Playboy Bunnies …

Yet another publication in the Australian Weekend Magazine’s “Heart of the Nation” excellent weekly pictorial feature with words penned by journalist Ross Bilton. Ross excels at digging deep to find the story behind the images that are showcased every week … and this week he produced yet a another triumph of investigation, shovelling to get the dirt on prospective Playboy Bunnies and Heff’s Mansion. Thanks Ross!

The pic (taken whilst on the Gold Coast) and Ross’s words are below.

Image © Brian Cassey

“Pain Is My Name” …

For some time now one of my fondest places to see my pictures published has been the “Heart of the Nation” weekly feature in the “The Weekend Australian Magazine” – a rare image driven feature that runs ‘out of the ordinary’ photos from around Australia and matches the images with great in depth ‘words’.

Now it’s even better … the mag has had a recent major revamp … and “Heart of the Nation” has moved from a single page at the back of the book to what is often a double page spread near the front under the additional title ‘ForeWord – People & Observations”.

The new format looks sensational … and the images leap off the pages at you at about (in my old measurements) 14 inches by 10 and half inches … a size that is pretty rare in newspaper colour mags.

This weekend the mag featured an image I made at the recent Mareeba Rodeo of a chuckling horse dispatching his rider to his destiny and a face full of dirt. Great words, as usual, from journalist Ross Bilton and the two page spread as run and Ross’s words are shown below.

“Heart of the Nation” is a great window for Australia’s fantastic depth of photographic talent … and picture editor Christine Westwood, feature journalist Ross Bilton and the new magazine editor Christine Middap deserve congratulations … and the gratitude of photographers.

Pic © Brian Cassey 2011

Mareeba Rodeo Elroy Josiah Arrow

Words Mareeba Rodeo

Weebolla Bulls …

Another nice publication today in “Heart of the Nation” – The Australian ‘Weekend’ magazine weekly pictorial feature of slices of life from all around Australia.. The image of the Moree Weebolla Bulls second XV bonding in the dressing room before running out to take on fierce rivals – the Tamworth Magpies – was originally taken for a feature on Moree in Australian Geographic, but didn’t make the edited selection.

Always one of the favourite images of mine from the Moree assignment, it was a picked by Ross Bilton on The Australian ‘Weekend’ mag and Ross’s words once again compliment the pic superbly.

The tear sheet of the ‘Heart of the Nation’ page is below …

Tribal Truth …

Pleased to be selected as the current “Featured Artist” at Tribal Truth – the online community of artists (from the fields of film, video, art, poetry and photography) and humanitarian organisations working on humanitarian issues and social change. Tribal Truth’s object is to “endeavour to increase understanding among people of different race, nationality, religion, age, and gender.”

The work selected is a selection of twenty of my images from Queensland’s indigenous communities. The pictures span the communities of Aurukun, Napranum, Urandangi, Mona Mona, Kowrowa, Mossman, Laura and more.

The complete featured work can be found here – http://tribaltruth.org/2011/07/brian-cassey/

Below is just one of the selected images – from the Mona Mona community – a former mission – near Kuranda and Cairns in north Queensland.

Image © Brian Cassey

The Reef …

Something a little different from the norm … The carbon tax launch by the Australian Government last Sunday was the catalyst for a visit to the outer Great Barrier Reef at the request of the pic editor at the Australian newspaper.

The requested image – an underwater reefscape – was to accompany a story on the carbon tax and the reef conundrum – the reef desperately needs measures like carbon tax to put a halt to global warming and ensure it’s survival … but any tax may make the reef  more expensive for reef tourism operators and therefore less accessible to reef visitors. The jobs of crew and dive staff may also be in jeopardy in the future.

The full story penned by journo Sarah Elks – and the image (also below) – can be found here in the Australian on-line edition.

I travelled to the outer reef with Tusa Dive on their vessel Tusa5. Their relatively young and enthusiastic crew and staff were extremely professional and amazingly helpful and my ‘wishlist’ was attended to very efficiently.
Special mention must go to my long suffering dive buddy/instructor/sitter – Lindy – who showed amazing patience with a wayward non-certified diver!

