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Michael Rayner (photographer)

Michael Rayner (born 1951) is an Australian press photographer and photojournalist.

Biography edit

Michael Rayner was born in Stockport UK in 1951, 18 months before his parents Alan and Dorothy migrated with him to the industrial Melbourne bayside suburb Altona, as "Ten Pound Poms". During his teenage years Rayner worked a newspaper delivery round. His education at Altona Primary and Altona High limited his study options in his areas of interest; current affairs and news.

News photographer edit

Having failed his Matriculation, Rayner responded to an advertisement for a cadet photographer in The Age requiring a lesser qualification of a school Leaving certificate. Though his photographic experience was minimal, Rayner's knowledge of politics secured him a position along with four others from a field of 250 applicants. He he commenced on Tuesday 31 December 1968.[1] Ron Lovitt,[1] the pictorial editor who employed him and took a famous picture of the last ball of the tied Test cricket match between Australia and the West Indies, was an influence on Rayner's photography. In 1972 he won the Sydney E Pratt Award for the best photograph taken by a cadet Australia-wide; it showed VFL footballer Sam Newman being struck square in the face by the ball he had just missed.

For the newspaper Rayner covered news such as the Franklin River blockade.[2] In 1980 he gained a second place in the Nikon Awards,[3] the following year winning its Best Sports Photograph of the Year for his graphic and comical capture of North Melbourne footballer David Dench's effective smothering of a kick by South Melbourne's John Roberts, and a second prize for 'Sports' in the 1981 Rothmans National Press Photo of the Year,[4] and merit awards for his news and sports images in the Press Photographer of the Year Awards of 1982.[5] Even his earlier editorial photographs provoked an emotional response,[6][7] and on one occasion he found himself caught up in criminal investigations of corruption in municipal council elections.[8] Major influences on his approach were Age colleagues John Lamb, a multiple Walkley Award winner,[1] and Clive McKinnon and Terry Phelan of The Sun.[1]

From 1983 to 1999 his remit covered all of the Fairfax-owned media. He meanwhile directed 'Impressions Photography' from a shopfront in North Melbourne with partner the press photographer Tony Feder for four years from 1983 for around two hundred clients including Time magazine and The Telegraph in London,[9] then briefly worked freelance on his own 1987- 1988.

Rayner was employed on The Sydney Morning Herald during 1988–1991, on one assignment photographing socialite Susan Renouf in a women's refuge,[10] before once again freelancing 1991–1994. He rejoined The Age in 1994, covering such disparate stories as a 'boot camp' on the Snowy River for troubled teenage girls,[11] rehearsals of the musical A Chorus Line.[12] the repurposing of Melbourne's notorious Pentridge jail as apartments,[13] and the opposite sides in the battle over logging in old growth forests.[14]

Freelance edit

Rayner remained with Fairfax until 1999 moving, after a period of teaching, to The Weekly Review in April 2015 until late 2017, concurrent with freelance assignments for The Daily Telegraph UK, Sports Illustrated USA, and The Observer UK.

Mentor and educator edit

Rayner served as a judge on The Age/Nikon school photography competition.[15] From 1999 his professional experience in photography enabled a change of direction and an opportunity to mentor others in his role as manager of Feral Fine Art Gallery & Cafe (1999–2004) in rural Forrest, alongside his teaching in the medium at Photography Studies College (1999-2008) and Mallacoota ACFE (2008–2011).

Portraitist edit

Rayner's approach to pictures of people in the news is influenced by the environmental portraits of Arnold Newman and Bill Brandt and the photojournalism of W. Eugene Smith. Alongside his sports photograph, one portrait was awarded a first in the 1980,[16][17] and a second in the 1982[18] and 1984[19] Rothmans Press Awards. His subjects have included Mel Gibson, Bob Hawke when he resigned from the ACTU and launched his Federal election campaign,[20] Eddie McGuire, Paul Keating,[21] Jean Bedford,[22] Kate Langbroek, Steven Berkoff, Tony Greig[23] Guy Pearce, David Gulpilil, Peter Carey, Hugo Weaving, Rachel Griffiths, Gérard Depardieu, Andrea Stretton[24] and Adam Elliot, though not all such assignments went smoothly; Mushroom Records was reported as having treated Rayner 'aggressively' when he attempted to photograph singer Jimmy Barnes in 'casual clothes'. The resulting images were run by The Age regardless, with useful publicity for Barnes.[25]

Personal life edit

Rayner has married once and is divorced, with a son and a daughter.[citation needed]

Books edit

Aside from numbers of publications in which his photographs are illustrations, Rayner has published;

