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Frank Hurley

James Francis "Frank" Hurley OBE (15 October 1885 – 16 January 1962) was an Australian photographer and adventurer. He participated in a number of expeditions to Antarctica and served as an official photographer with Australian forces during both world wars. He was the official photographer for the Australasian Antarctic Expedition and the Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition of 1914–16.

Frank Hurley

Hurley around 1914
Birth nameJames Francis Hurley
Born(1885-10-15)15 October 1885
Glebe, New South Wales, Australia
Died16 January 1962(1962-01-16) (aged 76)
Collaroy Plateau, New South Wales, Australia
AllegianceAustralia
Service/branchFirst Australian Imperial Force
Australian Army
Years of service1917-1918, 1940
RankCaptain
Unit1st Division (Australia)
Battles/warsBattle of Passchendaele and the Battle of Bardia
Other work1908–1948

His artistic style produced many memorable images. He also used staged scenes, composites and photographic manipulation.

Early life edit

Frank Hurley was the third of five children to parents Edward and Margaret Hurley and was raised in Glebe, a suburb of Sydney, Australia.[1] He ran away from home at the age of 13 to work on the Lithgow steel mill, returning home two years later to study at the local technical school and attend science lectures at the University of Sydney.

When he was 17 he bought his first camera, a 15-shilling Kodak Box Brownie which he paid for at the rate of a shilling per week. He taught himself photography and set himself up in the postcard business, where he gained a reputation for putting himself in danger in order to produce stunning images, including placing himself in front of an oncoming train to capture it on film.

Hurley married Antoinette Rosalind Leighton on 11 April 1918.[2] The couple had four children: identical twin daughters, Adelie (later a press photographer) and Toni, one son, Frank, and youngest daughter Yvonne.[3]

Antarctic expeditions edit

 
Endurance among ice pinnacles, Shackleton expedition, February 1915

During his lifetime, Hurley spent more than four years in Antarctica.[4] At the age of 23, in 1908, Hurley learned that Australian explorer Douglas Mawson was planning an expedition to Antarctica; fellow Sydney-sider Henri Mallard in 1911, recommended Hurley for the position of official photographer to Mawson's Australasian Antarctic Expedition, ahead of himself.[5]

Hurley asserts in his biography that he then cornered Mawson as he was making his way to their interview on a train, using the advantage to talk his way into the job.[6] Mawson was persuaded, while Mallard, who was the manager of Harringtons—a local Kodak franchise—to which Hurley was in debt, provided photographic equipment. The expedition departed in 1911, returning in 1914. On his return, he edited and released a documentary, Home of the Blizzard, using his footage from the expedition.[2]

Hurley was also the official photographer on Sir Ernest Shackleton's Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition which set out in 1914 and was marooned until August 1916; Hurley's photographic kit for the expedition included the cinematograph machine, plate still camera and several smaller Kodak cameras, along with various lenses, tripods, and developing equipment, most of which had to be abandoned with the loss of their ship Endurance in 1915. He kept only a hand-held Vest Pocket Kodak camera and three rolls of film and for the rest of the expedition, he shot a total of just 38 images. He also selected and saved 120 of his glass-plate negatives smashing about 400 remaining ones.[1] Some of the plates from the expedition are now part of the State Library of New South Wales collection.[3]

Hurley produced many pioneering colour images of the expedition using the then-popular Paget process of colour photography. He photographed in South Georgia in 1917. He later compiled his records into the documentary film South in 1919. His footage was also used in the 2001 IMAX film Shackleton's Antarctic Adventure. He then returned to the Antarctic in 1929 and 1931, on Mawson's British Australian and New Zealand Antarctic Research Expedition.

Wartime photography edit

 
1st Australian Division near Ypres, 1917

In 1917, Hurley joined the Australian Imperial Force (AIF) as an honorary captain, and captured many stunning battlefield scenes during the Third Battle of Ypres. In keeping with his adventurous spirit, he took considerable risks to photograph his subjects, also producing many rare panoramic and colour photographs of the conflict. Hurley kept a diary from 1917 to 1918, chronicling his time as a war photographer.[7] In it, he described his commitment "to illustrate to the public the things our fellows do and how war is conducted", and his short-lived resignation in October 1917 when he was ordered not to produce composite images—a practice that was especially popular among professional photographers at the time and one that he believed could portray the disgust and horror that he felt during the war in such a way that his audience would feel it too.[8] His period with the AIF ended in March 1918.[9]

 
A composite image created by Hurley and two of the photographs on which it was based. Hurley argued with superiors over the ethics of compositing photos, arguing that war was conducted on such a vast scale that it was impossible to capture the essence of it in a single negative.[10] His motivation was to portray the disgust and horror that he felt during the war in such a way that his audience would feel it too. Some have considered the practice as an art form; others have argued that history demands the plain, simple truth.

