|

Olive Cotton (1911-2003)
Australian Photographer
This catalogue is available
to download as an
Acrobat PDF 959kb
Compiled by Josef &
Jeanne Lebovic, Lenka Miklos
On exhibition from Saturday, 7 October to 31 October 2009.
Prices are in Australian dollars and include GST.
Exch. rates as at time of printing: AUD $1.00= USD $0.86¢;
UK £0.54p
© Licence by VISCOPY AUSTRALIA 2009 LRN 5523
OLIVE COTTON
In 1929, at the age
of 18, Olive Cotton became a member of the Sydney Camera Club
and the Photographic Society of New South Wales.
After graduating from
Sydney University with a BA in 1934, she joined Max Dupains
studio and after a brief marriage from 1939 to 1941, they separated.
Cotton ran Dupains studio while he was in service during
WWII from 1942 to 1945. |
|
|
Vintage Prints #1-10
|
1 |
Vintage Prints #11-16
|
2 |
Non-Vintage Prints #17-25
|
3 |
Non-Vintage Prints #26-33
|
4 |
Non-Vintage Prints #34-43
|
5 |
Non-Vintage Prints #44-53
|
6 |
Non-Vintage Prints #54-63
|
7 |
In 1946 she married Ross
McInerney and moved to Cowra, where she continued to photograph
the landscape. From the mid 1960s she ran her own photographic
studio.
In the early 1980s she
began to print from the many negatives amassed over the years
(continuing until the studio closed mid 1990s).
Cotton is now recognised as a major contributor to Australian
photography.
The portrait of Olive
Cotton (left) was taken by Jean McInerney (later Jean Lorraine)
in 1943. A close friend of Olive Cotton, Jean was one of the
Dupain studio models. For several years they were also sisters-in-law.
"Olive was always my friend...I was working for the American
Red Cross at this time, not modelling professionally, and she
and I had some fun in the studio: she did a portrait of me by
candle-light, and I took this portrait of her"
Jean Bailey
(Jean Lorraine), Richmond, Virginia, 1998
(Ref: Sally McInerney, Olive Cottons daughter) |