-
Details
- Dates
- 1992
printed 1996 - Media category
- Photograph
- Materials used
- gelatin silver photograph
- Edition
- 2/20
- Dimensions
- 22.9 x 34.2 cm image; 30.3 x 40.5 cm sheet
- Signature & date
Signed and dated l.r. verso, pencil "Sandy Edwards 96".
- Credit
- Purchased 1996
- Location
- Not on display
- Accession number
- 373.1996.4
- Copyright
- © Sandy Edwards
- Artist information
-
Sandy Edwards
Works in the collection
- Share
-
About
Sandy Edwards is one of Australia’s leading documentary photographers. She has worked as such for over thirty years. Her work has been extensively published in the mainstream press, and she has participated in many important commissions including the ‘CSR Pyrmont Refinery centenary project’ 1978. Edwards was the joint curator of the public art program, ‘Sydney Airport 2000 art project’. She continues to work as a freelance curator and photographer.
Throughout her practice, Edwards has shown a commitment to the portrayal of political and social issues. Previous bodies of work in the Art Gallery of New South Wales collection depict the life of the worker (the CSR project) and the Aboriginal community at Brewarrina, NSW (‘Welcome to Brewarrina’). Portraiture features strongly in Edward’s oeuvre, particularly the depiction of women. She sees the potential for photography to act as a ‘passport’ allowing access to other people’s lives. Edwards likes to develop a degree of trust and intimacy between herself and her subject, recognising that while the camera observes, the photographer participates socially with those he or she portrays, leaving a record which can reveal much.1
‘Paradise is a place’ is a series of works documenting the childhood and early adolescence of Marina, a friend of the photographer. The photographs were taken over an eight year period in the 1990s, at Tanja, on the far South Coast of New South Wales, where Edwards took her annual summer holidays with Marina, her family, and various friends.
These images portray the innocence of a child’s life before the pressures of adulthood. Marina’s pleasure and ease within her environment are apparent in various photographs as she cradles a goose, contemplates a goanna and swims in the ocean.
The series also explores the relationships of Marina to the people in her life. ‘Marina and Marr at the dam’ depicts the girl looking up at her father as he appears to be demonstrating stone skimming. Marina is focused on his action, the image capturing the unquestioning trust and reliance of a child to her father.
1. Edward’s thoughts on photography expressed in Sandy Edwards, ‘Peer pressure: practising politics in the 1970s’, in McDonald E & Annear J eds, ‘What is this thing called photography?: Australian photography 1975–1985’, Pluto Press, Sydney , 2000, pp 37–47
-
Exhibition history
Shown in 3 exhibitions
Paradise Is A Place, Royal Botanic Gardens, Sydney, Australia, 23 Feb 1996–31 Mar 1996
Inheritance, Australian Centre for Photography, Paddington, 21 Mar 1996–04 May 1996
What's in a face? aspects of portrait photography, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 24 Sep 2011–05 Feb 2012
-
Bibliography
Referenced in 1 publication
-
Joanna Mendelssohn., The Australian, 'Sydney Art', Sydney, 08 Mar 1996.
-