Monday, 11 March 2013

A Whale in Mid City

In March a gigantic hump whale beached in Sydney's CBD in Martin Place, and shines blackly in glorious afternoon sun. The event was a protest against mining developments planned for the Kimberley coast. See (for example) The Wilderness Society website.

This whale must have been a huge effort to man-handle into position.

Some ingenious mechanics are on display. 
Both eyes were illuminated from inside.
Note the water supply: every now and again a spout shot up into the air!
Supporter Claire showing off her 'whale tail' on top of a Sea Shepherd cap.
While a succession of excellent musicians jammed on through the afternoon, giving their energies to the cause. 
This photo is a little soft in focus, so I've given it a 'dry brush' filter in Photoshop. Once in filters, who can resist 'glowing edges'? I like it, but this contradicts my usual documentary photo dictum to keep it simple, and becomes a graphic. The key thing is the truly huge size of the whale.

 






Thursday, 7 March 2013

Elephants in Sydney



Prepare to be amazed at the little-known Macleay Museum hidden in a corner of Sydney University, which has many fascinating scientific specimens including this once-was-an-elephant. Magnificence is no protection against rampant slaughter, especially of big-tusked African elephants, which is continuing faster than ever due to blood-soaked Chinese demand. Find out more.
Taronga Zoo has many Asian elephants, with a full conservation breeding programme. See details. The nearest one in this photo balances on three legs while standing on a rock during an afternoon display.
This slippery-dip near Central Railway in Prince Albert Park is innovative, and the design appealed simultaneously to a three year old and a nine year old.  
 

Tuesday, 5 March 2013

Rubber Ducky at Darling Harbour

Who can resist a cute baby giant, the stilled heart of a childhood longing? Sydney Festival brought this rubber ducky by Florentijn Hofman (from the Netherlands) to Darling Harbour in January.

My grand-daughters Lily and Mali give scale to the Pop-able grandeur.

Monday, 4 March 2013

Girls with Terrible Lizard & Big Red

This was my grand-daughter Mali's own idea for a photo, when we visited the Sydney Museum, and she acts the helpless heroine perfectly as a terrible tyrant lizard prepares to crunch.

Movie references suddenly abound ... including the original King Kong movie (1933), though how could a monster reptile express feelings?

The photo was made in black & white (using a phone app with a square format). I don't find it sentimental at all, but oddly disturbing as she becomes - even pretend - prey.
Meanwhile, her sister Lily shows the true size of a big red. This kangaroo looks almost in fighting position - as an Australian icon, the boxing kangaroo is a pop cult cliche used as a sporting symbol. 

Red shoes, another movie. "Close your eyes and tap your heels together three times. And think to yourself "there's no place like home". The Wizard of Oz

Butterflies on a porch

These butterflies aren't fluttering by - but held in imaginary flight, both magical and compelling. If they were real and landed on a wall (unlikely) their wings would be raised and touching each other - while moths sit with wings folded flat.

This porch is in a row of small-fronted houses on Elizabeth Street in Redfern. The barred windows and doors (common in the area) show past problems, while the cheerfulness of the arrangement shows hope.

Tuesday, 26 February 2013

A Lackadaisical Stuffed Giraffe

Roger is the star at a shop in Redfern, Seasonal Concepts, which has some exceptional taxidermy amongst the semi-antiques. Ken and TR report that he died a natural death at Taronga Zoo before being recycled as a lackadaisical stuffed giraffe.

Many finely preserved animal heads are on display, trophies of an Australian hunter-collector in the 1950s-60s.

Ken says you need a seriously large room to display even one. Some of the heads (stag, addax, gazelle, etc) have an overwhelming presence. We cannot get as close as this to living animals even in a zoo. Looking at the immaculate reincarnations we tease ourselves with fright and stand our ground. The wild stares back at us through unfamiliar masks. We have evolved from hunter gatherers to hunter collectors.


