Launch of 'Wellingon:: Colourcity Velocity'
Media
release:: December 17 2009. Launch of 'Wellingon::
Colourcity Velocity', a new series of pop-tographic iconic
Wellington images by Cat Brown.
Immediate
release
Attention: Arts/lifestyle/design/Wellington
editors and communicators
_This is Wellington like
you’ve never seen it before_
Oozing saturated colours. Bold striking lines and lurid bright skies. Rich, vivid and massively design-focused. Her images, including 'nikau explosion', 'pinkawahine' and 'divebyshooting' are Wellington like you’ve never seen it before.
“I was bored with the delicate lines and muted colours which seems to have been the trend in design, art and photography over the last few years,” says Thorndon-based photographic fine artist Cat Brown.
“I wanted to create images that would appeal to anyone who wanted to wake up to more colour and spark in their lives. I also wanted to make images that were vibrant and over the top representations of the things that I liked most about Wellington,” she says.”
“This Wellington: Colourcity Velocity series is total pop-tography. I want it hanging in everyone’s kitchen, in everyone’s lounge. I wanted to make images that were bright and bold and totally accessible to people of all ages and backgrounds and make people feel energised just by looking at them,” she says.
This latest series of works by Brown cannot be found in any gallery in Wellington. Instead she has chosen a virtual gallery to show off the brilliant colours and iconic imagery of her latest work. Click here to view
Getting started as a photographer - Cat Brown: "I went from a tiny newspaper to shooting John Travolta"
This year is
Brown’s first as a full time photographer. She launched
her creative enterprise, Cat Brown Photography, in June.
Before this she photographed professionally while
working as a communication advisor a number of Australian
and New Zealand organisations and media outlets, including
Qantas, Jetstar, Freehills (Australia’s largest commercial
law-firm), the University of New South Wales, and the
Christchurch City Council.
“In 1997, my very first job
after studying communications at university was as a
journalist for a small newspaper on Auckland’s Hibiscus
Coast. On my first day the editor surprised me by giving me
a large, expensive SLR camera and informing me I was also to
be paper’s photographer.
“I had no idea what I was
doing. I couldn’t even take the lens cap off
“Luckily
one of the designers showed me the basics and I just took
off from there. I had to. When you’re thrown in the deep
end you learn pretty fast,” she says.
With talent and a
flare for creating striking images she went on to became
‘official photographer’ for a number of organisations
and shoot many varied subjects over the years: from
John Travolta in his role as ambassador for
Qantas, to the Wiggles, to the Australian Olympians
returning from their triumphant Athen Olympics.
Brown
describes her experience with the Olympic
athletes:
“I’m a Kiwi, but I was still stoked to see
that plane cruise into that huge Kingsford Smith Airport
hanger and watch all the smiling, medal-clad olympians walk
down the stairs and touch back down on Aussie soil and greet
their families. It was a really cool moment - they were all
totally beaming,” she says.
"John Travolta was also fun
to shoot. I even had the chance to do the Vince Vega Jack
rabbit slim dance (from Pulp Fiction) with him in between
shots. It was a bit surreal," she says.
From her first day
shooting photos for the Hibiscus Coast Newspaper, Brown
found she loved the instantaneousness of the photographic
medium.
“I started taking photographs before digital
was everywhere like it is now - it was the old school film
days. Still, I found with a bit of camera shutter speed or
aperture tweaking here and there, you could take the kinds
of images you had in your mind in a single instant. You
could develop them and see them that very day.
“This was
exhilarating for me. To explain, I came from a family which
valued traditional artistic skills very, very highly. And to
be honest photography - even professional photography - was
viewed as a very amateur, low-brow pass time.
“Within a
traditional, artistic sense, the type of full blown, full
colour, realistic images of a scene you see or have in your
mind could take weeks to create, and suddenly here I found I
could create it in a split second.
“It’s obvious I
know, but to me, and at that time, this was quite a
revelation.
Family connections
This is
only the second photographic exhibition of Cat Brown’s
works. In 2000 she had her first showing of photographs as
part of a family exhibition along with her late father,
traditional realist artist and ex-lecturer at Auckland
University’s Elam School of Fine Art Peter Brown, her
Gisborne-based artist mother Catherine Brother, and designer
and artist brother Romilly Brown (current winner of the
Gisborne/East Coast Telecom Art Awards).
Brown, who is
also an artist and illustrator has exhibited painted and
illustrated works in both Australia and New Zealand.
"My father Peter Brown taught me to look very carefully at my surroundings, to notice the subtleties, the patterns and the colours that others might take for granted. I've tried to take this a step further and make the little things big, the patterns more obvious and the subtleties scream with colour. I think he'd be pretty proud of what I'm doing now ... ," says Brown smiling.
About Cat Brown
Cat Brown is a
photographer, artist and musician based in Thorndon,
Wellington. Her work is as dynamic and varied as she
is.
“I have to have dynamism in what I do, I get bored
easily,” she says.
After working in journalism, and
communications over the past 12 years, Brown has never been
far from a camera.
More
details
• For interviews and more information
call Cat Brown on 0211 548 540 or email catbrownphoto@xtra.co.nz
• Attached:
Promotional photographs from
Wellington::Colourcity.Velocity
• Attached: Promotional
photograph of Cat Brown/if used please photo credit: Ali
Balkwill
• Click Wellington::Colourcity.Velocity to see
this new series of fine art poptographic prints by Cat
Brown
ENDS