There will be a floor talk this Sunday, 2nd October at 3.00 pm to discuss River.
Manuka Arts Centre
Cnr Manuka Circle & NSW Cres
(next to the Manuka Pool)
Griffith ACT
Thursday, 29 September 2016
Monday, 26 September 2016
Canberra Times and Sydney Morning Herald review of River by Peter Haynes
Peter Ranyard's River captures the beauty of a largely inaccessible part of New Zealand visited by the artist over a number of years. Ranyard is obviously deeply attracted to the sites pictured in the 28 photographs that comprise the exhibition. Each image is beautifully rich in topographical detail and this, aligned with a reverential awe for the power of the natural world, gives them powerful presence. Ranyard uses black in a particularly effective way. His blacks are dense and lush, redolent of a primeval past and of things no longer present. They are both colour and mood and act as purveyors of memory. The memories may initially be those of the artist and relate specifically to his chosen subject matter but it is a credit to him that viewers are invited (albeit extremely subtly) to move from his particular reveries to those of their own. Ranyard's evocative atmospheric landscapes clothed in his marvellous blacks are about memory and the power of the natural world to continually elicit responses from those who care to converse with it. They are about possibilities of loss, and about places once experienced but now remembered. They are also beautiful.
http://www.smh.com.au/act-news/canberra-life/photoaccess-shows-by-amy-dunn-annika-harding-peter-ranyard-and-oscar-capezio-20160920-grkg8n.html
http://www.canberratimes.com.au/act-news/canberra-life/photoaccess-shows-by-amy-dunn-annika-harding-peter-ranyard-and-oscar-capezio-20160920-grkg8n.html
Tuesday, 20 September 2016
Tiff Brown Botanica painting exhibition and Pete Ranyard River photography solo show
Tiff will be in attendance at her Botanica show from 2.30 Saturday 24th September 2016 at Bisonhome Pialligo.
https://www.bisonhome.com
Bisonhome Flagship Store
6/8 Beltana Rd Pialligo,
Canberra ACT 2609
Australia
Peter will be in attendance at his River photography exhibition from 12-4 Sunday 25th September 2016 at PhotoAccess Griffith.
http://www.photoaccess.org.au
Manuka Arts Centre
Cnr Manuka Circle & NSW Cres
(next to the Manuka Pool)
Griffith ACT
https://www.bisonhome.com
Bisonhome Flagship Store
6/8 Beltana Rd Pialligo,
Canberra ACT 2609
Australia
Peter will be in attendance at his River photography exhibition from 12-4 Sunday 25th September 2016 at PhotoAccess Griffith.
http://www.photoaccess.org.au
Manuka Arts Centre
Cnr Manuka Circle & NSW Cres
(next to the Manuka Pool)
Griffith ACT
Botanica-an exhibition by Tiff Brown at Bisonhome in Pialligo ACT
Award-winning local artist and illustrator Tiff Brown creates an exhibition
of paintings celebrating the floral beauty of Spring
Brian Tunks, creative
director and entrepreneurial force behind Bisonhome, has invited Tiff Brown to
create a series of still life paintings for his Spring-inspired festival Botanica. This exhibition, including
works on paper and canvas, features all manner of botanic specimens, flora and
fauna, interwoven with Bison’s newest vessel designs, as well as incorporating some
Bison ceramic favourites.
The opening will be this Saturday
at 2.30pm, 24 September at Bisonhome, 8 Beltana Road, Pialligo ACT. The show
will run until Sunday, October 16.
The exhibition will run in
tandem with the month-long festival Botanica
at Bisonhome. This festival
includes free events and seminars ranging from how to curate an exciting event
and style-up the perfect dinner party, bake an award-winning delight, and
create a stunning floral display with an exciting array of guest speakers
including accomplished stylists, floral designers, magazine writers and
editors.
Friday, 16 September 2016
Penelope Grist opening speech for River
An extract from Penelope Grist's opening speech
Peter Ranyard’s River was edited down to 28 prints out of thousands of negatives – an extraordinary feat in itself, Peter presents Poronui, an area outside Taupo, New Zealand that runs into Maori lands and that he visited over a period of ten years for commercial work with the lodge there. When the lodge was sold a few years ago, a box of negatives arrived – with all his images of this remote, stunning, timeless place that he’d shot within and outside the brief!