  • Ticket to Ride,[26] the Australian continent photographed on train journeys with text by Anthony Dennis;[27][28][29][30][31][32]
  • Caribbean Odyssey showing cricket culture in the West Indies;[33][34]
  • Contact Renewed; Australia versus the new South Africa; on Test cricket after apartheid.[35]
  • Sydney since the Opera House: an architectural walking guide[36]
  • Morecroft, Richard; Sweeney, Paul; Rayner, Michael, 1951-; Morecroft, Richard (1991), Raising Archie : the story of Richard Morecroft and his flying fox, Simon & Schuster, ISBN 978-0-7318-0254-8{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)

Collections edit

  • National Library of Australia[37]
  • State Library of Victoria[38]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Whelan, Kathleen (2014), Photography of the Age : newspaper photography in Australia, from glass plate negatives to digital, Brolga Publishing, ISBN 978-1-922175-66-3
  2. ^ Rosslyn Beeby, 'Creative tactics introduce dull note to blockade', The Age, 5 Jan 1983, p. 5.
  3. ^ The Sydney Morning Herald, 5 Dec 1980, p. 8.
  4. ^ The Age, 7 Mar 1981, p. 3.
  5. ^ 'Photography prizes', The Age, 16 Nov 1982, p. 3.
  6. ^ 'Luckless, helpless, and nearly friendless', The Age , August 17, 1973, p. 5.
  7. ^ Barbara Hooks, 'Car crash children need funds urgently', The Age, 5 Aug 1975, p. 10.
  8. ^ 'Witness says he saw newspapers removed', The Age, 16 Sep 1981, p. 14.
  9. ^ 'Press photographers cover the media gap', The Age, 17 Dec 1986, p. 27.
  10. ^ Nikki Barrowclough, "Lady Bountiful", The Sydney Morning Herald, 24 Mar 1990
  11. ^ Sue Neales, "Going with the flow", The Age, 29 Dec 1994, p. 55.
  12. ^ Megan Backhouse, "Life on the line", The Age, 21 Jan 1994, p. 29.
  13. ^ David M. Walker, "Her Majesty's apartments, Pentridge", The Age, 16 Jan 1997, p. 25.
  14. ^ Geoff Stong, "Trouble in paradise, The Age, February 6, 1999
  15. ^ "Curse that brought victory, The Age, 18 Jun 1996, p. 58.
  16. ^ 'Three snap awards', The Age, 9 Feb 1980, p. 16.
  17. ^ 'The snake bite had a happy ending' The Sydney Morning Herald, 9 Feb 1980, p. 3.
  18. ^ 'Pictorial prize to Age man', The Age, 6 Feb 1982, p. 3.
  19. ^ Louise Carbines, 'Age photographer scoops pool wit Cash shots', The Age, 3 Mar 1984, p. 3.
  20. ^ The Age, 1 Jan 1981, p. 7.
  21. ^ 'It's not just his popularity that's thinning', The Age, 2 Feb 1992, p. 16.
  22. ^ Fiona Capp, "Romantics on the road", The Age, 6 Nov 1993, p. 170.
  23. ^ The Age, 14 Feb 1975, p. 24.
  24. ^ Brian Courtis, 'Alchemy and the arts', The Age, 8 Apr 1999, p. 62.
  25. ^ Larry Shwartz, 'Selling the soul of Jimmy Barnes', The Age, 10 Nov 1991, p. 22.
  26. ^ Dennis, Anthony, 1963- (1989). Ticket to ride : a rail journey around Australia. Rayner, Michael, 1951-. New York: Prentice Hall Press. ISBN 0-13-921198-5. OCLC 21558073.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  27. ^ 'A rail chance to travel', The Sydney Morning Herald, 29 Dec 1988, p. 11.
  28. ^ The Philadelphia Inquirer, May 27, 1990, p. 128.
  29. ^ The Times (Louisiana), May 27, 1990, p. 108.
  30. ^ Journal and Courier, Lafayette, Indiana, May 27, 1990, p. 46.
  31. ^ Florida Today, June 3, 1990, p. 53.
  32. ^ The Orlando Sentinel, July 8, 1990, p. 130.
  33. ^ Coward, Mike. (1991). Caribbean odyssey : Australia and cricket in the West Indies. Rayner, Michael. Sydney: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-7318-0232-2. OCLC 30510913.
  34. ^ Mark Ray, 'Remarks set to ruffle feathers: Caribbean exposed', The Age, p. 51.
  35. ^ Coward, Mike. (1994). Australia vs the new South Africa : cricket contact renewed. East Roseville, N.S.W.: Simon & Schuster Australia. ISBN 0-7318-0436-8. OCLC 38356771.
  36. ^ Rayner, Michael; Graus, Philip (1990). Sydney since the Opera House: an architectural walking guide. [Sydney?], New South Wales. ISBN 1-86318-011-7. OCLC 26827068.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  37. ^ Rayner, Michael; Age (Melbourne, Vic.); John Fairfax & Sons (1983), [Bob Hawke, 1983], retrieved 30 December 2020
  38. ^ Rayner, M., & Sunday Observer. (1988). Tracey Curro / Michael Rayner.

