Precinct Tour: Town Hall

06 May 2022
Image: Hannah Brontë, from the series [Divinely Protected], 2022. Photo by Stephanie Teixeira. Commissioned by Photo Australia for PHOTO 2022 International Festival of Photography. Courtesy the artist.

Image: Hannah Brontë, from the series Divinely Protected, 2022. Photo by Stephanie Teixeira. Commissioned by Photo Australia for PHOTO 2022 International Festival of Photography. Courtesy the artist.

When

06 May 2022

Friday, 1-2pm (AEST)

Explore PHOTO 2022’s outdoor program and get insights into the artworks through the perspectives of some of Melbourne’s top photography experts.

Join Catlin Langford, Curator of Photography at the V&A, as our expert taking this tour.

NOTE: This tour takes place outside and is weather dependent. If rain is forecasted, participants will be notified regarding cancellation prior to the event.

Speaker

  • Catlin Langford (AU)

    Catlin Langford is a curator, researcher and writer specialising in photography. She was the inaugural Curatorial Fellow in Photography, supported by The Bern Schwartz Family Foundation, at the V&A, focusing on early colour processes. Her publication ‘Colour Mania’, looking at the history of the autochrome, will be published later this year with Thames & Hudson/V&A. She previously held positions at the Royal College of Art, Guildhall School, Royal Collection Trust and Courtauld Institute. She completed her MA at the Courtauld Institute of Art, focusing on the contemporary curation of vernacular photographs.

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