Photography Review: SLOW
Greg Stoodley : PhotoAccess
Online Gallery
16 April – 16 May 2020
After having to close its physical gallery, PhotoAccess has moved its
scheduled exhibitions to a new online gallery space: http://www.gallery.photoaccess.org.au/
and expressed the hope that viewers enjoy the new format, and the works of
their exhibitors who have been willing to take a leap of faith into the
unknown!
The online gallery space introduces Slow, by Greg
Stoodley, by saying his exhibition ‘reflects a personal take on the
modernist portraits of Irving Penn. The artist has used principles and
foundations he's noticed in Penn's portraits to create engaging, meaningful
portraits of his own. These works strike one as timeless and classical, yet
moreover relevant and recognisable as a contemporary photo-media practice.
Stoodley is a dedicated member of PhotoAccess, and a master in the ways of
platinum palladium darkroom printing, and we're honoured he chose us to host
this exhibition.’
Stoodley graduated from the Canberra Institute of Technology
with an Advanced Diploma of Photography in 2014. Then he was offered a position
at the Royal Australian Mint to photograph the National Coin Collection. He is
currently continuing his studies at the ANU School of Art, whilst maintaining a
commercial photography practice as a freelance photographer. He also has been
an instructor at Photo Access, teaching short courses in Studio Photography and
Art Documentation.
For any readers who do not know the work of Penn, he was one of the
twentieth century's great photographers. Despite being celebrated as one of
Vogue magazine's top photographers for more than sixty years, Penn was an
intensely private man. Known for striking images and first-rate prints, he pursued
his work with quiet and unfailing commitment, approaching his photography with
an artist's eye and expanding the creative prospects of the medium.
Penn was among the first photographers to pose subjects against
a simple grey or white backdrop and he effectively used its simplicity.
Expanding his austere studio surroundings, he constructed a set of upright
angled backdrops, to form a stark, acute corner. Stoodley has utilised similar
backgrounds.
When he submitted his exhibition proposal to Photo Access, Stoodley’s
concept envisaged a “slowing down” using traditional techniques, studio setups,
medium format cameras, black and white film, and platinum printing processes. This
exhibition invites us to carefully examine the choices made by photographers
today.
This exhibition comprises 18 portraits, all bar one being
monochrome. For me the standouts include Waist Coat,
Arnett, and Michael; all shot in a corner and all of men. Penn
famously photographed the Duchess of Windsor standing in much the same type of corner.
Waist Coat © Greg Stoodley
Arnett © Greg Stoodley
Michael © Greg Stoodley
Saskia is photographed in the same corner setting but, otherwise, does
not relate to the other images already mentioned. This is the one nude included
in Stoodley’s exhibition. It is a fine image but does not, for me, compare with
Penn’s best-known nudes which are of fleshy models, whereas Stoodley has a much
slimmer subject.
Saskia © Greg Stoodley
Likewise, there is just a single colour image in Slow and
I found myself asking why it was included. Penn did shoot in colour, but his
strength is in his black and white work. The exhibition would have been equally
strong without Dixie.
Dixie © Greg Stoodley
The catalogue essay Learning from slowness by Kate Warren,
a Lecturer of Art History and Curatorship at the Australian National University,
is well worth reading and there is some additional interesting behind the
scenes background to the exhibition on Woodley’s own blog https://gregstoodley.com/new-blog-layout.
He shows some of the prints in the wash bath, drying and laid out for
observation, as well as shots of his final print products.
All artworks are for sale, in multiple editions. Some works are
available as inkjet, platinum palladium prints, or silver gelatin prints. Contact
hello@photoaccess.org.au for
details.