A series of images passionately created by Andrew Vukosav
Intimate moments of solitude while traversing the Australian skies.
Flying solo on journeys into remote terrain that can take days or weeks
at a time, Andrew Vukosav has photographed a beautiful strangeness of the Australian continent, from a viewpoint that defiantly overturns tourist clichés of outback landscape.
An exhibition six years in the making, its imagery roams from the intricate and delicate filigrees of coastlines to the vast dunes and rock plateaus of the central Australian deserts. The world seems to metamorphose between states of fluidity and stability, between atmospheric and geological strata. Crystalline saltpans glisten like immense snowdrifts or opalescent glaciers; the shallows of estuaries seem to swirl like clouds.
With decades of experience as a highly successful commercial photographer and a similarly long love of piloting, Vukosav sought a photographic experience different to that of holding the camera up to the cockpit window. With some intricate engineering, he fitted out his single engine Cessna 182 with a Phase One 150mp XF Camera mounted in the underbelly of the fuselage. Something unusual happens with this. The whole plane becomes the camera body, pitching and banking into position for each shot, like a solitary eye looking this way and that. As a consequence, photographs do not feel as if they are framed through a viewfinder or from within a cockpit, but have a sense of radically open space. They give us as much an experience of the open sky around as they do of the vast earth below.
Opening night - Thursday the 27th of June
6.30 - 9pm
Trading times :
Mon-Fri 12pm-7 pm | Sat-Sun 10am-5pm