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==Fine art photography==
==Fine art photography==
Since 2006 Ogden's work has focused on series of fine art photography, and extensive work with Aboriginal Australian imagery. His work was featured in the book ''A Few of the Legends''(2021) by Peter Adams.
Since 2006 Ogden's work has focused on series of fine art photography, and extensive work with Aboriginal Australian imagery. His work was featured in the book ''A Few of the Legends'' (2021) by Peter Adams.


==Author/Publisher==
==Author/Publisher==

Revision as of 05:06, 18 December 2021

John "Oggy" Ogden is an Australian photographer, cinematographer, writer and publisher, whose wide ranging career has encompassed producing television commercials, international documentary making, music video production, drama, and fine art photography.

Early life

Ogden, also known as Oggy, was born in South Australia of Anglo-Irish descent,[1] and may also have some Palawa heritage. He has worked all over the world, his projects spanning diverse cultures and nations including SE Asia, Sri Lanka, China, Japan, Europe, South America, the USA, and Indigenous Australia.[2] His work with imagery associated with Aboriginal Australians resulted in the books Australienation (1999), and Portraits From A Land Without People, released in 2009 to coincide with the first anniversary of Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd's apology to Australia's Indigenous peoples.[1]

Education and early career

Ogden began his career as a photo-journalist, and continued his personal development by completing an English degree, with a focus on film history and theory.[1][3] After graduating in 1979, Ogden began his career in filmmaking and advertising.

Work in film and documentary

Ogden credits his documentary filmmaking experience with giving him a good sense of natural lighting, as well as the invaluable experience of witnessing how real people behave in a variety of situations.[2] Notable credits include work as Director of Photography on As Time Goes By, Bad Boy Bubby (second-unit, 1993) and Mission: Impossible (second-unit, 1988–89). His short film House of Sticks (2011) was screened at Flickerfest (Bondi Beach), HollyShorts (Los Angeles) and several other festivals. Ogden also contributed photos and 16mm footage to the award-winning documentary 'Sea of Darkness' (2008).

Music video

Having acted as Director of Photography on over 50 music videos, Ogden has worked with many major artists including Prince, INXS, and Split Enz.[2] In an interview with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation in 2007, he recounted the challenge of filming a video directed by Prince, having signed a contract which expressly prohibited conversation with the artist.[4] Ogden credits working in this medium as teaching innovation.[2]

Fine art photography

Since 2006 Ogden's work has focused on series of fine art photography, and extensive work with Aboriginal Australian imagery. His work was featured in the book A Few of the Legends (2021) by Peter Adams.

Author/Publisher

After losing his eye in 1998, Ogden began publishing through his company, Cyclops Press. His debut book, Australienation(1999), featured his own black and white humanist photography. Partly inspired by a conversation in which he was upbraided whilst in England in his youth,[4] criticising the near genocide of the Aboriginal populations by the colonial immigrants, and subsequent culture clash, Ogden's 2008/9 work Portraits From A Land Without People is considered to be the most comprehensive pictorial history of the Aboriginal people of Australia produced, honouring fully the Aboriginal cultural code which requires permission to be granted by each individual in every picture.[1] To compile the book, and gain the appropriate permissions, Ogden travelled extensively over a four-year period, examining over 300,000 images, and visiting public libraries, galleries, museums and private collections in every state and territory in Australia. Ogden has described the dedication necessary to complete this task as a "beautiful obsession".[1]

In November 2011 Ogden released Saltwater People of the Broken Bays: Sydney's Northern Beaches, and in November 2012 released the companion book Saltwater People of the Fatal Shore: Sydney's Southern Beaches. Slightly Dangerous: The Cyclops' Cypher, published in May 2013, provides an insight into the inspirations and influences behind Ogden's work.[5] In his foreword to Slightly Dangerous, photographer Tim Page writes: "This is a life well travelled, of a baby boomer who surfs an existential path across six decades, waxing the best of nostalgia against the odds that are self mitigated by the excesses of those times. It is a heritage of the hippest, most gonzo ‘down-under’ attitudes, rendered by images we all wish we had snapped. As if Hunter S. Thompson and Richard Neville shuffled photo cards with Robert Frankian images throughout the deck".

Slightly Dangerous was the inspiration for the Shibboleth trilogy. Volume One, Woke(2018), was Ogden's debut novel and was followed up with Will(2019). The third volume is soon to be released.

Whitewash – The Lost Story of an African Australian" (2020) presents social history through biography. It is not just the story of one man, but an essay on race and identity, viewed through the lens of slavery and colonialism.

Waterproof – Australian Surf Photography Since 1858" (2021) is not just a homage to the pioneers and leading lights of Australian surf photography. It provides a lineage … a road map to understanding our national fascination with the surf zone.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "A completely permitted view of Aboriginal Australia". The Sydney Morning Herald. 19 September 2008. Retrieved 4 November 2020.
  2. ^ a b c d "John Ogden, Director of Photography ACS (Avalon, NSW)". ArtsConnect. Archived from the original on 17 September 2008.
  3. ^ Official website
  4. ^ a b "John Ogden and Debbie Spillane". ABC Radio: The Backyard. 29 May 2007. Archived from the original on 4 November 2007. Audio
  5. ^ Ogden, John (23 April 2013). "Saltwater People" (Audio, photographs, text). ABC Radio National (Interview). Interviewed by Adams, Phillip. Retrieved 4 November 2020.