michael, rayner, photographer, michael, rayner, born, 1951, australian, press, photographer, photojournalist, contents, biography, news, photographer, freelance, mentor, educator, portraitist, personal, life, books, collections, referencesbiography, editmichae. Michael Rayner born 1951 is an Australian press photographer and photojournalist Contents 1 Biography 2 News photographer 3 Freelance 4 Mentor and educator 5 Portraitist 6 Personal life 7 Books 8 Collections 9 ReferencesBiography editMichael Rayner was born in Stockport UK in 1951 18 months before his parents Alan and Dorothy migrated with him to the industrial Melbourne bayside suburb Altona as Ten Pound Poms During his teenage years Rayner worked a newspaper delivery round His education at Altona Primary and Altona High limited his study options in his areas of interest current affairs and news News photographer editHaving failed his Matriculation Rayner responded to an advertisement for a cadet photographer in The Age requiring a lesser qualification of a school Leaving certificate Though his photographic experience was minimal Rayner s knowledge of politics secured him a position along with four others from a field of 250 applicants He he commenced on Tuesday 31 December 1968 1 Ron Lovitt 1 the pictorial editor who employed him and took a famous picture of the last ball of the tied Test cricket match between Australia and the West Indies was an influence on Rayner s photography In 1972 he won the Sydney E Pratt Award for the best photograph taken by a cadet Australia wide it showed VFL footballer Sam Newman being struck square in the face by the ball he had just missed For the newspaper Rayner covered news such as the Franklin River blockade 2 In 1980 he gained a second place in the Nikon Awards 3 the following year winning its Best Sports Photograph of the Year for his graphic and comical capture of North Melbourne footballer David Dench s effective smothering of a kick by South Melbourne s John Roberts and a second prize for Sports in the 1981 Rothmans National Press Photo of the Year 4 and merit awards for his news and sports images in the Press Photographer of the Year Awards of 1982 5 Even his earlier editorial photographs provoked an emotional response 6 7 and on one occasion he found himself caught up in criminal investigations of corruption in municipal council elections 8 Major influences on his approach were Age colleagues John Lamb a multiple Walkley Award winner 1 and Clive McKinnon and Terry Phelan of The Sun 1 From 1983 to 1999 his remit covered all of the Fairfax owned media He meanwhile directed Impressions Photography from a shopfront in North Melbourne with partner the press photographer Tony Feder for four years from 1983 for around two hundred clients including Time magazine and The Telegraph in London 9 then briefly worked freelance on his own 1987 1988 Rayner was employed on The Sydney Morning Herald during 1988 1991 on one assignment photographing socialite Susan Renouf in a women s refuge 10 before once again freelancing 1991 1994 He rejoined The Age in 1994 covering such disparate stories as a boot camp on the Snowy River for troubled teenage girls 11 rehearsals of the musical A Chorus Line 12 the repurposing of Melbourne s notorious Pentridge jail as apartments 13 and the opposite sides in the battle over logging in old growth forests 14 Freelance editRayner remained with Fairfax until 1999 moving after a period of teaching to The Weekly Review in April 2015 until late 2017 concurrent with freelance assignments for The Daily Telegraph UK Sports Illustrated USA and The Observer UK Mentor and educator editRayner served as a judge on The Age Nikon school photography competition 15 From 1999 his professional experience in photography enabled a change of direction and an opportunity to mentor others in his role as manager of Feral Fine Art Gallery amp Cafe 1999 2004 in rural Forrest alongside his teaching in the medium at Photography Studies College 1999 2008 and Mallacoota ACFE 2008 2011 Portraitist editRayner s approach to pictures of people in the news is influenced by the environmental portraits of Arnold Newman and Bill Brandt and the photojournalism of W Eugene Smith Alongside his sports photograph one portrait was awarded a first in the 1980 16 17 and a second in the 1982 18 and 1984 19 Rothmans Press Awards His subjects have included Mel Gibson Bob Hawke when he resigned from the