Patrick Bingham-Hall

Patrick Bingham-Hall is an architectural photographer who came to prominence in the 1990s.[1]  He is also an architectural writer and editor, and owns Pesaro Publishing,[2] which publishes books on architecture and design.

Patrick Bingham-Hall
Born (1958-07-15) 15 July 1958
NationalityAustralian/British
OccupationArchitectural photographer, author, editor
Websitepatrickbingham-hall.com

Education

He was born on 15 July 1958 in Aden in Yemen, where his father (Group Captain T. L. Bingham-Hall) was in command of the Royal Air Force base, and spent his early years in London before emigrating to Australia in 1963. He was educated at Sydney Church of England Grammar School (Shore) and studied philosophy at Macquarie University for one year, before taking up photography at Sydney College of the Arts. He left in his second year to start his own photographic studio, and specialised in rock and roll photography, working with bands like Radio Birdman and The Saints. His cover photograph of the Radio Birdman album Living Eyes[3] became an iconic image of the underground rock scene in Australia.

Career

He switched to architectural photography in the early 1980s, and travelled the world to study architectural history and to photograph classic buildings. Many of these photographs were included in his first (self-published) book Monumental Irony.[4] In the 1990s he took the photographs for many books on Australian architecture, and was selected as editor of the book that documented the architecture for the 2000 Sydney Olympic Games.[5] He also wrote Austral Eden,[6] an idiosyncratic history of Australian architecture, and contributed articles to magazines in Australia and England.[7] In 1999, he formed his own publishing company,[8] Pesaro Publishing, which was to publish many books on Australian architecture within a few years. Bingham-Hall was usually editor and photographer. Most of his early books for Pesaro were done in collaboration with Philip Goad,[9] an architectural writer and academic from Melbourne. After publishing Architecture Bali[10] in 2000, Bingham-Hall decided to expand his publishing into Asia, while continuing to produce books on Australian architecture.[11] He also writes many of the books himself, particularly on tropical architecture in Asia. He is the author of monographs on WOHA Architects, Guz Architects, Peter Stutchbury, Colin K. Okashimo, K2LD Architects, Cicada Landscape Architects, LOOK Architects, and a book on houses in the Asia-Pacific region.

Patrick Bingham-Hall is married to Katrina, and they have five children – Salty Nettie Bingham-Hall, Pepe Jay Bingham-Hall, Rosemary Alice Bingham-Hall, Thomas James Bingham-Hall and William Ginger Bingham-Hall. His house in Balmain, Sydney, was designed by Rex Addison,[12] although he lived in Singapore for many years, before again immigrating to England.

Books by Patrick Bingham-Hall

Monumental Irony (1986) Austral Eden : 200 Years of Australian Architecture (1999)
Durbach Block Architects (1999) Troppo Architects (1999)
Olympic Architecture: Building Sydney 2000 (2000) Peter Stutchbury (2000)
James Barnet (2000) Celebrating Sydney 2000 (2000)
Architecture Bali (2000) New Directions in Australian Architecture (2001)
A Short History of Brisbane Architecture (2001) 8 Eight Great Houses (2002)
A Short History of Perth Architecture (2002) A Short History of Melbourne Architecture (2002)
Houses for the 21st Century (2003) Hassell Architects (2004)
New Directions in Tropical Asian Architecture (2005) Jones Coulter Young (2005)
Tonkin Zulaikha Greer (2005) Sydney Architecture (2005)
The Stadium (2005) New China Architecture (2006)
25 Houses in Singapore and Malaysia (2006) New Directions in the Australian House (2006)
Alex Popov : Selected Works (2007) The Australian House (2008)
The Architecture of WOHA (2009) No Boundaries : The Lien Villas Collective (2010)
Peter Stutchbury : Selected Projects (2010) The New Asia Pacific House (2010)
Stanisic Live:Work (2011) WOHA Architects : Selected Projects Vol. 1 (2011)
Tropical Arts and Crafts: The Houses of Guz Wilkinson (2012) Provoking Calm: The Artworks of Colin K. Okashimo (2013)
Tropical Expression: K2LD Architects (2013) Cicada Landscape Architecture (2013)
LOOK Architects (2013)

Exhibitions

  • Parliament House, Canberra, Australia 1988
  • RAIA Tusculum, Sydney, Australia 1990
  • State Library of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia 1999
  • Brisbane City Hall, Queensland, Australia 2004
  • RIBA, London, England 2004
  • Esplanade Theatres on the Bay, Singapore 2004
  • WOHAGA Gallery, Singapore 2007
  • Deutsches Arkitektur Museum, Frankfurt, Germany 2011
  • Creative Design Space at NAFA, Singapore 2012
gollark: Perhaps a 4-core CPU with outdated everything is slow.
gollark: I don't think it's too likely, but perhaps...
gollark: Or maybe your CPU is bottlenecking it.
gollark: *Amazing.*
gollark: Or, if you're a 1337 h4xx0r, do that with an NVMe drive.

References

  1. Architectural Review Australia, Summer 1998, page 38. 'Literal not metaphorical', by Kate Stewart.
  2. "Pesaro Publishing". Pesaro Publishing. 28 July 2010. Retrieved 21 March 2012.
  3. "Living Eyes/More Fun by Radio Birdman on MSN Music". Music.msn.com. 26 April 2005. Archived from the original on 10 July 2012. Retrieved 21 March 2012.
  4. RAIA NSW Architecture Bulletin, August 1986. 'Monumental Irony', book review by Frank Stanisic
  5. The Australian, 17 January 2000, p. 18. 'Making History', book review by Peter Ward
  6. "AA – Books – September/October 1999". Architecturemedia.com. Retrieved 21 March 2012.
  7. Building Design magazine, 10 September 1999
  8. The Australian Financial Review, 6 November 1999, p. 14. 'Drawing rooms to sit the way Australians live', by Anne Susskind
  9. "Beyond The Tin Shed". Ruralshed.com.au. 3 November 2001. Retrieved 21 March 2012.
  10. "AA – Books – January/February 2001". Architecturemedia.com. Retrieved 21 March 2012.
  11. Sydney Morning Herald (Domain), 21 April 2005, p. 12. 'He's in the Good Books', by Julia Richardson
  12. MICHAEL TAWA. "BINGHAM-HALL HOUSE". Architecture Australia. Architecture Media Pty Ltd.
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