For anyone interested in such things, the image was made on a Nikon D3S with lens focal length at about 20mm … and the kit nestled rather worryingly inside my German made Ewa-Marine U-BXP10 (flexible) housing. No idea now of exposure settings although they would be in the EXIF data. (actually looked it up … 640asa, 250 @ 5.6, bit of fill flash)

Image © Brian Cassey 2011

‘To Be Indigenous’ … Book Updated for 2011

The original edition of “To Be Indigenous” – my volume of collected images from Indigenous communities in Queensland – was first published over two years ago. Texts were now a little out of date and newer images were crying out to be included.

So … the NEW updated 2011 edition of “To Be Indigenous” is now available … with more pages (an extra 16 – now 80 pages), updated texts and more photographs.

Communities featuring in the volume now include – Aurukun, Kowanyama, Napranum, Mona Mona, Kowrowa, Port Stewart (the Lamalama), Palm Island, Mossman Gorge and more.

Below are just some of the new pages and images included in the 2011 edition.

To order please go to the ‘Books’ page on my website here.

(Note: the original edition of “To Be Indigenous” was recently featured in the Reading Room of the National Library of Australia in Canberra. See here for details in earlier post)

All Images © Brian Cassey


Rajasthan & Holi …

Have at last had time to post the second photo essay from the recent trek to India – “Rajasthan & Holi” – to the ‘fotostrada’ website at …  http://www.fotostrada.com/#/brian-cassey/india-in-an-ambassador/BCRaja1 (UpDate … the two India essays “Varanasi” and “Rajasthan & Holi” have now been combined into a new essay on the ‘fotostrada’ website entitled “India in an Ambassador”)

The images were made during the trip with News Ltd photographer colleagues Rob Maccoll and Peter Wallis in an old and once ubiquitous Ambassador taxi (a 1950’s Morris Oxford lookalike) through Rajasthan and onto Vrindavan in Uttar Pradesh.

One cannot fail to be impressed by the vivid colours of Rajasthan … the women dress in the most brilliant saris. The Elephant Festival and Holi Festival in Jaipur are also riots of colour.

Some of these pics have just been published, along with the work of my travelling colleagues, over three pages in the Walkley Magazine – the bi-monthly journal for the media industry.

When time permits I will post the images from India to my personal web site – www.briancasseyphotographer.com

Just three of the many images in the pic essay are shown below … click on an image to take you to the full essay.

All images © Brian Cassey – from top – Vrindavan, Jodhpur, Vrindavan.

No Man Is An Island …

Another nice “Heart Of The Nation” image publication in the Weekend Australian Magazine today (May 7). Couldn’t have been of a nicer person either –  David Glasheen who lives alone on remote and historic Restoration Island off the very northern tip of Australia near the indigenous community of Lockhart River.

I’ve made the trek to Restoration Island and photographed David on three memorable occasions over the past couple of years – twice for News Ltd in Australia (one of which was coverage of the arrival of the ‘Bounty’ boat replica) and once for a New York Times feature – and have been made more than welcome on every visit.

The image used in this latest issue of the Weekend Magazine in “Heart Of The Nation” is perhaps my favourite from my visits – and journalist Ross Bilton’s words more than do justice to the pic (as always !).

As Ross tells the story better than I do I’ve shown his text below the image.

 

National Library of Australia …

My gratitude goes to Craig Hodges of ACT who sent me a message today with the welcome information that my volume of indigenous images – “To Be Indigenous” – is currently featured and on display in the reading room of The National Library of Australia in Canberra.

A bit pleased about that …

The volume is 64 pages landscape, hardcover and 13″x11″ on premium stock – features a forward by Walkley winning journalist Tony Koch and images from many north Queensland indigenous communities.

Below is a cover image and a selection of pics from inside the volume. More info on books can be found here.

All Images © Brian Cassey

Cyclone, Cyclone …

A jam packed, eventful and sad week …

It began with a 600 kilometre road chase from Cairns to Bowen to catch category 2 Cyclone Anthony crossing the coast and giving the town (famous for being the site where the movie “Australia” was filmed) a bit of a shake up. Nuthin’ too serious and a challenge to get newsy frames.