For the 1918 London exhibition, Australian War Pictures and Photographs, he employed composites for photomurals to convey drama of the war on a scale otherwise not possible using the technology available. This brought Hurley into conflict with the AIF on the grounds that montage diminished documentary value. He wrote that he would dress in civilian clothes and eavesdrop on soldiers who were visiting his exhibitions; he concluded that the composites were justified by the favourable comments they attracted.[9][11] Charles Bean, official war historian, labelled Hurley's composite images "fake".[2][12]

Hurley again worked as an official photographer during the Second World War. He was employed by the Australian Department of Information as head of the Photographic Unit from September 1940 until early 1943, based in Cairo. He took the only film of the initial victory against the Italians at Sidi Barrani in December 1940, which was given to Cinesound and Movietone News for global release. He also covered the battle of Bardia and the Siege of Tobruk in 1941, and both of the battles at El Alamein in 1942.[13] Several volumes of his War Diaries cover this period.[14]

In early 1943, the AIF 9th Division was recalled to Australia to fight the Japanese forces in the Pacific theatre. Hurley resigned his position, but remained in the Middle East, and accepted the position of Middle East Director of Army Features and Propaganda Films with the British Ministry of Information. In this capacity, he travelled a reported 200,000 miles covering the region from Libya to Persia, making regular items for War Pictorial News and 2-reel features. He photographed two conferences of leaders at Cairo and Teheran in 1943. Only one diary volume survives for this period. It includes a summary of his 1943 work, and covers a four-month journey from Cairo to Teheran commencing in February 1944, during which he took footage for The Road to Russia (1944), A Day in the Life of a King (1944), possibly the first film of the Marsh Arabs Garden of Eden (1945), and one other feature about Teheran itself. Other features of this period include Cairo (1944), and The Holy Land (1945).[15] Hurley returned to Australia in September 1946.[16]

Cinematography edit

 
Hurley (right) discusses photographic opportunities for the forthcoming battle of Bardia in Egypt, 1940.

Hurley also used a film camera to record a range of experiences including the Antarctic expeditions, the building of the Sydney Harbour Bridge, and war in the Middle East during World War II. The camera was a Debrie Parvo L 35 mm hand-crank camera made in France. This camera is now in the collection of the National Museum of Australia.[17]

Hurley made several documentaries throughout his career, most notably Pearls and Savages (1921). He wrote and directed several dramatic feature films, including Jungle Woman (1926) and The Hound of the Deep (1926). He also worked as cinematographer for Cinesound Productions where his best known film credits include The Squatter's Daughter (1933), The Silence of Dean Maitland (1934) and Grandad Rudd (1935).

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b McGregor (2004) p 8
  2. ^ a b c Pike, A. F. "Hurley, James Francis (Frank) (1885–1962)". Frank Hurley. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Retrieved 7 November 2013. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  3. ^ a b "Hurley, Adelie". www.womenaustralia.info. Retrieved 12 December 2018.
  4. ^ Ennis, Helen (2010). Frank Hurley's Antarctica. Australia: National Library of Australia. p. 2.
  5. ^ while Hurley records his approach to Mawson differently in his memoir, the fact of this introduction via Mallard was established by David P. Millar in Millar (1984).
  6. ^ Jack Cato in his obituary explains Hurley's motivation and enthusiasm; 'We were both fired with the Spirit of Adventure; we were both happy in the knowledge that the camera was the key that would open that Magic Door.' Cato, Jack, 'For the Late Frank Hurley, Three Tributes', Australian Popular Photography, March 1962.
  7. ^ "Series 03: Frank Hurley diaries and related papers, 21 August 1917 – 13 August 1918, kept while official photographer to the Australian Imperial Force". Catalogue. State Library of NSW. Retrieved 14 July 2014.
  8. ^ "Frank Hurley war diary, 21 August – 28 October 1917".
  9. ^ a b Scepanovic, Milan (6–7 October 2018). "The camera doesn't lie". The Great War, part 4: endgame and aftermath. Canberra: The Australian. p. 28.
  10. ^ "Truth and photography". sl.nw.gov.au. State Library of New South Wales. 2017. from the original on 20 March 2022. None but those who have endeavoured can realise the insurmountable difficulties of portraying a modern battle by the camera. To include the event on a single negative, I have tried and tried, but the results are hopeless. Now, if negatives are taken of all the separate incidents in the action and combined, some idea may then be gained of what a modern battle looks like.
  11. ^ For an account of the conflict between Hurley and the war correspondent Charles Bean, see Gough, Paul. "'Exactitude is truth': representing the British military through commissioned artworks". Journal of War and Culture Studies Volume: 1 | Issue: 3 December 2008 Page(s): 341–356 (ISSN 1752-6272), and also the excellent discussion of this, and Hurley's use of montage in some of his Antarctic imagery, in McGregor, Alasdair (2004) Frank Hurley: a photographer's life. Camberwell:Viking/Penguin
  12. ^ Martyn Jolly, "Australian First–World–War photography Frank Hurley and Charles Bean." History of photography 23.2 (1999): 141-148 https://doi.org/10.1080/03087298.1999.10443814
  13. ^ McGregor (2004) p 353-387
  14. ^ National Library of Australia MS 883- Papers of Frank Hurley, 1912-1962 [manuscript]./Series 1/Item 18 - 23/
  15. ^ National Library of Australia MS 883- Papers of Frank Hurley, 1912-1962 [manuscript]./Series 1/Item 24/
  16. ^ McGregor, A 2004 p 387-397
  17. ^ . Archived from the original on 17 March 2011. Retrieved 20 May 2009.

