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Melanie Jayne Sancho Taylor

  • About
    • Biography
    • CV
  • Exhibitions
    • Upcoming
    • Past
  • Projects
  • News
  • Contact
 

View from the Window

 
View fullsize Mostly Mist. 2008 – 2013. Archival inkjet print on hahnemühle photo rag. 90x93cm
View fullsize Beginning or the End of the Garden. [2008] 2010. Archival inkjet print on hahnemühle photo rag.
View fullsize Garden Fragments. Archival inkjet print on hahnemühle photo rag. 100.7x27.3cm. 2008-2015
View fullsize All what was underneath, [snow scene fragments],2012 [2015]. Archival inkjet print on hahnemühle photo rag.
View fullsize All what was underneath, [snow scene fragments],2012 [2015] Archival inkjet print,
View fullsize Mostly Mist. Installation view from a view from the window. Edmund Pearce Gallery. 2014
 

Edmund Pearce Gallery
Melbourne, Australia
2 -19 July 2014

An edited version of this exhibition was presented at: 
Wallflower Photomedia Gallery
Mildura
1- 29 August 2014

Download exhibition catalogue here

 

 

Curated by Jason McQuoid and Vivian Cooper Smith

Featuring: Sean Barrett, Danica Chappell, Kim Demuth, Jackson Eaton, Mike Gray, Megan Jenkinson, Benjamin Lichtenstein, Phuong Ngo, Izabela Pluta, Kate Robertson, Jo Scicluna, Vivian Cooper Smith, Melanie Jayne Taylor and Justine Varga.

View from the Window presents current thinking around photography (if we can even talk of something called photography any more).


The exhibition adapts its name from the oldest existing camera photograph, View from the Window at Le Gras by Nicéphore Niépce. Created with a cumbersome process using Bitumen of Judeah, it remains a trace of a day nearly two hundred years ago and a fragile, enigmatic object today. Since that time, photography has undergone continual seismic shifts in its short history. Given its technological foundations it was inevitable that as new processes and techniques were discovered they would influence current photographic practice. From daguerreotypes, cyanotypes through to Kodachrome, C-41, digital negatives and Photoshop just about everything has changed how we engage with the medium.


With the ubiquity of the modern photographic image View from the Window attempts to highlight the need for considered reflection upon the place and value of current photographic practices. The artists respond to this by considering what ‘photography’ is, and in doing so re-shape, re-imagine, expand and break it down. They explore new thinking with traditional techniques and invent new methods of image making. The work is digital and analogue, flat and sculptural, conceptual and experiential, whole and fragmented. Despite all this, the photographic ‘idea’ remains – reshaping the way we see the world.

 

 
 

All text and images © Melanie Jayne Sancho Taylor 2024. Reproduction by permission only.