高清福利片

高清福利片_

It's black and white

13 November 2021
Historic photos zero in on Pacific Nations' climate plight
A new exhibition of some of the earliest photographs taken in the Pacific Islands aims to highlight the region's vulnerability to climate change.

Pacific Views is a selection of landscapes taken from the 1870s until the 1960s on show at the Chau Chak Wing Museum, drawing on its historic photograph collection. The black-and-white and hand-coloured photographs reveal early colonial scenes from Papua New Guinea, Tuvalu, Fiji, Nauru, the Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, Tonga, Samoa, New Caledonia and New Zealand.

Framed by the Fijian concept of talanoa (dialogue), employed by the UN Climate Change Council, the exhibition incorporates the work of contemporary Pacific poets. These ecopoems refer to ecological issues affecting Pacific peoples鈥 homelands, with more recent works directly addressing climate change.

In its latest report, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change references Pacific Islands鈥 vulnerability to climate change, saying 鈥渟ea level rises will cause shorelines to retreat along sandy coasts of most Small Islands.鈥

Soundscapes from the PARADISEC archive of the world鈥檚 small cultures and languages, many of which are endangered, form the third element of the exhibition. PARADESIC鈥檚 holdings at the University鈥檚 Conservatorium of Music include oral histories and song lines included in Pacific Views.

鈥淲e鈥檝e taken photographs from the colonial era and projected them into the future through contemporary Pacific Islanders鈥 voices and words,鈥 said co-curator Dr Jude Philp, a senior curator at the Chau Chak Wing Museum.听

A black and white image of thatched huts surrounded by palm trees taken in Funafuti, Tuvalu

Section pipe of diamond drill on reef platform 1897, Funafuti, Tuvalu

鈥淧eople don鈥檛 feature in the exhibition and that鈥檚 a deliberate choice. The pairing of landscapes with soundscapes brings home the eerie threat climate change poses to some the world鈥檚 most vulnerable communities. The landscapes in the exhibition are breathtaking but bereft of human life.鈥

The free exhibition is co-curated by PARADISEC archivist Steven Gagau, who brings a breadth of Pacific knowledge to the exhibition.

鈥淭his exhibition offers our Pacific communities a rare insight into both their traditional and colonial histories,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t also gives momentum to the urgent plight of those who will be most affected by climate change.鈥

The museum鈥檚 photographic holdings exceed 60,000 images, held in its Macleay Collections. Pacific Views draws on the collections鈥 Burns Philp archive, Geography and Anthropological Field Research and Teaching Records and private donations. It will be shown in the museum鈥檚 historic photography gallery, one of 18 exhibition spaces at the University鈥檚 free public museum.

What:听Pacific Views听听

奥丑别苍:听13 November until June 2022听

Opening hours: Mon-Fri, 10am-5pm; Sat-Sun, 12-4pm (NB: closed during the University's shutdown from 24 December until 9 January)

奥丑别谤别:听Chau Chak Wing MuseumUniversity Place, University of Sydney, Camperdown, Sydney听

Cost:听Free听听

Jocelyn Prasad

Media and Public Relations Advisor

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