Freshwater Beach (Harbord) Beach
Photographer
John Williams
(1933 - 2016)
Date1942-1983
Object number00056447
NamePhotograph
MediumDigital Print
DimensionsOverall: 445 x 920 mm,
Copyright© Jean Curthoys
ClassificationsPhotographs
Credit LineAustralian National Maritime Museum Collection Gift from Jean Curthoys
DescriptionBlack and white photomontage by John Williams titled 'Freshwater Beach (Harbord) Beach'. The six photographs depict a panoramic view of Freshwater Beach with the central photograph being an historical image believed to depict Williams's uncles in 1942. HistoryWilliams’s beach images reveal his modernist interest in subject, framing and composition in capturing the informality of the beach and in pursuit of Cartier Bresson’s ‘decisive moment’.
During the 1970s there was an increasing recognition of photography as an art form, and these works represent a break from the conservative photographic techniques and styles that predominated when Williams began his career. Several of the works date to the late 1970s when he shifted from photographing strangers in public spaces to friends, relatives and acquaintances in their home environments, in this instance experimenting with photomontages of family members in the 1920s-30s with the beachscape of the 1980s.SignificanceFrom his emergence in the 1960s to his passing in 2016, John Williams was one of Australia’s most influential photographers. His works rejected established photographic narrative conventions and experimented with subject, framing and composition. In many of his beach photographs from the 1960s-70s, he captures a sense of informality and being in the moment.