03 July - 10 August Last Train to Banksia
Link to artist's website
Link to artist's website
Bryan is a neighbour. He is the Fitzgerald of Chee Soon and Fitzgerald, a shop along Regent St. He’s the guy who sweeps the street in a wide arc around the shop, delivering the same aura of calmness to our street that his shop exudes. And he’s a photographer who observed Raam, a friend making his way to Redfern Station for the Last train to Banksia. And among these various endeavours the idea that threads them together is patina – Bryan’s alertness to patina.
Patina is the surface texture of things that visually conveys mood. It’s
the shine on an old car’s chrome-work that labels it a classic, the
faint echo of wall paint that encapsulates a past rather than indicating
the need for modernization. It’s the beauty born of time and the
passage of hands. And it’s the romanticism of walking down a street
alive to every sensation where the visual charge is of life lived. This is the mood
that Bryan Fitzgerald captures for us in his photographs of our streets.
Bryan offers us the gift of pause. It is the moment of stillness, listening, watching some perfect moment of light and shade across a surface that is gone in the moment it takes to perceive it. Then again that might simply be a friend rushing to catch the last train home.
He was born in New Zealand and living there in timber houses he says that he learnt about patina from his great aunts. With a single sweep of their hands they cleaned, making no distinction between inside and out. Timber was scrubbed, the weatherboards painted, lino was no doubt mopped, week in week out imbuing each surface with life. Small changes, incremental differences building across the passage of time and recorded as surface patina are savoured here in photographs of Raam making his journey, short and local that we might understand as cinema. We watch transfixed as time passes
Bryan offers us the gift of pause. It is the moment of stillness, listening, watching some perfect moment of light and shade across a surface that is gone in the moment it takes to perceive it. Then again that might simply be a friend rushing to catch the last train home.
-Tony Twigg
All works are for sale in editions of 5 at $350 each
Enquiries – contact@cheesoonfitzgerald.com 83991305