View allAll Photos Tagged UniversityofTechnologySydney
This is the final series for my photography subject at university.
Shot on a Bronica SQA with a 90mm lens and a 24mm lens, and on Kodak E100G.
It was shot in the squatter community of Tin City on Stockton beach near Newcastle. A really wonderful place whose undeniable relationship with a harsh and volatile landscape is explored in the series.
The new Chau Chak Wing Building, designed by Frank Gehry for the University of Technology in Sydney.
Mamiya C3
Sekor 80mm f/2.8
Kodak TMax 100
1/60s f/5.6
This is the final series for my photography subject at university.
Shot on a Bronica SQA with a 90mm lens and a 24mm lens, and on Kodak slide film.
It was shot in the squatter community of Tin City on Stockton beach near Newcastle. A really wonderful place whose undeniable relationship with a harsh and volatile landscape is explored in the series.
In and around the Dr Chau Chak Wing building at the University of Technology (UTS) in Sydney. The building was designed by architect Frank Gehry.
Lens used was really a Konica M-Hexanon 28mm/f2.8 (I forgot to change the lens setting)
I was travelling up an esculator (moving stairs) of the UTS building (Ultimo, Sydney) when I spotted the reflection of clouds on the glass of the esculator and thought 'stairway to heaven' and snapped some photos of the effect. I hope you like it.
A section of the Dr Chau Chak Wing Building of the University of Technology, Sydney. Designed by Frank Gehry, it has been likened to a crushed paper bag.
In and around the Dr Chau Chak Wing building at the University of Technology (UTS) in Sydney. The building was designed by architect Frank Gehry.
Lens used was really a Konica M-Hexanon 28mm/f2.8 (I forgot to change the lens setting)
View of the living wall and greenery on the outside of Central Park opposite University of Technology Sydney at Broadway, NSW, Australia.
This is the final series for my photography subject at university.
Shot on a Bronica SQA with a 90mm lens and a 24mm lens, and on Fuji Velvia 100.
It was shot in the squatter community of Tin City on Stockton beach near Newcastle. A really wonderful place whose undeniable relationship with a harsh and volatile landscape is explored in the series.
In and around the Dr Chau Chak Wing building at the University of Technology (UTS) in Sydney. The building was designed by architect Frank Gehry.
Lens used was really a Konica M-Hexanon 28mm/f2.8 (I forgot to change the lens setting)
Wedged between the sculptured walls of the Brutalist library building at the Kuring-gai campus of the University of Technology Sydney is this simple seat.
UTS Kuring-gai is located in the Sydney suburb of Lindfield, New South Wales, Australia. The university buildings were designed by David Don Turner and built in stages from 1971.
Shot on Ilford FP4 Plus black-and-white film.
In and around the Dr Chau Chak Wing building at the University of Technology (UTS) in Sydney. The building was designed by architect Frank Gehry.
Lens used was really a Konica M-Hexanon 28mm/f2.8 (I forgot to change the lens setting)
In and around the Dr Chau Chak Wing building at the University of Technology (UTS) in Sydney. The building was designed by architect Frank Gehry.
Lens used was really a Konica M-Hexanon 28mm/f2.8 (I forgot to change the lens setting)
Two muslim men in Hyderabad, drinking tea together at a local pakistan-style bakery after going to mosque in the Muslim majority city.
Many works reflect life in limbo - not knowing whether their refugee claim will be granted or when a decision will be made
This is the final series for my photography subject at university.
Shot on a Bronica SQA with a 90mm lens and a 24mm lens, and on Fuji Velvia 100.
It was shot in the squatter community of Tin City on Stockton beach near Newcastle. A really wonderful place whose undeniable relationship with a harsh and volatile landscape is explored in the series.
This is the final series for my photography subject at university.
Shot on a Bronica SQA with a 90mm lens and a 24mm lens, and on Kodak slide film.
It was shot in the squatter community of Tin City on Stockton beach near Newcastle. A really wonderful place whose undeniable relationship with a harsh and volatile landscape is explored in the series.
I don't really like this photo, but hey, it was a pretty good view from Level 27 of the UTS Tower Building.
The Brutalist library building at the Kuring-gai campus of the University of Technology Sydney in the Sydney suburb of Lindfield, New South Wales, Australia. UTS Kuring-gai was designed by David Don Turner and built in 1971.
Shot on Ilford FP4 Plus black-and-white film.
This is the final series for my photography subject at university.
Shot on a Bronica SQA with a 90mm lens and a 24mm lens, and on Fuji Velvia 100.
