Ocean Beach by David Corke

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ARTIST NOTES: An out-of-the-way beach near Robe, South Australia. By clearing out unnecessary detail lets us appreciate the contrast between the colors and texture of the ocean and the soft rolling dunes, with the dark and broken form of some hard rocks in the foreground.

DIMENSIONS (Height - 29.00 cm X Width - 45.00 cm )
MEDIUM ON BASE None Entered
GENRE Seascape
REGISTERED NRN # 000-44957-0207-01
COPYRIGHT © David Corke
PRIZES AND AWARDS No Awards

 

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Artist: David Corke



ARTIST BIO

DAVID CORKE

I began my working life as a photographer in an academic institution — learning all about black-and-white photography in the days of silver-gelatine printing. Mixing chemicals for processing films and prints; darkroom printing and enlarging; copying; and general photography with 5"x4" and 35mm cameras soon became part of everyday work for the next ten years.

I then went on to work in a film-production unit, making documentary films on that organization’s scientific research work throughout Australia. That was all working with pictures, sounds, and words; and meeting interesting people doing exciting work on the fringe of knowledge. Ten years later I moved on to become a free-lance photographer, director and writer of educational films for use in schools. A wide range of subjects were covered — biology, social studies, geography, Australian history, wildlife, art and anthropology.

Now in ‘active retirement', I’ve gone back to my early interests, but with a modern twist—combining analogue and digital photographs with computer editing, to produce gallery-prints from the monochrome and colour photographs I’ve collected in my travels throughout Australia.

As an artist, I don't need to see a whole lot of unnecessary detail in a picture; and as I'm working with images on a computer it's possible to "paint with pixels", and so focus attention on the subject or the composition. I’m amazed by the potential of what might be called ‘photo-impressionism’ or 'PhotoArt' — although many people will always say “that’s not a photograph!” But then, what is a photograph? An American artist/photographer once said: “Photography and painting are the same. Each renders imagination in tangible form … It all comes down to the same thing—the ability to envision a final result in your mind’s eye, and then to make it so with your tools at hand … art is the message, not the medium”. (KenRockwell.com)

To me, it's the message that's important, not the medium.