‘Ever Present’
Photographs from the Collection 1850–1975
Jun 2013 -
Oct 2013
Images from photography's early years evoke a seemingly remote past through old-fashioned clothing and poses, as well as often unfamiliar customs and geographies. But they also deliver the past to us in a very immediate and familiar way. Through photography, the past is always with us — it is 'ever present'. Drawn from the Gallery's historical collections, this exhibition presents works by unknown nineteenth-century photographers alongside iconic images by some of the masters of the twentieth century, such as Walker Evans, Henri Cartier-Bresson and Diane Arbus. The images suggest the multiple stories comprising the history of photography in the pre-digital era.
'Ever Present: Photographs from the Collection 1850–1975' was on display at QAG, from 8 June to 13 October 2013. The sample list of works below is non-exhaustive.
Feature image: (l–r) Portraits by Baron Raimund von Stillfried-Ratenicz installed alongside an unknown photographer's Burma, durian sellers c.1880, for 'Ever Present', Gallery 6, QAG, September 2013 / Photograph: M Sherwood, QAGOMA
Collection artworks featured in ‘Ever Present’
Mr and Mrs Caleb Morgan c.1850
- UNKNOWN - Creator
(Street band, Singapore) c.1890s
- BECKER, E. - Creator
Burma, durian sellers c.1880s
- UNKNOWN - Creator