Visual Art (Photography) Review | Brian Rope
Dark
Matter 2025
Joshua
Catanzariti, Danica Chappell, Kristian Häggblom, Bingham Thurgate
Photo
Access, Canberra
23
October 2025 – 22 November 2025
The 2025 Dark Matter residency program brought together four most interesting artists. They each spent part of this year working in the Photo Access darkroom and developing new works through experimentation.
At a conversation with the artists event I attended at the gallery, Joshua Catanzariti spoke about his research regarding how other people have used digital negatives and how, the more he explored, the more he felt that printing images onto paper and then using those prints as negatives was something he wanted to pursue. A large collage of images displayed in this exhibition was created in that way, using Japanese washi paper. The fibres of that paper got translated into those prints. Using film negatives, layering them on top of each other in the enlarger, was another technique he used. Overall, the created artworks are a marvellous portrait of the outcomes of the artist’s experiments.
| Joshua Catanzariti’s artworks – installation image © Eunie Kim |
| Joshua Catanzariti, passage to Kasuga - installation (detail), 2025 © Eunie Kim |
| Joshua Catanzariti, Fuji – framed, 2025 - installation image © Eunie Kim |
Danica Chappell’s artworks are absolutely different. She pressed her hands directly to surfaces, breaking a golden rule that had previously been instilled in darkroom workers: a film or paper surface should never be touched. She has investigated the history of photography through experimentation and touch, drawing inspiration from pictorialism photography, which links the hand and chance. Both colour and light are valued in the materials she employed, such as egg whites and old typewriter paper, as well as in the actual production of her final products. She clearly has a strong interest in geometry and abstraction, receding spatial forms, and advancing photography's methods while appreciating its past.
| Danica Chappell’s artworks – installation image © Eunie Kim |
| Danica Chappel, selection from the series Kaleidoscope, 2025 – installation image © Eunie Kim |
Two most interesting pieces amongst those on display are from a series, appropriately titled Shadow Shaping (light-modulated-form). The shapes, the colours, the light - all are fascinating.
| Danica Chappel, Shadow Shaping (light-modulated-form #6), 2025 – installation image © Eunie Kim |
Kristian Häggblom has drawn on his childhood memory. He has used surviving darkroom photographs made by his father as the impetus for his explorations. In particular he has referred to images his parent made relating to the 1986 Halley’s Comet celestial occurrence. He has sought to re-tell and speculate about that and other associated stories of destiny and doom. And he has spoken about embracing mistakes in the darkroom. The integrated placement of the displayed completed artworks provides a complete, and most enjoyable, visual portrayal of this project – in many ways a homage. However, the artist has suggested we may not be able to read it all.
| Kristian Häggblom’s artworks – installation image © Eunie Kim |
| Kristian Häggblom, Halley’s Comet, 1986 – photograph and print by Robert Haggblom, analogue print with wooden base – installation image © Eunie Kim |
| Kristian Häggblom, On the Beach (Kunihiro Hanasaka & Kristian Häggblom), 2004 – photograph by Souma Sato, framed archival digital print – installation image © Eunie Kim |
Bingham Thurgate’s work is accompanied by text written for the catalogue by Mae West on his behalf. It seeks to shift our focus to the “spatial, objectual and material qualities of the photographic image and the ways in which these elements, once manipulated, both shape and guide his methodology.” Four created three-dimensional pieces of art use a variety of materials, such as acrylic paint, hinges, chair legs, bolts, paraffin wax, polyester fabric, and balsawood, in addition to their photographic content.
| Bingham Thurgate’s artworks – installation image © Eunie Kim |
It is good to view these works from various angles rather than simply front on. Doing that reveals so much more, better enabling us to see their qualities in the way West has identified.
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| Bingham Thurgate, Photographic print #1, 2025 (dye-sublimation print on eco lycra, MDF board, chair legs, bolts) - installation image © Eunie Kim (detail selected by Brian Rope) |
All
four artists have created excellent artworks from their individual programs of
experimentation, demonstrating once again that the annual Dark Matter
residencies program is successfully achieving its aims.
This review is also available on the author's blog here.








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