POWERHOUSE COLLECTION

Photographs, The Rocks Festival, by Kerry Dundas

Object No. 2007/208/1

The photographs by Kerry Dundas record aspects of The Rocks' prominent place in the hotel and drinking history of Sydney. As one of the first areas of Sydney to be settled by wharf labourers and other city workers, The Rocks precinct has long been home to a dense concentration of hotels and drinkers. Some of these hotels, including the Ocean Wave and the Hero of Waterloo are memorably depicted in the Tyrrell collection of historic photographs. Although most Rocks hotels were removed or rebuilt during the Sydney Harbour Trust's redevelopment of the early twentieth century, the precinct has continued to be associated with hotels. Public ownership of the Rocks hotels and housing protected this character throughout the twentieth century. Kerry Dundas' photographs depict two scenes from the The Rocks Festival during the 1970s, plus a more everyday Rocks drinking scene. With a pub crawl as its main event, the Rocks Festival of the 1970s had a markedly different character to the decorous heritage and music events now organised by the Sydney Harbour Foreshore Authority. The bacchanalian scenes produced by the pub crawl ensured that it was favourite of documentary and news photographers including as well as Dundas, Roger Scott and John Williams. The scenes depicted in Dundas' photos are comparatively dignified in character, despite the gent in drag atop the Land Rover. As publicly-endorsed pub crawls are now a thing of the past, it is valuable to have this record of the Rocks Festival and of the pre-tourist precinct character of the Rocks, created by one of Australia's leading documentary photographers. Charles Pickett, Curator

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Summary

Object Statement

Photographs (3), silver gelatin prints, The Rocks Festival, photographs by Kerry Dundas, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia, 1970-1980

Physical Description

Three photographic prints depicting scenes from The Rocks Festival in Sydney. The first print featues a scene from Lower Fort Street, The Rocks, near the Hero of Waterloo Hotel. A decorated Land Rover is at centre, bearing a banner stating 'The Castlereagh Hotel salutes The Rocks'. The street behind is crowded with drinkers. The second print features a group of drinkers also apparently in Lower Fort Street, behind an elderly man playing a trumpet. The third print features a group of sailors and casually dressed men sitting or leaning on a railing outside a tiled hotel. All photographs bear the photographer's stamped details on the reverse.

PRODUCTION

Notes

The photographs were taken by Kerry Dundas (1931 - 2010), son of the artist Douglas Dundas. He was apprenticed to the studio of portrait photographer Monte Luke in 1948. From 1951 he worked for the Max Dupain studio, gaining the opportunity to work in a variety of commercial contexts. Dundas also began photographing documentary subjects and moved to London in 1958, working successfully as a photo-journalist for some years. His stories and photos were published in The Observer, The Times, Vogue and numerous other high-profile newspapers and magazines. After returning to Sydney in 1967 Dundas worked again with Max Dupain before becoming photographer for the Art Gallery of New South Wales, where he produced portraits and documentary photographs of artists, designers and others.

SOURCE

Credit Line

Purchased 2007

Acquisition Date

10 December 2007

Copyright for the above image is held by the Powerhouse and may be subject to third-party copyright restrictions. Please submit an Image Licensing Enquiry for information regarding reproduction, copyright and fees. Text is released under Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivative licence.

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