Media Release
IMAGE: SHADOW PORTRAIT, C 1950 BY ROB HILLIER
E&D-5841-5/2023
SH
T
SHOT has been generously supported
by the State Library of NSW Foundation
NSW State Library’s landmark photography
exhibition now online
30/1/2024
The State Library of NSW is opening its virtual doors to the Library’s biggest and most
significant photography exhibition to date with today’s [Tuesday 30 January] online
launch of Shot.
The new online version of Shot — the exhibition which opened at the State Library in
October 2023 — delves into our extraordinary collection of two million images and
delivers a visual feast of 400 captivating moments by 200 photographers over three
centuries.
According to State Librarian Dr Caroline Butler-Bowdon: “The State Library is now
home to Sydney’s largest photography gallery, and if you can’t visit us on Macquarie
Street, or indeed you want to find out more post-visit, photography lovers across the
globe will now be able to view this extraordinary collection of images in their own
time.”
“Almost every photographic format and every year between 1845 and 2022 is
represented, starting with Australia’s oldest photograph, an 1845 daguerreotype by
George Barron Goodman,” says Dr Butler-Bowdon.
Senior Curator Geoff Barker spent two years trawling through the Library’s
extraordinary collection — one of the largest and most diverse in Australia — and
came across images that immediately piqued his interest.
This included a striking photo of two female farmers walking through an opium field
in Armidale in 1943. With the outbreak of the Second World War, Australia realised
it could be cut off from the supply of morphine needed for its hospitals and on the
battlefield. Members of the Women’s Agricultural Security Production helped plough
and sow this 40-acre plantation.
“The 400 photos are arranged into decades creating a unique visual history of
Australia over the last 180 years” says Geoff. “As you scroll through the decades you
will see things like fashion, architecture and transport, as well as photographic styles
and printing processes, change over time.”
Media Release
IMAGE: SHADOW PORTRAIT, C 1950 BY ROB HILLIER
E&D-5841-5/2023
SH
T
SHOT has been generously supported
by the State Library of NSW Foundation
He says, “the Library’s collections are a revelation for the fascinating development of
photographic technology, and the impact it had on the way Australians saw
themselves. No other collection in the country is so rich in its ability to explore the
visual history of the nation.”
Highlights include:
• early examples of colour photography (including rare photo-crayotype prints);
• one of the original Paget plates Frank Hurley saved from Shackleton’s sinking
ship Endurance in Antarctica in 1915;
• iconic works by some of our most acclaimed photographers, including Max
Dupain, Harold Cazneaux, David Moore, Olive Cotton; and
• contemporary images and commentary by over 30 living photographers,
including Stephen Dupont, Tony Mott, Anne Zahalka.
To ensure the best possible user experience, the Shot online exhibition has been
designed to be viewed on computer desktops only so users can easily move through
the timeline to view images either by decade, alongside captions or at full screen with
zoom capabilities. A mobile view will be developed later.
View the Shot online exhibition and learn more about the Library’s photography
program and collections here: sl.nsw.gov.au/photography
The Shot onsite exhibition has been extended to 3 November 2024 by popular
demand.
For more information, interviews and publicity images, please contact:
Vanessa Bond, Media & Communications Manager, State Library of NSW
02 9273 1566, 0411 259 898, vanessa.bond@sl.nsw.gov.au