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Margin walker - a theatre of disembodied poetics

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posted on 2025-05-09, 08:40 authored by Roger Hanley
This exegesis, which is essentially an auto-ethnographic account, examines the particularities of my photographic practice, which has been forged and elaborated over a period of years, and which coalesced into an exhibition titled Margin Walker - A Theatre of Disembodied Poetics. The questions and concepts that are inevitably and tangentially raised by its singular style are interrogated. Margin Walker invites investigations into the nature of photographic truth, which are approached through applying pataphysical and surrealistic constructions in the directorial mode, using analogue large-format photography. Time and space are distorted and elevated to unfamiliar dimensions by what I call the process-exposure, an ever-evolving method whereby a dense temporal layering on the negative occurs. This enables me to create an unfamiliar, or even recondite, vision of the liminal landscape. It is one which, given that I do not apply post-production manipulations to the images, I argue is a literal recording of time and light, and thus, even impossible photographs are available for the interpretation of being truthful. An overview of the nature and style of Margin Walker is given in the first chapter, A Theatre of Disembodied Poetics. Here, the notion of a fundamental paradox upon which my photographs hinge, which structures and enables the work, is introduced. In the following chapter, Estrangement, Displacement, Belonging, I explore the primary motivations of the work, which derive from personal psychology. That very private realm is not just motivation, but it shapes the work in conceptual and practical terms as well. The chapters Nothing and Beingness, and then Periphery and Centre, ponder, respectively, the qualitative temperament of the photograph, and of the landscape, especially as they exist in the peculiar milieu of Margin Walker. I then, in Thinking Sideways, Building Backwards, use a number of ‘case studies’ of individual photographs as a matrix in which to explore not only their particular idiosyncrasies, but also the ways in which they serve more generally to illustrate and illuminate themes and motifs which occur throughout the larger body of work. Lastly, I consider the work of some contemporary photographic artists whose work I find of special interest; and I then review how my work has, over the years, been received in the wider world, and how it is shown in a culminating exhibition, in December, 2013.

History

Year awarded

2014.0

Thesis category

  • Doctoral Degree

Degree

Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

Supervisors

Chawner, Allan (University of Newcastle)

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Education and Arts

School

School of Creative Industries

Rights statement

Copyright 2014 Roger Hanley

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