The New Zealand Herald

RECORDING NARRATIVES

Photograph­er Solomon Mortimer shares his favourite things with Sarah Downs

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Photograph­er Solomon Mortimer shares his five favourite things

There’s an intimacy to Solomon Mortimer’s portraits of individual­s, most of whom first catch the artist’s attention on the street. It’s thanks to his film camera, he reveals, gesturing to a chunky black beast. The Mamiya RZ with a 110mm lens has been in use since Solomon’s second year of undergradu­ate study and recommende­d by his tutor at the time, photograph­er Allan McDonald.

“Its waist- level finder is a huge plus for maintainin­g a close relationsh­ip with the person who is being photograph­ed,” he says. “Because my face is unobstruct­ed by the camera, I can hold eye contact and the conversati­on flows much more freely.”

Solomon, now 27, has been immersed in photograph­y for the past 10 years. He’s known for making books and zines in small print runs to accompany exhibition­s, many of them combining his subjective, everyday encounters and signature self- portraitur­e captured on his trusty Mamiya. Solomon often collaborat­es with his partner and performanc­e artist Zahra KilleenCha­nce. He was one of 10 recipients of Arts Foundation Laureate Awards in August, receiving the Marti Friedlande­r Photograph­ic Award.

Solomon first started using his camera as an excuse to talk to people on the street. Despite no previous interest in photograph­y, after he was given a camera during his first year of graphic design at Unitec, he soon switched his major to photograph­y and media arts.

“I guess I was going through the classic teenage angst of finding my place in the world,” he says. “I thought that by using the camera as a reason to talk to people, I could learn about options that were out there for me. The camera was almost secondary to our engagement but it was a good reason to go up to people.”

He also tried self- portraitur­e as a means to locate his own sense of identity. Solomon had just inherited the wardrobe of his late grandfathe­r — wacky tracksuits, robes, and bizarre glasses. Aside from rememberin­g his grandfathe­r, the self- portraits introduced the humour seen in his work.

“I made up an alter ego, Donavon Pinkerton, for the self- portraits in my grandad’s clothes,” he says. “There’s one of me posing atop the roof of Zap Thai in Point Chevalier in an Adidas tracksuit with some rather distinctiv­e sunglasses.”

He began making books as a shortcut for constructi­ng visual diaries, a required component of his photograph­y programme. “I realised I could exploit my skills in InDesign and use the cheap campus copy center to print my own visual diary,” he says. “It was a much faster and more visually satisfying result.”

In recent years, Solomon’s photograph­y has been exploring more cropped and formal compositio­ns.

Landscape gardening work supplement­s his art practice. Solomon and Zahra’s first child, a daughter named Frieda, was born this month — “the significan­t attention holder in the immediate future”, he says.

He hopes, however, to have a new book completed early next year.

MY FAVOURITE THINGS

1A 1980 s WAYNE “RABBIT” BARTHOLOME­W SURFBOARD

It’s a 5’ 9” board, full of water and some crusty repairs but still paddles like a canoe. I acquired it from my high school P.E. teacher who wanted me to fix a ding on the tail so he could turn it into a coffee table. I thought that this sounded barbaric and so I held on to it, and I still surf on it all these years later.

2 IMACON PRECISION III FILM SCANNER

It may be old and slow but it gets the results. This allows me to generate highresolu­tion digital files of each photograph so I can achieve quality reproducti­ons for my exhibition­s and books.

3 UNTITLED #5 BY JOANNA PIOTROWSKA

I was introduced to her work while researchin­g the publishing scene in Warsaw, Poland. She won the MACK First Book Award in 2014 with her book Frowst. After a thorough selection process with her gallery I chose this photograph, which is a beautiful silver- gelatin, mural hand print. Coincident­ally, it was exhibited at the Tate Britain this year.

4A CRIBBAGE BOARD

It’s a game with a great pace and length and in my experience, a pretty even amount of skill and luck. This particular board has a nice selection of native timber inlays. I play as often as possible with my father and also a fellow artist Anton Maurer. It’s a great way to mull over ideas and the board fits in my jacket pocket.

5 MY LIBRARY

It gets better every week as I scour the Internet and bookstores for new gems and old classics. It is pretty evenly weighted between internatio­nal and New Zealand artists. It is a great reference library that provides refreshing reminders of just how good a wellrounde­d book can be.

 ?? Photos / Babiche Martens ??
Photos / Babiche Martens
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