT SPACE)
Keely O'Shannessy's Alice's Conversations in Cyberspace (e-MEDIA) is not
'Artificial Intelligence'. It is an interactive imitation game, an
experiment in 'simulated' personality and conversation. Alice has attitude.
She is a little crazy. A little confused. She is by turns curious,
bewildered and playful. Her conversation is restricted to excerpts from
Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass (1865). So
you can say or ask her almost anything at all, but (like most people) she's
got her own agenda, and she likes you to play her game.
Image: a work by Deborah Paauwe
The Centre for Contemporary Photography (CCP) is supported by the Victorian
Government through Arts Victoria, a division of the Department of Premier
and Cabinet. The CCP also acknowledges financial support of the Australia
Council, the Federal Government's arts funding and advisory body.
Opening Thursday 2 October 6-8pm
Gallery Hours: Wednesday - Saturday, 11am - 5pm
Centre for Contemporary Photography
205 Johnston St
Fitzroy Vic 3065
+613-9417-1549
+613-9417-1605