The scenery is lovely, and I have to say I think in particular the painting is wonderful!
Title inspired by the permanence of the subject, Eddystone Point, Tasmania. Exif: Olympus, taken 2002, f/2.8, 1/800, iso100
Im referring to the unnatural edges around the body and the inconsistent lighting of the figure in relation to the scene. That's either rather crude digital restoration of shadow detail or photomontage. I'd be happy to assume it's not the latter, but that still leaves the former. Now, there's no accounting for taste, but I find it a little...idk, crude. For me, it doesn't work very well this way, sorry.
What a great photo Bender; that looks like a very serious tinny your grandfather had, and how serendipitous that the broody cloudscape is somewhat similar to that in mine. Do you know in what year that might have been?
1987 is our best guess but it may have been earlier... my earliest trip there was when I was still in nappies circa 1980/1981. Unfortunately dementia started to get the better of my grandfather in his last decade of life (he passed in 2024) and that coupled with his relative indifference to this photography in retirement (it was a job, not a passion) meant that getting dates and details out of him was increasingly difficult.
The old boat is still about too (my uncle has it) though the original Chrysler 75hp has long gone to the unreliable-two-stroke-outboards-graveyard-in-the-sky. Keeping all the Mercury blue labels company ;-)
I moved over to NE VIC in 2010 to care for a close friend with dementia who passed away in 2015, so I know how devastating that disease is.
Location: Edith Falls, Northern Territory, AU
Olympus E-3, f/10, 1/640sec/ISO-250/23mm
A popular swimming hole, crocodile free,
guaranteed, trust me ...
View attachment 418706
Below: My rendition in Oils with wife in the pool ...
View attachment 418707
Yup, those were the days, my friend...Looking back to Cox's Bight, Southcoast Trek, Tasmania.
View attachment 418833
A seven day trek from Cox's Bight to Cockle Creek, 1994.View attachment 418835
A snack before the long trek in Tassie's Southwest.
No bull, I love the painting more than the photograph!! A very, very good interpretation of the scene with a sort of cubist interpretive quality to it.
I toured around Australia solo (tenting it!) in 2011 for 9 months, with highlights being Karlu-Karlu/Devils Marbles, Coober Pedy, Darwin, Kununurra, Broome and especially 80 Mile Beach, then the Gasgoyne region south down to (boring) Perth. Did some charcoal drawings of 80 Mile Beach, copping sunburn into the bargain! I do remember Edith Falls in the NT, along with the more popular (perhaps far too popular) waterfalls that doubled as famously crowded swim spots, along with Mataranka thermal pools.
___________________________________________
L to R: Pinhole camera 6x6 of a rock outcrop, Devil's Marbles;
Evening afterglow at Devil's Marbles, and
6x17 panorama from a home made 6x17 camera with an ancient Komuranon 90mm lens (the camera no longer survives); and Sturt Desert Pea, Gasgoyne beaches region, WA.
The two panorama prints were RA4 printed and framed; both in private collections with two Estate editions at home.
Im referring to the unnatural edges around the body and the inconsistent lighting of the figure in relation to the scene. That's either rather crude digital restoration of shadow detail or photomontage. I'd be happy to assume it's not the latter, but that still leaves the former. Now, there's no accounting for taste, but I find it a little...idk, crude. For me, it doesn't work very well this way, sorry.
Where can I see some of your work?
It's in the gallery and on my website; soms of it on my blog and a lot of older (and mostly pretty abysmal) stuff on the main website which I keep up but no longer maintain.
Sorry you've taken down the image; I you're of course free to do so at any time. I think it's a given that not everyone will like every image they ever see; I'd personally try not to be too bothered by it if someone says something critical of an image.
Hi koraks - you were right, it wasn't a great image, and it wasn't a camera phone image; it was a snapshot taken by my wife on a DSLR during a tour of the Northern Territory. I didn't bother to process the file before posting it. If I had, I would certainly have considered a shadow/highlight adjusment. I'm looking at the EXIF data: Olympus E-3, f/8,1/80sec, ISO-500, lens 20mm. But it's history now with no hard feelings. Take care mate.
Taylor, your 9mths tour was far more extensive and ambitious than mine for only one month. I also tented it.
Ambition and Art. Two great things in life!
But that "simple, economical trip around the traps" cost, all up, $26,000. It was very productive photographically though. Besides petrol, a lot of the cost was accommodation in resort towns where double- and triple bookings were annoyingly troublesome and caused by demanding "grey nomads". Their trick? Edging others out by using displays of money, influence and even cash bribes! Particularly prevalent in Central Australia, NT and the top of WA. Places I would never go to again unless I had a ginormous big rig, dripping with gold bling, a fake orange tan, a manicured poodle and crocodile skin slips : Alice Springs (caravan park there was surrounded by an electrified fence and scrutinised by security cameras to keep the naughty natives away), Coober Pedy, Darwin, Kununurra and Broome.
What a great photo, 'Bender'; that looks like a very serious tinny your grandfather had, and how serendipitous that the broody cloudscape is somewhat similar to that in mine. Do you know in what year that might have been? My wife and I also set up camp there overnight, Oct., 2003.
Olympus compact, f/2.8, 1/60sec, ISO-100
View attachment 418780
Overnight camp, somewheres inconspicuous, off road Outback, NT Australia -
Title inspired by the permanence of the subject, Eddystone Point, Tasmania. Exif: Olympus, taken 2002, f/2.8, 1/800, iso100
Yup, those were the days, my friend...
I don't do much of that these days. lol.
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