ACTU and launched his Federal election campaign 20 Eddie McGuire Paul Keating 21 Jean Bedford 22 Kate Langbroek Steven Berkoff Tony Greig 23 Guy Pearce David Gulpilil Peter Carey Hugo Weaving Rachel Griffiths Gerard Depardieu Andrea Stretton 24 and Adam Elliot though not all such assignments went smoothly Mushroom Records was reported as having treated Rayner aggressively when he attempted to photograph singer Jimmy Barnes in casual clothes The resulting images were run by The Age regardless with useful publicity for Barnes 25 Personal life editRayner has married once and is divorced with a son and a daughter citation needed Books editAside from numbers of publications in which his photographs are illustrations Rayner has published Ticket to Ride 26 the Australian continent photographed on train journeys with text by Anthony Dennis 27 28 29 30 31 32 Caribbean Odyssey showing cricket culture in the West Indies 33 34 Contact Renewed Australia versus the new South Africa on Test cricket after apartheid 35 Sydney since the Opera House an architectural walking guide 36 Morecroft Richard Sweeney Paul Rayner Michael 1951 Morecroft Richard 1991 Raising Archie the story of Richard Morecroft and his flying fox Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 7318 0254 8 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Collections editNational Library of Australia 37 State Library of Victoria 38 References edit a b c d Whelan Kathleen 2014 Photography of the Age newspaper photography in Australia from glass plate negatives to digital Brolga Publishing ISBN 978 1 922175 66 3 Rosslyn Beeby Creative tactics introduce dull note to blockade The Age 5 Jan 1983 p 5 The Sydney Morning Herald 5 Dec 1980 p 8 The Age 7 Mar 1981 p 3 Photography prizes The Age 16 Nov 1982 p 3 Luckless helpless and nearly friendless The Age August 17 1973 p 5 Barbara Hooks Car crash children need funds urgently The Age 5 Aug 1975 p 10 Witness says he saw newspapers removed The Age 16 Sep 1981 p 14 Press photographers cover the media gap The Age 17 Dec 1986 p 27 Nikki Barrowclough Lady Bountiful The Sydney Morning Herald 24 Mar 1990 Sue Neales Going with the flow The Age 29 Dec 1994 p 55 Megan Backhouse Life on the line The Age 21 Jan 1994 p 29 David M Walker Her Majesty s apartments Pentridge The Age 16 Jan 1997 p 25 Geoff Stong Trouble in paradise The Age February 6 1999 Curse that brought victory The Age 18 Jun 1996 p 58 Three snap awards The Age 9 Feb 1980 p 16 The snake bite had a happy ending The Sydney Morning Herald 9 Feb 1980 p 3 Pictorial prize to Age man The Age 6 Feb 1982 p 3 Louise Carbines Age photographer scoops pool wit Cash shots The Age 3 Mar 1984 p 3 The Age 1 Jan 1981 p 7 It s not just his popularity that s thinning The Age 2 Feb 1992 p 16 Fiona Capp Romantics on the road The Age 6 Nov 1993 p 170 The Age 14 Feb 1975 p 24 Brian Courtis Alchemy and the arts The Age 8 Apr 1999 p 62 Larry Shwartz Selling the soul of Jimmy Barnes The Age 10 Nov 1991 p 22 Dennis Anthony 1963 1989 Ticket to ride a rail journey around Australia Rayner Michael 1951 New York Prentice Hall Press ISBN 0 13 921198 5 OCLC 21558073 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link A rail chance to travel The Sydney Morning Herald 29 Dec 1988 p 11 The Philadelphia Inquirer May 27 1990 p 128 The Times Louisiana May 27 1990 p 108 Journal and Courier Lafayette Indiana May 27 1990 p 46 Florida Today June 3 1990 p 53 The Orlando Sentinel July 8 1990 p 130 Coward Mike 1991 Caribbean odyssey Australia and cricket in the West Indies Rayner Michael Sydney Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 7318 0232 2 OCLC 30510913 Mark Ray Remarks set to ruffle feathers Caribbean exposed The Age p 51 Coward Mike 1994 Australia vs the new South Africa cricket contact renewed East Roseville N S W Simon amp Schuster Australia ISBN 0 7318 0436 8 OCLC 38356771 Rayner Michael Graus Philip 1990 Sydney since the Opera House an architectural walking guide Sydney New South Wales ISBN 1 86318 011 7 OCLC 26827068 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Rayner Michael Age Melbourne Vic John Fairfax amp Sons 1983 Bob Hawke 1983 retrieved 30 December 2020 Rayner M amp Sunday Observer 1988 Tracey Curro Michael Rayner Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Michael Rayner photographer amp oldid 1198062329, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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