However, all that was about to change as the massive storm system of Cyclone Yasi moved across the Coral Sea from the Fiji area and strengthened to category 5.

Weather experts warned that Yasi was on target to cross the coast somewhere between Cooktown and Bowen on the far north east coast of Queensland with catastrophic results.

The Queensland Government line was even more pessimistic … calling Yasi the worst ever cyclone to grace Australia in modern times. Lives would be lost …

By Monday the City of Townsville was deemed to be at the point of Cyclone Yasi’s arrow. After documenting Bowen’s damage from Anthony we drove up the coast to find a suitably strong, tidal surge proof hotel room in Townsville to await the tempest.

However, first light next morning brought the news that Yasi had turned it’s attention further north and was now targeting my home town of Cairns. So … back in the car for the near 400 km drive home stopping off at various spots en route to do a few ‘preview’ pics.

The priorities back in Cairns were two fold … plan where and how to photographically document the worse case scenario of massive destruction … and to do as much as we could to save our beautiful old timber Queensland style house and all that it contains.

After boarding up, packing up and kissing the house good bye, attention turned to the photographic plan. Rooms were booked at the Hilton Hotel on the waterfront in Cairns and car parks acquired above storm surge level on the second floor of the building next door. Helicopters were placed on standby to be available as soon as the cyclone passed.

Dawn of Cyclone Yasi’s arrival saw thousands of families stream into cyclone rated evacuation centres in shopping centres and schools … they filled quickly and some were turned away. By early afternoon the streets were completely deserted and an eerie calm settled over the town. Major hotels, including our Hilton, had plans in place to lock all guests up for the duration. A bit of polite negotiation with hotel management and we were free to come and go “at our own risk”.

Luckily for Cairns Yasi took a late final twist to the south and zeroed in on the small seaside town of Cardwell … half way between Townsville and Cairns.

Overnight category 5 Yasi, punching winds up to 300 km an hour, smashed it’s way through the Cassowary Coast area from Silkwood in the north, El Arish, Mission Beach, Tully, Hull Heads, Tully Heads, Dunk Island and Cardwell. A storm surge metres high destroyed beach side properties and islands.

For over 7 hours after Yasi crossed the coast we flew around the disaster areas in our chopper documenting the damage and tribulations of the shell shocked residents from the air and on the ground. The next day we returned by helicopter to the remains of famous Dunk Island Resort and spoke to traumatised staff and management.

Out of the many published pics in News Ltd mastheads I made in the early days following, the most striking, I feel, were these two which made it to the front pages of two consecutive days ‘The Courier Mail” …

When time permits I will put together a photo essay of images from this disastrous event.

Stairway To Heaven …

One of my favourite images of late … and a nice publication … featured in The Australian Weekend Magazine “Heart Of A Nation” section on the 15th January 11.

© Image – Brian Cassey


“A Paradise Of Sorts

“Cairns based Photographer Brian Cassey was down at the Gold Coast on a job for the London newspapers – trying to snap celebs who’d been evicted from the British reality TV series I’m a Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here!, being filmed in the nearby Springbrook National Park – when he found himself one day in Surfers Paradise.

It was Schoolies Week. He’s no fan of the institution – “I usually try to stay away… all you’re going to get is trouble,” he says wisely – but after managing to avoid all the boozing and carousing youngsters he stumbled across this strange scene in the Centro Shopping Centre. The girls dressed as angels were going around collecting money for Paradise Kids – a Gold Coast charity that helps children deal with the heartache of losing a loved one.

Cassey couldn’t resist the image of a bunch of angels ascending a stairway – not to heaven, you’ll notice, but to a bowling alley on one side and the Australian Shooting Academy on the other. Despite the name, the “Academy” doesn’t offer educational courses exactly; rather, punters come in and pay money for the thrill of firing weapons – everything from a big-game hunting rifle to a Smith & Wesson 500 magnum, the most powerful production revolver on earth. It’s a strange old world.”                 Ross Bilton