Collapsible Time: Contesting Reality, Narrative And History In South Australian Liminal Hinterlands
Abstract
My practice-led project explores the indexical lamination of memory, history, narrative and reality afforded by photography imbued with the illusion of spatial dimensionality. This thesis investigates the notion that far from freezing a ‘slice of time’ photography reanimates perception through sensation rendering duration flexible and elastic. Using the liminal landscape of South Australia as time’s stage, I contend that time is ‘collapsible’, constantly unfolding and repeating. In embracing this temporal flow, I submit that photomedia becomes our most compelling connection to time itself, as lived experience. It is this connection that can act as an ethical agent of change for the betterment of the landscape in which we live. The project includes work created in South Australia, the ACT, the United States and the Outer Hebrides and Shetland Islands of Scotland. It includes artefacts photographed in the Adelaide Civic Collection, The South Australian Museum and the National Museum of Australia.
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time, temporality, South Australia, photography, video, multimodality, archives, elastic photography, video, memory, history, narrative, reality, illusion, digital, analogue, wet plate collodion, Australian, landscape, Colonel William Light, museums, practice-led PhD, hinterlands, bioavidity, collapsible time, whyalla art prize, bergson, deleuze, duration, duress, 3D, 2.5D, stereoscopes, parallax, time-pressure, tarkovsky, Ross Gibson, cinema, expanded photography, z-space, CJ Taylor
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