Bibliography edit

  • Hurley, Frank, 1885–1962 & Ponting, Herbert, 1870–1935 & Boddington, Jennie, 1922– (1979). Antarctic photographs 1910–1916. Macmillan, London
  • Dixon Robert (2012).Photography, early cinema and colonial modernity : Frank Hurley's synchronised lecture entertainments.
  • Edited by Robert Dixon and Christopher Lee (2011).The Diaries of 1912–1941.
  • Ennis, Helen (2010). Frank Hurley's Antarctica. Canberra: National Library of Australia. ISBN 9780642276988.
  • Kleinig, Simon (August 2003). "Hiking with Hurley". NLA News, Volume 13, Number 11. National Library of Australia.
  • McGregor, Alasdair (2004). Frank Hurley: A photographer's life. Camberwell: Viking. ISBN 9780670888955.
  • Jolly, Martyn. "Australian First–World–War photography Frank Hurley and Charles Bean." History of photography 23.2 (1999): 141–148. https://doi.org/10.1080/03087298.1999.10443814
  • Millar, David P. (1984). From snowdrift to shellfire : Capt. James Francis (Frank) Hurley, 1885–1962. Sydney: David Ell Press. ISBN 9780908197590.

External links edit

frank, hurley, this, article, about, australian, photographer, australian, rugby, league, footballer, rugby, league, james, francis, frank, hurley, october, 1885, january, 1962, australian, photographer, adventurer, participated, number, expeditions, antarctic. This article is about the Australian photographer For the Australian rugby league footballer see Frank Hurley rugby league James Francis Frank Hurley OBE 15 October 1885 16 January 1962 was an Australian photographer and adventurer He participated in a number of expeditions to Antarctica and served as an official photographer with Australian forces during both world wars He was the official photographer for the Australasian Antarctic Expedition and the Imperial Trans Antarctic Expedition of 1914 16 Frank HurleyOBEHurley around 1914Birth nameJames Francis HurleyBorn 1885 10 15 15 October 1885Glebe New South Wales AustraliaDied16 January 1962 1962 01 16 aged 76 Collaroy Plateau New South Wales AustraliaAllegianceAustraliaService wbr branchFirst Australian Imperial ForceAustralian ArmyYears of service1917 1918 1940RankCaptainUnit1st Division Australia Battles warsBattle of Passchendaele and the Battle of BardiaOther work1908 1948His artistic style produced many memorable images He also used staged scenes composites and photographic manipulation Contents 1 Early life 2 Antarctic expeditions 3 Wartime photography 4 Cinematography 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksEarly life editFrank Hurley was the third of five children to parents Edward and Margaret Hurley and was raised in Glebe a suburb of Sydney Australia 1 He ran away from home at the age of 13 to work on the Lithgow steel mill returning home two years later to study at the local technical school and attend science lectures at the University of Sydney When he was 17 he bought his first camera a 15 shilling Kodak Box Brownie which he paid for at the rate of a shilling per week He taught himself photography and set himself up in the postcard business where he gained a reputation for putting himself in danger in order to produce stunning images including placing himself in front of an oncoming train to capture it on film Hurley married Antoinette Rosalind Leighton on 11 April 1918 2 The couple had four children identical twin daughters Adelie later a press photographer and Toni one son Frank and youngest daughter Yvonne 3 Antarctic expeditions edit nbsp Endurance among ice pinnacles Shackleton expedition February 1915During his lifetime Hurley spent more than four years in Antarctica 4 At the age of 23 in 1908 Hurley learned that Australian explorer Douglas Mawson was planning an expedition to Antarctica fellow Sydney sider Henri Mallard in 1911 recommended Hurley for the position of official photographer to Mawson s Australasian Antarctic Expedition ahead of himself 5 Hurley asserts in his biography that he then cornered Mawson as he was making his way to their interview on a train using the advantage to talk his way into the job 6 Mawson was persuaded while Mallard who was the manager of Harringtons a local Kodak franchise to which Hurley was in debt provided photographic equipment The expedition departed in 1911 returning in 1914 On his return he edited and released a documentary Home of the Blizzard using his footage from the expedition 2 Hurley was also the official photographer on Sir Ernest Shackleton s Imperial Trans Antarctic Expedition which set out in 1914 and was marooned until August 1916 Hurley s photographic kit for the expedition included the cinematograph machine plate still camera and several smaller Kodak cameras along with various lenses tripods and