It was shot in the squatter community of Tin City on Stockton beach near Newcastle. A really wonderful place whose undeniable relationship with a harsh and volatile landscape is explored in the series.
Alumni, friends and past and present staff from the UTS Kuring-gai campus and it's antecedent institutions gathered to bid a fond farewell to the much-loved leafy bush campus in Sydney's Lindfield on Saturday 7 November 2015.
Photo by Encapture Photography
University of Technology Sydney - UTS Building 4 – the original Faculty of Science building along Harris and Thomas streets, expected to become a new state-of-the-art research facility in the future.
The Peak the residential tower on top of Market City can be seen in the background.
In between, a glimpse of the iconic Dr Chau Chak Wing Building (Brown Paper Bag Building opened on 2 February 2015), designed by the renowned architect Frank Gehry for the UTS Business School, can be seen.
The new Dr Chau Chak Wing Building of the University of Technology, Sydney, seen at dusk. Designed by Frank Gehry, it has been likened to a crushed paper bag.
An exciting new research collaboration in spinal cord injury and neurodegenerative disease launches at the University of Technology in Sydney on Wednesday 14 September. The Project Edge initiative, in partnership with SpinalCure Australia and Spinal Cord Injuries of Australia (SCIA) and UTS, will expand on the groundbreaking research of world-renowned spinal cord injury expert, UCLA's Professor Reggie Edgerton, and will be hosted at the new transdisciplinary UTS Centre for Neuroscience and Regenerative Medicine, launching in 2017.
Photographs by Carmen Lee Platt/Encapture Photography
An exciting new research collaboration in spinal cord injury and neurodegenerative disease launches at the University of Technology in Sydney on Wednesday 14 September. The Project Edge initiative, in partnership with SpinalCure Australia and Spinal Cord Injuries of Australia (SCIA) and UTS, will expand on the groundbreaking research of world-renowned spinal cord injury expert, UCLA's Professor Reggie Edgerton, and will be hosted at the new transdisciplinary UTS Centre for Neuroscience and Regenerative Medicine, launching in 2017.
Photographs by Carmen Lee Platt/Encapture Photography
An exciting new research collaboration in spinal cord injury and neurodegenerative disease launches at the University of Technology in Sydney on Wednesday 14 September. The Project Edge initiative, in partnership with SpinalCure Australia and Spinal Cord Injuries of Australia (SCIA) and UTS, will expand on the groundbreaking research of world-renowned spinal cord injury expert, UCLA's Professor Reggie Edgerton, and will be hosted at the new transdisciplinary UTS Centre for Neuroscience and Regenerative Medicine, launching in 2017.
Photographs by Carmen Lee Platt/Encapture Photography
The new Dr Chau Chak Wing Building of the University of Technology, Sydney. Designed by Frank Gehry, it has been likened to a crushed paper bag.
In and around the Dr Chau Chak Wing building at the University of Technology (UTS) in Sydney. The building was designed by architect Frank Gehry.
Lens used was really a Konica M-Hexanon 28mm/f2.8 (I forgot to change the lens setting)
Alumni, friends and past and present staff from the UTS Kuring-gai campus and it's antecedent institutions gathered to bid a fond farewell to the much-loved leafy bush campus in Sydney's Lindfield on Saturday 7 November 2015.
Photo by Encapture Photography
Some people would say that this is the best view of this building :)
From Wikipedia:
"The University of Technology, Sydney (UTS), is a university in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. The university was founded in its current form in 1988, although its origins trace back to the 1870s.
UTS is notable for its central location as the only university with its main campuses within the Sydney CBD. It is part of the Australian Technology Network of universities and has the fifth largest enrolment in Sydney.
UTS has been ranked 234th in the World's Top 500 universities by the Times HES (2008) and was one of two Australian Universities given A1 ratings across all major disciplines in 2007 and 2008 by the Federal Government Education department.
The famous 'Tower' building is an example of brutalist architecture with square and block concrete designs.
In October 2006, the university's tower building was voted by 23% of the total vote in a poll hosted by Sydney Morning Herald as ugliest building in Sydney."
UTS - University of Technology Sydney. I could have shot the whole tower but the tower is a real ugly building, probably one of the ugliest, if not the ugliest, in Sydney. The history of this centre of learning is quite interesting: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UTS_Tower
The project: www.flickr.com/groups/rollinaday The November RAD project was to choose a subject starting with 'A' and then follow the alphabet for the number of frames in the roll. I decided to upload all this time, even the dodgy shots - from A - Z.
Link to A - Z album: www.flickr.com/photos/30079014@N03/sets/72157649723641866/