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Image: Teva Cosic, Untitled (till blåkulla), 2022.

Meet the PHOTO 2024 New Photographers

18.12.23

New Photographers returns for PHOTO 2024, showcasing work by Victoria’s most inspiring emerging photographers.

Six new names in photography show us the future of the artform: Cecilia Sordi Campos, Erhan Tırlı, Kyle Archie Knight, Nicholas Mahady, Pearce Leal and Teva Cosic.

 

This exhibition brings together six artists exploring concepts of construct, contrast, community, and the self. Curated by Catlin Langford, their works are united by a unique approach to their subjects, ranging from humour to the surreal, and technique, including staging, assemblage and collage.

Kyle Archie-Knight’s ongoing series Cruising for a Bruising is at once a poignant and humorous reflection on his experience growing up queer in in the outer suburbs of Naarm (Melbourne). Cecilia Sordi Campos pushes the boundaries of photography to examine ideas of womanhood, identity and the body, while Erhan Tirli combines a documentary and staged approach to explore long-term ethnography of culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) communities.

 

Teva Cosic’s work draws on personal and cultural narratives around family, history, tradition, and mythology to consider ideas of stability in the face of uncertain futures. Mixing documentary practices and found imagery, Pearce Leal explores the interrelationships between humans and fragile ecologies, and Nicholas Mahady work focuses on the relationship between atmosphere and image, and representing the unrepresentable.

 

Check out New Photographers at Daine Singer from 01 – 24 March, 2024.

Founding Partners
  • Bowness Family Foundation
  • Naomi Milgrom Foundation
Major Government Partners
  • City of Melbourne Arts Grants Program
Major Partners
  • Maddocks

PHOTO Australia respectfully acknowledges the traditional custodians of the lands upon which we work and live, and the rich and diverse Indigenous cultures across what is now called Australia. For over 60,000 years, Indigenous arts and culture have thrived on this sacred land, and we honour Elders and cultural leaders past and present. This was, and always will be, Aboriginal land.

01–24 March