People are usually happy if a photograph catches a nice smile or a beautiful landscape. Fabian Muir wants his photographs to capture more, and he travels to some of the world's most ostracised countries to take them.
The playroom of a provincial orphanage in North Korea.
Looking at the big picture 鈥 literally 鈥 is what drives photographer Fabian Muir (LLB 鈥91).
Muir鈥檚 work is a journey into the unexpected. From the stark black-and-white shots of his Sydney series Emerge to his humanist treatments of 鈥渙utsider鈥 countries such as North Korea and Iran, disrupting traditional narratives about place and people is a key feature of his work.
Muir himself is sincere, funny, genuinely interested in people and, at times, delightfully cynical. We don鈥檛 get to meet, but he talks on the phone from his apartment in inner Sydney鈥檚 Paddington, where his mobile surprisingly sputters in and out of reception. His voice is warm, and the conversation is littered with jokes. He is not a hard subject to interview.
Muir grew up in a family heavily embedded in the arts scene; his mother, Elke Neidhardt, was an actress and opera director; his father, Christopher Muir, a documentary film director and head of drama at the ABC; while Norman Kaye, his stepfather, was an actor and musician. Surrounded by art and discussions on literature, theatre and art-house film, it was perhaps inevitable that he would follow a creative path, though for a teenage Muir, the last thing he wanted to do was follow in his parents鈥 footsteps.
Muir's series taken in Iran shows how different the lives of Iranian men are compared to women.
Muir explains: 鈥淚f my parents had been lawyers I might have said I want to be a filmmaker or an actor or something like that. But they had pre-empted me, so I thought right, I鈥檓 going to become a lawyer.鈥
While studying law, writing work with publishing house Studio Magazines led to a job offer as the Spanish correspondent for their newly launched photography publication, Black & White. Reviewing photography and photographers helped him develop a visual aesthetic and an internal philosophy that would serve him well when he finally took the plunge to leave law after several years in practice. Being completely self-taught as a photographer, it was a leap that took courage.
As it turned out, Muir鈥檚 law studies have also played a role in his work as a photographer, 鈥湼咔甯@琲ng law gives you a forensic approach,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t also helps you find some kind of 鈥榦bjective truth鈥 in your subject matter.鈥
From the Blue Burqa in a Sunburnt Country (2014) series.
This is expressed in his fondness for exploring human nature within complex political backdrops, which has led him to Iran, Cuba, North Korea and 15 former Soviet countries. After many years living in Berlin, he now spends six months of the year in Sydney with the rest of the time working on his continuing projects overseas, where he has found that speaking a number of languages (German, French, Spanish and 鈥渢errible鈥 Russian) helps greatly. He believes being multilingual is invaluable for photographers.
Anticipating potential situations forms a big part of his photographic process, and he often waits long periods for the right elements to emerge. This measured process was challenged when he went to North Korea, and had to take photos in the constant company of minder-guides. In typical Muir fashion, he is expansive towards his guides.
鈥淭hey鈥檙e constrained by the rules as much as you are. I tend to be less harsh on minders than other people 鈥 certainly there are journalists who see them simply as this impediment and forget that they鈥檙e human beings as well. If you can establish a good rapport with them, they鈥檒l help you as much as they can.鈥
Fabian Muir at a kindergarten show in North Korea.
On his first visit to North Korea in 2014, he was surprised to discover a complexity he had not expected. 鈥淚t was the things that ran counter to the established narratives that surprised me the most,鈥 he says.
鈥淐hildren playing and laughing and coming up pinching you and that sort of thing. I thought that鈥檚 really worth exploring 鈥 It鈥檚 an incredibly layered place. It鈥檚 too simplistic to just sit back and rely on the clich茅s.鈥
He is cynical about tourists who say they鈥檝e risked their lives to smuggle pictures out of North Korea. In his experience it is what you bring into the country that the authorities are interested in 鈥 his pictures get checked on entry, not on exit.
One of his most challenging assignments was in Abkhazia in 2008 when the Russo-Georgia war broke out. Despite his vulnerability taking photographs in a country at war, the Russians were remarkably tolerant. There is the sense he is able to defuse tough situations by sheer virtue of his amiability.
When I put this to him, he laughs. 鈥淚鈥檓 not trying to particularly charm anyone or manipulate them, but I鈥檓 just completely normal. I would talk to a North Korean minder in exactly the same way I鈥檓 talking to you now. You know, throw in some jokes 鈥 not in an attempt to soften them up, but just because it鈥檚 my nature to throw in some jokes.鈥
The Mansudae Grand Monument in Pyongyang.
In a similar way, Muir鈥檚 work aims to bring out the best in the viewer. Nothing sums up this approach more aptly than the series Blue Burqa in a Sunburnt Country (2014), which sets a woman in the distinctive blue of an Afghani burqa within central Australia. The work emerged out of the tense political landscape in Australia regarding its treatment of refugees.
鈥淚 wanted to put together an artistic visual response to this, over and above the kinds of articles appearing in the newspapers,鈥 he says.
鈥淚 really do believe in the power of an image to have an instant impact that is more visceral and longer lasting than even the most eloquently put together article.鈥
He developed the series further this year with Urban Burqa (2017). In the final image (shown on page 14-15), striking visual compositions that play strongly on angle and colour are put into juxtaposition 鈥 the shadow of a skater reaching out to the woman in a gesture of solidarity. Much like the man himself, the image suggests and provokes fundamental questions of humanity and the value of benevolence.
You can see more of Fabian Muir鈥檚 work or buy his images聽.
Written by Rebekah Hayden
Photography by Fabian Muir