developing equipment most of which had to be abandoned with the loss of their ship Endurance in 1915 He kept only a hand held Vest Pocket Kodak camera and three rolls of film and for the rest of the expedition he shot a total of just 38 images He also selected and saved 120 of his glass plate negatives smashing about 400 remaining ones 1 Some of the plates from the expedition are now part of the State Library of New South Wales collection 3 Hurley produced many pioneering colour images of the expedition using the then popular Paget process of colour photography He photographed in South Georgia in 1917 He later compiled his records into the documentary film South in 1919 His footage was also used in the 2001 IMAX film Shackleton s Antarctic Adventure He then returned to the Antarctic in 1929 and 1931 on Mawson s British Australian and New Zealand Antarctic Research Expedition Wartime photography edit nbsp 1st Australian Division near Ypres 1917In 1917 Hurley joined the Australian Imperial Force AIF as an honorary captain and captured many stunning battlefield scenes during the Third Battle of Ypres In keeping with his adventurous spirit he took considerable risks to photograph his subjects also producing many rare panoramic and colour photographs of the conflict Hurley kept a diary from 1917 to 1918 chronicling his time as a war photographer 7 In it he described his commitment to illustrate to the public the things our fellows do and how war is conducted and his short lived resignation in October 1917 when he was ordered not to produce composite images a practice that was especially popular among professional photographers at the time and one that he believed could portray the disgust and horror that he felt during the war in such a way that his audience would feel it too 8 His period with the AIF ended in March 1918 9 nbsp A composite image created by Hurley and two of the photographs on which it was based Hurley argued with superiors over the ethics of compositing photos arguing that war was conducted on such a vast scale that it was impossible to capture the essence of it in a single negative 10 His motivation was to portray the disgust and horror that he felt during the war in such a way that his audience would feel it too Some have considered the practice as an art form others have argued that history demands the plain simple truth For the 1918 London exhibition Australian War Pictures and Photographs he employed composites for photomurals to convey drama of the war on a scale otherwise not possible using the technology available This brought Hurley into conflict with the AIF on the grounds that montage diminished documentary value He wrote that he would dress in civilian clothes and eavesdrop on soldiers who were visiting his exhibitions he concluded that the composites were justified by the favourable comments they attracted 9 11 Charles Bean official war historian labelled Hurley s composite images fake 2 12 Hurley again worked as an official photographer during the Second World War He was employed by the Australian Department of Information as head of the Photographic Unit from September 1940 until early 1943 based in Cairo He took the only film of the initial victory against the Italians at Sidi Barrani in December 1940 which was given to Cinesound and Movietone News for global release He also covered the battle of Bardia and the Siege of Tobruk in 1941 and both of the battles at El Alamein in 1942 13 Several volumes of his War Diaries cover this period 14 In early 1943 the AIF 9th Division was recalled to Australia to fight the Japanese forces in the Pacific theatre Hurley resigned his position but remained in the Middle East and accepted the position of Middle East Director of Army Features and Propaganda Films with the British Ministry of Information In this capacity he travelled a reported 200 000 miles covering the region from Libya to Persia making regular items for War Pictorial News and 2 reel features He photographed two conferences of leaders at Cairo and Teheran in 1943 Only one diary volume survives for this period It includes a summary of his 1943 work and covers a four month journey from Cairo to Teheran commencing in February 1944 during which he took footage for The Road to Russia 1944 A Day in the Life of a King 1944 possibly the first film of the Marsh Arabs Garden of Eden 1945 and one other feature about Teheran itself Other features of this period include Cairo 1944 and The Holy Land 1945 15 Hurley returned to Australia in September 1946 16 Cinematography edit nbsp Hurley right discusses photographic opportunities for the forthcoming battle of Bardia in Egypt 1940 Hurley also used a film camera to record a range of