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About the artist : ... Liam Lynch ................................................ Previous exhibition 'BREATH'

Exhibition: 'DRACONES et EQUORUM ' by Liam Lynch, MAY 6-17 2015

Exhibition: 'DRACONES et EQUORUM ' by Liam Lynch, MAY 6-17 2015

LIAM LYNCH returns to Melbournestyle Gallery, this time with a startling series of images made underwater right here in Port Phillip Bay.
Featuring Melbourne's official State Marine Emblem, the Weedy Seadragon and his cousin the Leafy Seadragon, these exquisite images are intricately detailed nature studies that play like the most fanciful of dreams. The Seadragons are captivating, in both design and character, and could claim the most extravagant clothes in nature. Lynch has created his own 'Gould's Books of Fish' in this series photographed on location and printed in a deep and detailed palladiotype process.
Can't wait. - MC.


An intrepid nature-lover and image-hunter, Australia's Liam Lynch goes far from the beaten track to create his images. Lynch is also a devotee of the palladiotype photographic process, which requires another excursion far beyond the norm. This painstaking technique shows a dedication to the labour of printing that is rare today.
After weeks underwater communing with these unique animals, Lynch is soon elbow-deep in alchemy: paper stocks are hand-coated with emulsion, and chemicals mixed from scratch. As a result of the 19th century process used, the images look genuinely antique in many ways, reminiscent of Joseph Banks' catalogues, or Darwin's specimen collections. Each image is composed using underwater backdrops that are carefully manoeuvred behind the subject and lit to create a 'studio like' feel.
Yet these works have a modern edge... Lynch combines the ancient palladiotype method with new technology and equipment to produce the final result. Using a contact printing method which requires a negative the same size as the final print, Lynch brings the raw files into a computer, then prints them out at the required size at high resolution on transparent sheets. The result is a high-quality negative ready for printing. The negative is then laid directly onto the paper and exposed to light, after which the paper can be developed into the finished print.
For Lynch crossing the line from machine-made to hand-made does necessitate a substantial commitment, and the work is certainly labour-intensive. But in the end, what unfolds before the eyes is no ordinary photograph. Each is a true work of art.

-Maree Coote, Author, The Art of Being Melbourne


PRINTS:Limited edition palladium prints on Canson Rag 310 gsm framed in hardwood stained black finish under UV perspex,
100% rag window mount, dry-mounted onto 3mm Forex
CANVASSES: Giclée prints on Archive Canvas

PRESS RELEASE


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