Shadows : Re-visualising the shark. Developing a framework for hybrid photography in the illumination of nonhuman animal and ecological perspectives at Heron Island and Gladstone, Great Barrier Reef


Autoria(s): McKelvey, Bridgette
Data(s)

2013

Resumo

This study investigated how and to what degree “hybrid photography”—the simultaneous use of indexical and fictional properties and strategies— innovates the representation of animals within animalcentric, ecocentric frameworks. Design theory structured this project’s Practice-led, Visual research methodology framework. Grounded theory processes articulated emerging categories of hybrid photography through systematically and comparatively treating animal photography works for reflexive analysis. Design theory then applied and clarified categories, developing practice that re-visualised shark perspectives as new ecological discourse. Shadows, a creative practice installation, realised a full-scale photographic investigation into shark and marine animal realities of a specific environment—Heron Island and Gladstone, Great Barrier Reef—facing ecological crisis from dredging and development at Gladstone Harbour. Works rendered and explored hybrid photography’s capacity for illuminating nonhuman animals, in particular, sharks, and comprise 65% of this project’s weighting. This exegetical paper offers a definition, strategies and evaluation of hybrid photography in unsettling animal perspectives as effective ecological discourse, and comprises 35%.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/63825/

Publicador

Queensland University of Technology

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/63825/1/Bridgette_Anne_McKelvey_Thesis.pdf

McKelvey, Bridgette (2013) Shadows : Re-visualising the shark. Developing a framework for hybrid photography in the illumination of nonhuman animal and ecological perspectives at Heron Island and Gladstone, Great Barrier Reef. PhD thesis, Queensland University of Technology.

Fonte

Creative Industries Faculty; School of Media, Entertainment & Creative Arts

Palavras-Chave #animalcentrism, animal studies, ecocentrism, Gladstone, Great Barrier Reef, Heron Island, hybrid photography, marine animals, photography, sharks
Tipo

Thesis