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Memoir

Number One All the Time

by John Thompson
February 2005, no. 268

Frank Hurly: A Photographer's Life by Alasdair McGregor

Viking, $65hb, 460pp

ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.

From his precocious youth in inner-city Sydney until his death – still in harness at the age of seventy-five – the Australian photographer Frank Hurley lived for ‘adventure and romance’. By any standards, his was an extraordinary career. Yet the individual delineations of its great landmarks have blurred in the factual catalogue of Hurley’s achievements in two Antarctic expeditions during the cradle period of exploration in that great southern continent; in his work as an official photographer during the two world wars; in his pioneering of filmed documentaries and as a cinematographer in the making of major Australian feature films in the 1930s. In the last twenty years of his career, Hurley travelled the length and breadth of his own country, celebrating its people and eulogising what he saw to be the heroic Australian landscape. Always restless, always yearning for the next challenge, Hurley was a citizen of the world. He was drawn to record the cultures of the ancient world and, closer to home, aspects of New Guinea and the Pacific.

 


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Frank Hurly

Frank Hurly: A Photographer's Life by Alasdair McGregor

Viking, $65hb, 460pp

ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.


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