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Details
- Date
- 1930s
- Media category
- Photograph
- Materials used
- gelatin silver photograph
- Dimensions
- 32.0 x 25.0 cm image; 38.0 x 30.8 cm sheet
- Signature & date
Not signed. Not dated.
- Credit
- Gift of Diana Dupain 2000
- Location
- Not on display
- Accession number
- 102.2003.26
- Copyright
- Artist information
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Max Dupain
Works in the collection
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About
Max Dupain (1911-1992) was one of Australia’s great modernist photographers. He took up photography in his teenage years and studied at the East Sydney Technical College and Julian Ashton School. From 1930-34 he assisted Cecil Bostock, before establishing his own photographic studio in Sydney. Throughout the 1930s and 40s Dupain was best known for his fashion illustrations, advertising and social portraits which were regularly published in ‘The Home’ magazine until it ceased publication in 1942. During World War II, Dupain served in the Royal Australian Air Force and worked as a photographer in the Department of Information, Canberra. After the War, he aligned himself with the documentary movement in photography and his later work eschewed his earlier subjects and experimentation in favour of architectural and industrial work.
‘Untitled (smiling woman)’ 1930s depicts a woman turned towards the camera, mouth open in a wide smile. The woman’s hair is coiffed and her face made up. This, combined with the exaggerated expression on her face and the dating of the work, suggests that this was a commissioned photograph for an advertisement. The aesthetic is suggestive of early Hollywood glamour stills, in which retouching and lighting were used to create images of iconic perfection. This can also be seen to reflect Dupain’s grounding in contemporaneous thinking around Vitalism.
Even in his commercial work one can see Dupain experimenting with his medium. Strong studio light directed onto the woman’s face creates deep shadows and emphasises strong contrasts between light and dark. In this photograph, Dupain has captured a moment of expression on the model’s face, and something of her character. This is reflective of the artist’s practice; throughout his career Dupain stressed the necessity for emotional involvement with his subjects. As he stated, ‘sensitivity, piercing awareness, emotional and intellectual involvement, self discipline, are some of the elements which create that rapport with the subject, be it a rock, or a woman, or a woman on a rock!’ The ‘physic interplay’ between subject and operator was, to Dupain, what differentiated work that was ‘spontaneous or laboured,’ ‘inspired or dead.’1
1. All quotes from Gael Newton, ‘Max Dupain’, The David Ell Press, Sydney, 1980 p33
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Exhibition history
Shown in 2 exhibitions
Soft Shadows and Sharp Lines: Australian photography from Cazneaux to Dupain, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 30 Sep 2002–17 Nov 2002
What's in a face? aspects of portrait photography, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 24 Sep 2011–05 Feb 2012
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Bibliography
Referenced in 2 publications
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Natasha Bullock (Curator), Soft shadows and sharp lines: Australian photography from Cazneaux to Dupain, Sydney, 2002. no catalogue numbers
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Kylie Tennant, Time enough later, 2020, front cover (illus.). first published 1943
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