Roger Scott (photographer)

Roger Scott (born 1944)[1] is an Australian social documentary photographer and photographic printer.

In December 2001 Scott published a retrospective of his work, Roger Scott: From the Street, with a foreword by Gael Newton, senior curator of photography at the Australian National Gallery. In addition to 139 of Scott's photos, the book included an essay by Robert McFarlane, a fellow Australian photographer and photographic critic. In his essay, McFarlane suggested that Scott's photographs "are unique within Australian photography. The intimacies he records in the lives of his subjects show that, far from being another purist disciple of Cartier-Bresson's worthy maxim of the decisive moment, Roger Scott introduces a new kind of instant in Australian documentary photography - the irrevocable moment." [2]

Scott's work was included in Candid Camera: Australian Photography 1950s–1970s at the Art Gallery of South Australia (2010).[3]

Book

  • Scott, Roger. Roger Scott: From the Street. Neutral Bay, NSW: Chapter and Verse, 2001. ISBN 0-947322-24-8.

Notes

  1. "Roger Scott, National Portrait Gallery". www.portrait.gov.au. Retrieved 12 August 2018.
  2. Scott, Roger & McFarlane, Robert, 1942- & Hock, Peter, 1954- & Scott, Roger, 1944- 2001, Roger Scott : from the street, Chapter & Verse, Neutral Bay, N.S.W - see also Trove summary http://trove.nla.gov.au/work/29120143
  3. "Candid Camera: Australian Photography 1950s–1970s", Art Gallery of South Australia. Accessed 30 May 2011.

gollark: The government here *is* apparently happy to pass stuff like the investigatory powers bill.
gollark: That doesn't seem to be a particularly universal view there, given the popularity of gun control stuff and the fact that as far as I know quite a lot of places still have knife restrictions.
gollark: Doesn't that also describe the US to quite a significant degree?
gollark: <@351074492577218560> Technically you can use external PCIe GPUs with the Pi. It's fiddly and you have to desolder the USB chip.
gollark: Besides, YouTube and random free content hosting things are "the internet" too.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.