experiences including the Antarctic expeditions the building of the Sydney Harbour Bridge and war in the Middle East during World War II The camera was a Debrie Parvo L 35 mm hand crank camera made in France This camera is now in the collection of the National Museum of Australia 17 Hurley made several documentaries throughout his career most notably Pearls and Savages 1921 He wrote and directed several dramatic feature films including Jungle Woman 1926 and The Hound of the Deep 1926 He also worked as cinematographer for Cinesound Productions where his best known film credits include The Squatter s Daughter 1933 The Silence of Dean Maitland 1934 and Grandad Rudd 1935 See also editPhotography in AustraliaReferences edit a b McGregor 2004 p 8 a b c Pike A F Hurley James Francis Frank 1885 1962 Frank Hurley National Centre of Biography Australian National University Retrieved 7 November 2013 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help a b Hurley Adelie www womenaustralia info Retrieved 12 December 2018 Ennis Helen 2010 Frank Hurley s Antarctica Australia National Library of Australia p 2 while Hurley records his approach to Mawson differently in his memoir the fact of this introduction via Mallard was established by David P Millar in Millar 1984 Jack Cato in his obituary explains Hurley s motivation and enthusiasm We were both fired with the Spirit of Adventure we were both happy in the knowledge that the camera was the key that would open that Magic Door Cato Jack For the Late Frank Hurley Three Tributes Australian Popular Photography March 1962 Series 03 Frank Hurley diaries and related papers 21 August 1917 13 August 1918 kept while official photographer to the Australian Imperial Force Catalogue State Library of NSW Retrieved 14 July 2014 Frank Hurley war diary 21 August 28 October 1917 a b Scepanovic Milan 6 7 October 2018 The camera doesn t lie The Great War part 4 endgame and aftermath Canberra The Australian p 28 Truth and photography sl nw gov au State Library of New South Wales 2017 Archived from the original on 20 March 2022 None but those who have endeavoured can realise the insurmountable difficulties of portraying a modern battle by the camera To include the event on a single negative I have tried and tried but the results are hopeless Now if negatives are taken of all the separate incidents in the action and combined some idea may then be gained of what a modern battle looks like For an account of the conflict between Hurley and the war correspondent Charles Bean see Gough Paul Exactitude is truth representing the British military through commissioned artworks Journal of War and Culture Studies Volume 1 Issue 3 December 2008 Page s 341 356 ISSN 1752 6272 and also the excellent discussion of this and Hurley s use of montage in some of his Antarctic imagery in McGregor Alasdair 2004 Frank Hurley a photographer s life Camberwell Viking Penguin Martyn Jolly Australian First World War photography Frank Hurley and Charles Bean History of photography 23 2 1999 141 148 https doi org 10 1080 03087298 1999 10443814 McGregor 2004 p 353 387 National Library of Australia MS 883 Papers of Frank Hurley 1912 1962 manuscript Series 1 Item 18 23 National Library of Australia MS 883 Papers of Frank Hurley 1912 1962 manuscript Series 1 Item 24 McGregor A 2004 p 387 397 Frank Hurley s movie camera National Museum of Australia Archived from the original on 17 March 2011 Retrieved 20 May 2009 Bibliography editHurley Frank 1885 1962 amp Ponting Herbert 1870 1935 amp Boddington Jennie 1922 1979 Antarctic photographs 1910 1916 Macmillan London Dixon Robert 2012 Photography early cinema and colonial modernity Frank Hurley s synchronised lecture entertainments Edited by Robert Dixon and Christopher Lee 2011 The Diaries of 1912 1941 Ennis Helen 2010 Frank Hurley s Antarctica Canberra National Library of Australia ISBN 9780642276988 Kleinig Simon August 2003 Hiking with Hurley NLA News Volume 13 Number 11 National Library of Australia McGregor Alasdair 2004 Frank Hurley A photographer s life Camberwell Viking ISBN 9780670888955 Jolly Martyn Australian First World War photography Frank Hurley and Charles Bean History of photography 23 2 1999 141 148 https doi org 10 1080 03087298 1999 10443814 Millar David P 1984 From snowdrift to shellfire Capt James Francis Frank Hurley 1885 1962 Sydney David Ell Press ISBN 9780908197590 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Frank Hurley Works by Frank Hurley at Open Library Works by or about Frank Hurley at Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Frank Hurley amp oldid 1152161292, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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