What is so extraordinary about these images, a testament to the art of Peter’s rhythm in editing and hanging the show as much as his care with the contrast and soft grain, is that they are not gothic. Black and white images of isolated places, old sheds, forest, whispering grasslands – all the ingredients are there. But no – they are gentle, human, inhabited and uninhabited, respectful and welcoming. How could they not be, with the inclusion of characters like Flick, the lodge dog who just turned up one day and stayed. The other thing these works are not, is Lord of the Rings – they are not what is now recognised and has become almost a stereotype of the New Zealand landscape. They are just as beautiful but more complex, universal, poignant and, as Peter put it to me – ‘more like a place in your memory.’ Hardy Lohse writes that ‘Peter Ranyard’s images create a space where we can revel in the joy of feeling small in the world, satisfying an urge to be elsewhere and to explore, matching our imaginations with reality.’6
Great American photographer of black and white landscape, Ansel Adams said that ‘There are worlds of experience beyond the world of the aggressive man, beyond history, and beyond science. The moods and qualities of nature and the revelations of great art are equally difficult to define; we can grasp them only in the depths of our perceptive spirit.’7
The full speech is available here
Tuesday, 13 September 2016
Thursday, 8 September 2016
Peter Ranyard's bio for River
Peter Ranyard is
a formally trained commercial photographer, fine artist and educator who has
maintained a professional arts practice for more than 20 years. He has had
extensive experience collaborating on projects in the fine art, corporate,
institutional and private sectors in Australia and overseas as well as being a
photography teacher and administrator.
“Photographer
and historian alike are storytellers who must choose what to include and what
to leave out, how close to stand to their subjects, how to frame their tales.”
Martha A.
Sandweiss
Most recently
Peter has had a solo exhibition Coast at Canberra Institute of Technology in 2012, a two-person exhibition Material Substance and the
Lightness of Touch with the ceramicist Sarit Cohen at Form Gallery in
2013, Beneath the Surface at M16 Artspace in 2014 and Impermanence
at the Firestation Gallery (Armadale Melbourne) in August 2015. Currently, the
solo exhibition River, showing
at Huw Davies Gallery at Photoaccess in September 2016
comprises 28 small, richly toned prints. In November 2016 Peter is the curator
and member of the exhibition Memoria Platea to be held at M16
Artspace.
Peter has
undertaken numerous fine art and commercial commissions and has previously been
selected to be included in the Communication Arts Photography Annual.
“The articulate
audible voice of the past when the body and material substance of it has altogether
vanished like a dream.”
Thomas Carlyle
Wednesday, 7 September 2016
Saturday, 3 September 2016
River catalogue essay by Hardy Lohse
“How we understand our landscape and our part in it …
has a profound influence on how and what we remember and take from our
landscape and how we glean meaning from newly encountered places[1].
Peter
Ranyard’s work, River (2016), a
selection of 28 images - shot on film and carefully manipulated in
post-production, evoke a deep sense of longing and a nostalgia for a place we
all hold close, but rarely get to. For
some, it may only be an imagined place, for others it is a place of childhood
adventures, or hiking trips with best friends or first loves, or perhaps places
only consumed through novels and other’s descriptions. Ranyard allows us to hear the tumbling of
the river, to feel the damp of the ferns as they brush against us and to
venture into something only able to be experienced once. The
poet, painter and art critic, John Berger, writes of photographs as having the
ability to show us what was and what is all at once and Ranyard’s River embodies this, drawing us into the
images to pause and imagine what
the conditions were really like the moment the shutter was pressed and the
image made - each image standing as witness to his experience of the wild, and now, as a record of a moment
passed, leaving us yearning for our own journey as we wander from photograph to
photograph.
Ranyard’s
images reflect a manageable wilderness, a wild we can escape to, one we can
tame just enough to gain an understanding of what lies beyond. They also present something exotic to most
of us – something unseen and not yet experienced, giving us a glimpse of an environment that is
ancient and all but untamed by permanent human inhabitation. The series creates a landscape of imagined
memories, one where viewers can see themselves in the photographs, capturing
the images and stirring up distant recollections of experiences possibly made
into the wild – although we can’t be sure
we made them. Through his mix of
aerial, traditional landscape and detailed close up, each carefully composed
and heavily manipulated to reveal just enough information, we can sense the
rugged environment, the cool climate, the smell of earth and soil and
decomposing foliage and overlay our own memories – real or otherwise - on his
images. We are allowed to follow the
journey Ranyard made over a number of years to Poronui, an area outside Taupo,
New Zealand, almost as if at his side, feeling the isolation and emptiness of
the plains, the denseness of the rainforests with the river serving as link to
an outside world. Ranyard employs a deliberate
use of dense, deep blacks, diffusion and grain to create distance from direct
memory and experience – each manipulation serving as metaphor for our
interaction with the environment, just as our memories are often romanticised
and almost always selective of any experience.
For most of
us, the reality of an adventure to an untouched place seldom matches our
imaginations. However, Ranyard’s images
create a space where we can revel in the joy of feeling small in the world,
satisfying an urge to be elsewhere and to explore, matching our imaginations
with reality. It goes without saying
that the world has changed, just about anywhere in the world is accessible,
however, in River, Ranyard reminds us that there are still pockets left untouched - stirring
the environmentalist, the explorer and the romantic in us all to go on that
journey, to follow that river, to venture into the unknown, to discover the
exotic.
[1] Geraldine Mate, Memory: how people remember the landscape, accessed http://www.qhatlas.com.au/essay/memory-how-people-remember-landscape 31 August 2016.
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