A mean-looking coyote growls lasciviously.*

(* synonymous with lustful or lewd or unruly. Good word, lascivious, but maybe he's just hungry)

Sunday, 24 February 2013

Cockatoo as Cock-stopper

Cockatoos need good handling. George's companion Bess's hand is wrapped in cloth for a spontaneous wing display. Bess says that George is a real "cock stopper", and gets vocal when an interested man gets too close. Last time, he threw a steak knife while squarking "Get F---ed". 
George is a Sulphur-crested Cockatoo, living at the Friend in Hand hotel in Glebe, Sydney.
The hotel has a weekly event racing hermit crabs, and is well know for poetry readings, as well as for George.

Saturday, 23 February 2013

A dog and his shadow

A kelpie keen on catching its shadow by surprise.

Baz comes to Prince Alfred Park on Cleveland Street across from Strawberry Hills post office with his man Stephen.

Baz gets puzzled in cloudy weather, knows where to look: "it was there before!" - jumps and spins and barks and pounces when the sun returns.


Monday, 18 February 2013

Dragons, Fish and a Snake at Chinese New Year

The parade for Chinese New Year in Sydney took a long time going past - lucky the dragons weren't hungry! They were magnificent, brimming with energy as they swooped and swirled. 

Dragons come in many kinds and colours - see Wikipedia info here.

This year is referred to world-wide as 2013, but the Chinese Year is either 4710, 4711 or 4650 depending upon which year is numbered "1" by various scholars. 

Everyone knows it's the year of the Snake - this one has swallowed a bicycle!
A dragon in a school of fish.

Thursday, 14 February 2013

Death Rides High

Death rides high every day at the Australian Museum in Sydney. Children who were frightened for years by the sight of a human skeleton on his/her rising bone steed are bringing their grandchildren to see the immortal charge. Like a vision of the rider on a white horse in the book of Revelations? (What's scary is some people believe the fantasy of 'the end of days').

Archaeology as stones & bones.

Check a movie crane shot at the Museum's website (sorry, doesn't work on iPhone as it's a Flash video)

"How do you like your blue-eyed boy, Mister Death?"
ee cummings, Buffalo Bill 

Happy Valentine's Day anyway

Tuesday, 12 February 2013

The Bicycle Parrot and Ralph's Big Red Mouth

Caesar, an Eclectus parrot from New Guinea, paused for a photograph on its bicycle ride with Pierre, heading for the opening of the Eternity exhibition at Damien Minton's gallery in Redfern. You can see Eternity written in chalk on the footpath next to the abandoned shopping trolley, in the famous copperplate style. After the photo opp, Caesar was pleased to climb up onto a nearby admirer's hand for a somber head scratch. 


Outside a supermarket near the gallery, Cindy was helping her hand-puppet Ralph. Their sign reads: "Please help me get my bed tonight $15 God be with us all. Have a nice life to us all love you all." Cindy asked to be included in the photo. She said she's homeless, and usually raises money for a place to stay by making jewellery. Ralph was doing well with his cheerful big-red-mouth act, and coins were adding up fast. 

Sad update a few weeks later: Cindy was holding out a cup for spare change without Ralph today, and says that Ralph has been stolen.

Monday, 11 February 2013

Snow dogs in NYC


Thick snow in New York City, with dogs in booties ... how urban can you get? Everyone's well prepared for the season


Puppies in the pram ... what a life. Actually, the dogs look as fully grown as miniatures can be.  Heading for a romp in the snow-drifts filling Central Park? They look very keen to get somewhere. Note specialised  seatbelts across their chests..


These photos were taken in typical snow time in February 2010, with a Canon Powershot G9.

Sunday, 13 January 2013

Urban Animals #1 at Slot Gallery

Richard Tipping's photography exhibition Urban Animals #1 is at Slot Gallery in Sydney's Redfern from Monday 21 January to 23 February at 38 Botany Rd, Alexandria 2015.
Slot Gallery is a window display only. See gallery information at:  slotgallery.blogspot.com.au  

Urban Animals is an on-going series on animals and their images in the city and surrounds, trying for poignancy and the mysterious more than simply documentation. 
  
