LEANNE VINCENT
  • ABOUT
  • RECENT WORK
    • Inhabited: Anthromes of Queensland
    • Something blue
    • Coastal biome
    • Anas domesticus
    • Hometown, any town
    • Garden City
    • Other Cyanotype Collages
    • One Road
  • PREVIOUS WORK
    • Picnic Area
    • Something Borrowed
    • Memory containers
    • Finding ness
    • Outlander
    • Screen culture
    • Viewing distance
    • Ways of seeing
    • Ipswich: historical, contemporary, vibrant
    • Fragments: what people leave behind
    • of no consequence
  • CV
  • VIDEO
  • RESIDENCIES
  • PURCHASE ART
  • CONTACT
  • CYANOTYPE WORKSHOPS
  • ARTIST BOOKS
  • PUBLIC ART
  • NEWSLETTERS
  • BLOG ARCHIVE

VIEWING DISTANCE

20th Century devices for creating ‘images from nature’ are memorialised in digital editing programs.  Their histories overlooked by many, and identified only as an ‘effect’ on a photo editing app.

Functioning as indicators of Photography’s multiple histories, these analogue devices are iconic of their eras and even their resulting prints become displaced in our increasing virtual landscape.

Rapid advances in technology and demand for immediacy ensure that the distance between photo-imaging innovations has become obscured.


Technotopia
The Cache Collective group exhibition 
1 - 13 April 2012
Salerno Gallery
Glebe Point Road, Glebe, NSW

Copyright 2025 LeAnne Vincent. All rights reserved.
  • ABOUT
  • RECENT WORK
    • Inhabited: Anthromes of Queensland
    • Something blue
    • Coastal biome
    • Anas domesticus
    • Hometown, any town
    • Garden City
    • Other Cyanotype Collages
    • One Road
  • PREVIOUS WORK
    • Picnic Area
    • Something Borrowed
    • Memory containers
    • Finding ness
    • Outlander
    • Screen culture
    • Viewing distance
    • Ways of seeing
    • Ipswich: historical, contemporary, vibrant
    • Fragments: what people leave behind
    • of no consequence
  • CV
  • VIDEO
  • RESIDENCIES
  • PURCHASE ART
  • CONTACT
  • CYANOTYPE WORKSHOPS
  • ARTIST BOOKS
  • PUBLIC ART
  • NEWSLETTERS
  • BLOG ARCHIVE