- Place made
- Cape Denison, Antarctica
- Medium
- carbon photograph
- Dimensions
- 56.7 x 73.4 cm (sight)
- Credit line
- Gift of Richard Phillips 1994
- Accession number
- 944Ph5
- Signature and date
- Not signed. Not dated.
- Media category
- Photograph
- Collection area
- Australian photographs
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Antarctica: five responses from the collection, 2020-2021
Frank Hurley accompanied Douglas Mawson on Australia’s first expedition to Antarctica in 1911–14. His documentation in photography and film was critical to the mission, providing evidence for scientific discoveries, as well as enabling access for an eager public to the dramatic landscape and conditions prevailing there. Hurley’s photograph The blizzard, 1912, became emblematic of the extreme conditions experienced by the men. It shows two figures ‘hurricane walking’ or ‘wind walking’, whereby in order to move forward they would lean and ‘lie on the wind’. In stark contrast, Hurley’s A glacial fairyland, 1912, was taken at a moment of calm. These works, and his film Home of the blizzard (on loan from the National Sound and Film Archive), had a remarkable impact on the public on Mawson’s return – magnified by the fact that the environment could be experienced by so few.
Maria Zagala, Associate Curator of Prints, Drawings and Photographs
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Exhibition of unique photographic pictures taken during the Australasian Antarctic Expedition : also other photographic studies
The Fine Art Society, London, 26 January 1915 -
Antarctica: Five responses
Art Gallery of South Australia, 5 December 2020 – 26 April 2021
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[Catalogue] Hurley, Frank. 1914. Exhibition of unique photographic pictures taken during the Australasian Antarctic Expedition : also other photographic studies. London: The Fine Art Society, London.
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[Journal] AGSA Magazine.