cally whitham
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Epitaph II
  • Epitaph II
  • Simmental Bull
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  • Saanan Milking Goat
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  • Saanan Milking Goat
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  • Saanan Milking Goat
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  • Wilshire Horn Ram
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Description
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Fields
Photography
Date
2012
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Other Projects
  • captive III
  • Epitaph II
  • Epitaph
  • Geese
  • Poultry ll
  • Turkey
  • Poultry
  • Domestic Birds
  • Captive II
  • Captive
  • Native & Endemic II
  • native & endemic
  • portraits of country children
  • Portrait
  • Small things II
  • small things
  • north II
  • North
  • South
  • Dwell II
  • Dwell
  • Town II
  • Town
  • Seascapes
  • Flock
  • Flight II
  • Flight
  • Water Fowl
  • A Memoir of Trees
  • Landscapes
  • Pole to pole
  • Tales from the Midlands
  • Tales from the Midlands II
  • Worthship
  • Counting Sheep
  • Exotics
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  • captive III Portraits of captive creatures     2013 Photography
  • Epitaph Food photography     2011 Photography
  • Geese 'Geese' is part of my continuing exploration into finding 'value' where none appears apparent, particularly with birds and animals that came to my country when colonization occurred in the mid to late 1800's. Our rural beginnings were heavily reliant on domestic birds and farm animals for survival. While agriculture is still a very big earner in my country (and many other countries in the west) the animals as individuals have lost the value and importance they once had to us in our every day lives, as we have divorced ourselves from the land and the things we eat.     2012 Photography
  • Poultry ll Portraits of poultry     2011 Photography
  • Turkey A typology of Turkeys     2012 Photography
  • Poultry A poultry typology     2011 Photography
  • Domestic Birds A typology     2011 Photography
  • Captive II A romanticized notion, an idea; the thought or feeling rather than the reality - the romantic perception. We find ourselves as captive as they are.     2012 Photography
  • Captive Portraits     2011 Photography
  • Native & Endemic II Portraits of native and endemic birds     2012 Photography
  • native & endemic birds of new zealand     2012 Photography
  • portraits of country children I shot these outside in a bush behind the school in ambient light. There were no hair brushes, no fancy outfits or props and no instructions to smile. I captured what children offered me     2012 Photography
  • Portrait .     2011 Photography, Digital Photography
  • Small things II .     2012 Photography
  • small things .     2012 Photography
  • north II Caught somewhere between seeing and remembering     2013 Photography
  • North Scenes from the North     2012 Photography
  • South The romantic south     2011 Photography
  • Dwell II A typology of the places we store ourselves     2012 Photography
  • Dwell The places we store ourselves.     2012 Photography
  • Town II .     2012 Photography
  • Town Passing through     2011 Photography
  • Seascapes For the sea and the sky and the sky and the sea. Romantic notions of the sea.     2011 Photography, Digital Photography
  • Flock The coming of night     2011 Photography
  • Flight II The romance of flight     2012 Photography
  • Flight A romance of birds in flight     2012 Photography
  • Water Fowl Tales from the pond     2012 Photography
  • A Memoir of Trees A memoir of trees     2011 Photography
  • Landscapes Rural New Zealand landscapes     2011 Photography
  • Pole to pole Power poles from the traveled road     2011 Photography
  • Tales from the Midlands .     2012 Photography
  • Tales from the Midlands II Moments from out on the road     2012 Photography
  • Worthship Worthship...a condition of being worthy of honor. The greater the worth of something is held, the greater the honor or renown something should be given.     2012 Photography
  • Counting Sheep Idyllic landscapes     2011 Photography
  • Exotics In the 1860's & 70's non-migratory carnivorous birds from the 'homeland' of Europe were introduced to New Zealand to control the plagues of insects that had come about due to deforestation and unwitting imports in food and goods.
    Settlers were paid not insignificant sums for bringing out live breeding pairs. Many birds did not survive the voyage and many attempts were made before success was reached.
    Birds were kept in special breeding aviaries or 'Acclimatization Gardens' in the Auckland Domain to build populations up. Visitors to the colony often remarked on the unusualness of seeing such common English birds treated as distinguished guests.
    Those so called 'distinguished guests' now go unnoticed; they've become part of the furniture, even considered pests or at the least competition for our native birds.
        2012 Photography
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