The Evening Hours

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title The Evening Hours
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Ben Cauchi
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Category/GenreIndividual photographers
ISBN/Barcode 9780864738387
ClassificationsDewey:779.092
Audience
General
Illustrations 80 full-page plates

Publishing Details

Publisher Te Herenga Waka University Press
Imprint Victoria University Press
Publication Date 3 January 2013
Publication Country New Zealand

Description

Ben Cauchi's photographs seem to arrive from another time and place, yet are thoroughly of the present. His use of the mid-nineteenth-century wet collodion photographic process is a means to question and undermine the certainties that we continue to invest in the photographic image. Cauchi's is a subtractive practice, dwelling on absence, lulls, the uncertain, the opaque and the fleeting elements of life. His shadowy images fixed on metal and glass explore the psychological dimensions of viewing and the nature of photography itself by continually moving within and expanding the grey areas between truth and untruth, presence and absence, the empirical and the incorporeal, seeing and believing. The Evening Hours brings together new writing on Cauchi's practice with reproductions of over eighty of his photographs. The artist has played an active role in this process, returning to his own archive just as he trawls through photographic histories to select, re-present and sequence a decade of work.

Author Biography

Ben Cauchi was born in 1974 in Auckland, New Zealand. He became interested in photography in 1997 and has exhibited regularly since 2000. His work is included in every major public collection in New Zealand, as well as in the collections of the Art Gallery of New South Wales and the National Gallery of Australia. In 2007 he was awarded the Frances Hodgkins Fellowship at the University of Otago, Dunedin. Cauchi was an Arts Foundation of New Zealand New Generation Award recipient in 2011 and in the following year was awarded the 2012 Creative New Zealand Berlin Visual Artists Residency at the Ku nstlerhaus Bethanien in Berlin. This is his first monograph.