This site is but a small snippet of my work.

Through many years travelling and developing my photography skills, through ever diversified outback and urban locations, a passion for capturing my surrounds grows from of my love for the Australian landscape. I seek out small, unseen details. Or fleeting moments of the wider landscape, amazing because it was able to be captured at just the right moment in time. I hope you enjoy my photos.

Contact me if you wish to use or reproduce images found on this site.
email;gordon.landscapedetails@gmail.com

Previous Photography posts are spread over multiple pages; use the 'Blog Archive' menu at the page end or;

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Melbourne Rooftop Skyline


Melbourne Skyline Circa 2007, from Rooftop Bar. There are some crazy distortions in this image and that is to be expected for such a wide format. I have tried to maintain vertical perspective and warp the horizontal. This is a huge image file on my computer, measuring 2.8 meters wide, made up from 9 portrait images. Was a fairly flat image, there are now three image layers with different blend modes in each, adjusted curves for better contrast in the midtones, put on a low and high overlay gradient, black and white conversion, adjusted levels and finished with a red/orange colour filter over the top to warm the highlights a bit. I usually dont write about how I choose to manipulate my images to get to the end product, but suffice to say most get around an hour of editing to boost it from a flat RAW image file into something quite different, and abstracted from the original.

Marysville Fire Series




Bark Peels From Burnt Messmate, 2010. 
Mountain Ash Avenue, 2010.
Burnt Trunks Washed in Winter Snowmelt, 2010 

The scale of the decimated forests is inconcievable until you drive and walk through it, and the completeness of the death of the tall trees is stunning. But the forest now acts in other ways as the tall trees break open in the weather, decay, and pass their space onto the saplings growing below. I chanced upon this road when all the rest were blocked for ski season. This was the road that revealed the true extents of the fires path, and of a new way of looking at the landscape here.


Victorian Winter Coastline




Cape Conran, 2010. Managed to pull up to the campsite at just that right time where evening light gets all warm and soft and beautiful, and the remnants of a mildly wintery day washes across the sky.
Point Hicks, Thurra Camp, 2010. Heavily desaturated to amplify the contrast within the rocks and the sky, the dark rich water of a small river swoops out to meet the sea.

Tectonic Activity


Ben Boyd National Park, NSW, August 2010 Amazing geomorphic rock structures all along the Vic/NSW coastline.

Three Organic, Three Archi-textural







Random collection. A focus on my observed details photography. A sampling of fleeting moments recorded and documented through my lens; just one of an infinite number of possible views. These were my moments on the continuum of change which I chose to freeze and record the event, my version of seeing site.
From Top;

Strangler Fig reches its aerial roots to the ground. Brisbane Parkland. 2009
Skyscraper pushes high toward storm clouds. Brisbane 2009.
Red hydrant taps on grey pre-cast concrete wall. Melbourne Museum. 2010
Ancient seabed cracks on top of mountain. Glass House Mountains, Queensland. 2009
Shadows before the leaves started to grow. Melbourne Museum. 2010
Veiny leaf reaches for morning light. Gold Coast. 2009

Winter Beach 6AM

A moody cool morning shot from the beach in Cape Conran in East Gippsland. Low enough light for slow shutter speed to capture the ebb of the waves in frosted movement. I personally love the simplicity and abscence of large features from this scene, so it relies on the geometry in stacking of lines from beach to horizon and the small details within the sand in the foreground.

Flock of Cockatoo's


I once proposed this flock of birds represented the mood I was in.... What sort of mood does it take on for you? I am always trying to capture a few elements of the 'living', as most of my photographs focus on the static around me. It is such a dynamic sight to see the spatial rearrangement within the flock and the amalgamous entity that the flock takes on. Unfortunately the combined sound of these Sulphur Crested Cockys is about the most gratingly horrid aural experience known to man. Enjoy the photo here without the need to suffer the sound.

Beautiful Sand....





The more photographs i take the more I am becoming confident of my style, or at least my interests. Sand and powerlines rate up there pretty high....! This epic landscape (though its hard to guage the landscape as such, as i havent provided it...this abstractive view asks you to visualise the rest) spanned around 50 acres, or maybe 10 MCG's sized expanse. It was a collossal coastal dune system. But the details within...I have never been so amazed at the patterns within these shifting sands, and the record of life left from the night before in the tiny tracks made by beatles and birds scampering across.

Industriality







Most of my recent attempts at invigorating my photography has seen me taking photos with a distinct industrial edge. I am awed by the extreme functionalist, operational nature of sites that aim to aggressively maximise production within spatial confines. I am an engineering functionalist at heart still and the beauty inherent in the order of a system trained in dedicated efficiencies is stunning. Top photo is of an Aldi rooftop carpark. Middle split-toned images are from a day exploring the outer western container port areas of Melbourne, its fair to say i had some stares from truckies... The last pic is of a more vintage warehouse in the slowly receding Williamstown/Newport industrial region. It makes me want to design a house that includes those gabled roofs.

Mallacoota Coastline



Ok. A return to my holiday a few weeks ago up the South-East Coast. Two different moods captured in the same locale, but the black and white around 30 minutes before sunrise, the other about 1 minute before. They are taken in a remote wilderness area around half an hour south of Mallacoota. I aimed to visually capture the gentle ebb of the washing sea that I had heard all night camping on the cliff above. I am overloaded with with photos from this holiday so more to come...!