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Details
- Date
- 1978
- Media category
- Photograph
- Materials used
- diptych: 2 gelatin silver photographs
- Dimensions
- Diptych: each photograph 23.2 x 29.5 cm image; 25.5 x 32.0 x 1.2 cm frame
- Signature & date
Signed and dated l.l. sheet [a-b], pencil "M Allan 1978".
- Credit
- CSR Photography Project Collection - Bicentennial Gift of CSR Limited 1988
- Location
- Not on display
- Accession number
- 12.1987.a-b
- Copyright
- © Micky Allan
- Artist information
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Micky Allan
Works in the collection
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About
Micky Allan’s socially aware photographic practice arose from the feminist and collectivist strategies of the 1970s, which turned towards photography as the most appropriate way of documenting people’s lives and experiences. Born in Melbourne and educated in Japan, Melbourne and Kansas, Allan trained as a painter at the National Gallery Art School, Melbourne (Victorian College of Arts). She started taking photographs in 1974 after joining a loosely formed feminist collective at Melbourne’s Pram Factory, a progressively experimental arts and theatre space. Allan’s background as a painter led her to the unconventional practice of hand-painting her photographs, which personalised her work and undercut photography’s claim to mechanically and objectively record reality. The hand-coloured portraits of her series ‘Babies’ 1976, ‘Old Age’ 1978 (AGNSW collection) and ‘Prime of Life’ 1979 are sensitive and emotive works which trace the passage of life and the ever-changing human condition.
Her perceptive documentation of people and of the social condition is also evident in her urban studies of the CSR sugar refinery in Pyrmont, Sydney. The diptych ‘The factory’ was taken as part of the 1978 CSR Photography Project for the Pyrmont Refinery Centenary, commissioned by Christine Godden of the Australian Centre for Photography. Allan, along with five other photographers, documented the working life of the factory and its defining presence on the harbour in a series of images. The majority of Allan’s photographs were taken inside the factory, and evoke its industrial atmosphere through a dark, grainy look which emphasised imperfections in the print. This diptych of distant views treats the factory as a composition of forms dominating the landscape. Yet, as with her sensitive portraits, Allan’s studies of the factory also suggest its personality and its inner working life: a quiet yet hulking presence by day which comes alive at night as the city sleeps. Allan ceased photographing in 1983 to concentrate on painting.
© Art Gallery of New South Wales Photography Collection Handbook, 2007
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Exhibition history
Shown in 5 exhibitions
The C.S.R. Photography Project for Pyrmont Refinery Centenary, Exhibition Venue Unknown, , 1978–1978
Micky Allan Perspective 1975-1987, Monash University Gallery, Clayton, 1987–1987
CSR Photography Project Collection: A bicentennial gift to the AGNSW, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 24 Feb 1988–15 May 1988
What is this thing called photography?, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 05 Jun 1999–29 Jul 1999
Demolished Sydney, Museum of Sydney, Sydney, 19 Nov 2016–01 May 2017
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Bibliography
Referenced in 5 publications
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Judy Annear, What is this thing called photography?, Sydney, 1999. no catalogue numbers
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Bronwyn Clark-Coolee, Photography: Art Gallery of New South Wales Collection, 'Not 'simply' anything', pg.266-287, Sydney, 2007, 279 (illus.).
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Jenepher Duncan, Micky Allan Perspective 1975-1987, Melbourne, 1987. cat.no. 30
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Ewen McDonald and Judy Annear (Editors), What is this thing called photography? Australian photography 1975-1985, Annandale, 2000, 31 (illus.).
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Robert McFarlane and Christine Godden, CSR Photography Project Collection: A bicentennial gift to the AGNSW, Sydney, 1988. no catalogue numbers
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