James the pig lives in a terrace house in Redfern. He sometimes hangs out in the park near the Rabbitohs' footy HQ and enjoys games offlead with gambolling dogs while sniffing out eats. 

Juliet Tabor at Australian Galleries has identified James as a Gloucester Old Spot, a rare breed appreciated for its docility and intelligence (Wikipedia again). Boars can grow to over 250kg.
See more photos of James below: getting a prize, and neatly avoiding a violin 
                     

  This coffee-spot in Redfern Street is marked with a striking painted gekko - which looks more iconic than local. Nonetheless, a fine gestalt. People like sitting outside, especially as there is no inside. Some of the seats are from bicycles (eg the guy with the brown hat's seat) on a pole and base. Three men are dealing with their phones. It's all men. Maybe women prefer the sit-down street-side cafes across the road?

This White Ibis is a native bird similar to the species worshipped by the ancient Egyptians. Ibis are common in Sydney these days, after fleeing drought inland. They like spending the night in the fronds of massive palm trees in Redfern Park. This bird in a Redfern lane is unperturbed by the surrealist affront of horizontal table legs. It is also undisturbed by the notice promising video surveillance.
Please 
help with
vet bill
Thank you



Yes, well. People do help, apparently, while these well-trained dogs have a peaceful nap on the edge of Chinatown. No owner was in sight. 

The dogs have also been spotted waiting (not busking) outside  the supermarket near Redfern Park.



A moment of graphic doubt for the labrador, spotting a cheerful orange rabbit smirking from the side of a box in a Redfern lane.

Tied on a blue lead, and recognising the image's non-edible nature, a calm dog continues along its day.








Lions by Belinda Villani, shown at SxS 2011 


Driving back to the city from Bondi, some tied-down lions stopped at the lights.
It was on the day after Sculpture by the Sea 2011 at Bondi closed, when artists came to collect their sculptures. 


James the pig receiving a prize in Great Buckingham Street, Redfern in September 2012, donated by a local advertising agency. He is shown sitting obediently, listening to the award speech. James is becoming both bigger and more famous by the day.  As spotter Franky Stein put it:
"Poor little pig nothin ... he's built like a tank!"
Are these dingoes? They look like dingoes. Three of them tied on tight leads, play-growling in Redfern Park. New evidence of genetic connections from India to ancient Australia 141 generations ago (4230 years) coincides with the arrival of dingoes, but they may be from Southeast Asia says one critic.Read an article about it at Australian Geographic
This kookaburra is half. Halfaburra? Not in the old gumtree but strapped across a large office building in Lane Cove. An icon photographed in flight, then cut into a headless half. The meaning is lost. Somehow the kookaburra is still clear and bold, having the last laugh. Listen to a caged kookaburra laughing alone on YouTube.
On the back porch of a Cairns apartment, this treefrog's usual place, disguised amongst pegs. Photographed in September XII when visiting Cairns planning a big public sculpture - just before arts expenditure in Queensland was trashed by a new conservative state government.Luckily this hasn't affected the frog so far.

   
Added 23 January XIII


Added 22 January XIII
Redfern Street, lunchtime. Outside the bank, a Vietnam vet on his Harley heads out with a bright-eyed toy animal strapped on. Note Tweety reflected in the bike mirror.

Barbie was walking by Coffee Tea & Me on Redfern Street and stopped for a snap. This photo may not be ironic, but the name of the dog definitely is: a Chinese Crested, says Wikipedia, is a breed originating in Mexico. 
Added 30 January XIII
A family portrait of White Ibis enjoying their rooftop home in Redfern, one parent feeding their youngster while the other watches on. Note the raised wings of the young ibis: this signal of spreading wings was repeated as a kind of "please" before each time food was given. 
Added 31 January XIII
James the Gloucester Old Spot pig is back, hunting for nibbles in the Redfern Park playground. Note unpertubed adults' feet and his delicate approach, not stepping on that violin! 
Added 31 January XIII
A moment later he trotted off towards visiting Park Rangers, who whipped out their phone cameras. Luckily there's no infringement for porcine pets off-lead, as James rooted around in the shrubbery.