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Internals from our cultural center.

Tom Dinning

pro member
Who says we don't have culture. We have a building to house it in.

[
url=http://www.flickr.com/photos/tomdinning/8210746416/]
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_DSC3343 by tom.dinning, on Flickr



_DSC3341 by tom.dinning, on Flickr


_DSC3332 by tom.dinning, on Flickr



_DSC3353 by tom.dinning, on Flickr


_DSC3348 by tom.dinning, on Flickr

It's empty most days.
 

Michael Nagel

Well-known member
Tom,

Cultural Center - an oxymoron? Can culture be centralized and planned? I digress...

Just what I see - in few words.

The first is the one I like the most - composition and b/w PP is how I would have liked to have it done myself (well, I didn't :) ).

The second I like a little less, not because of the crop or b/w PP, but there is a little pincushion distortion visible on the borders and the engineer in me gets distracted.

On the third - I never tried narrow perspective on escalators when I had the room for it, I have to think it over.

In the fourth - did you also see a little robot which just looks like a water dispenser?

The fifth is another example for me on how my pattern recognition works. The stairs provide a strong diagonal feature just like in this one it made me remember.

Cultural Centers are no place for me when I can walk/sit outside...

Best regards,
Michael
 

Tom Dinning

pro member
Thank you Michael for your comments.
I'm with you on cultural centers. Never the less, if it makes a difference for some I'm with them as well. Besides, it gives me something to photograph on a wet day. It also doubles as a conference centre so we get plenty of anti-culture to help pay the bills.

As for your technical assistance, I probably need that from time to time. I know it all but usually ignore it. It's my sloppy technique. Technical blindness. So what if there is a bent line or a bit of blur or what ever. I photograph like I dress. Functional. Fancy gear and post processing is wasted on me most days.

As for the ranking, that's nice.
As for the forth, it seemed a bit strange that a nice photo is framed with doors, vents, water coolers, bins and buttons. That's culture for you.
 

Doug Kerr

Well-known member
Hi, Tom,

The different sized leaves on the double door is a nice design feature.

Best regards,

Doug
 

Sam Hames

New member
Who says we don't have culture. We have a building to house it in.

...

It's empty most days.

A cultural center! We have one of those! I've been inside one of the associated buildings (twice). Going by the interior fitout this seems like be the kind of modern design that just gets irritating after a while.

The most important cultural center in Brisbane is the Cultural Center Busway Station - I figure that means you can skip going inside and just get your culture via osmosis as you head home from work. I would take photos of the buildings, but honestly this is more interesting - especially at peak hour with bus jams and lots of people.

I do like those chairs though - might be a nice place to sit and get some work done.

culturalCenterBuswayBrisbaneSkyline.jpg
 

Tom Dinning

pro member
Love that place, Sam. Never been in any of the buildings but the bus terminal is one of my favourites. Always something going on - or not. Thanks for reminding me. I need to get to Brizzie soon.
 

Asher Kelman

OPF Owner/Editor-in-Chief
I'll have a look. The only one I know,at the moment is the Number 4 Bus Link. I'll send you a timetable.

That would be nice! I'll have my driver follow it all the way to the show! Still, I'd love to know the address in case we lose the bus by an abrupt turn of a traffic light! So what's the address and the official name? Can you disclose that without breaking some primal aboriginal oath of secrecy? I'm interested in looking up the program of upcoming events.

Asher
 

Tom Dinning

pro member
Ha.
I'm still laughing.
I should explain.
It's official name is Darwin Convention Centre. It was originally designed to be part of the cultural experience of The Waterfront Precinct but a public servant realized it wouldn't make any money so it now is mostly used for conventions, for which purpose it is mostly empty.

At the other end of town we have what is called The Darwin Entertainment Centre which runs the 'events', plays opera, ballet, you know the stuff. I'm still laughing. Seriously, for the number of times we have anything worth attending they could hold it in my living room and I wouldn't need to shift the furniture.
We do have the Darwin Orchestra which performs outdoors mostly. It's a great program composed totally of amateur musicians but they only perform a couple of times a year. The performed for Mother's Day at the Waterfront Precinct. It's free. Families turn up with their Eskys and deck chairs and sit on the lawn to watch the show. They are pretty good and well supported.
Scattered around town there are smaller venues that hold art shows of locals works but that is also rare. The NT museum of Art and Culture is worth a visit if its still open when you get here. Their budget keeps getting cut.
This is The NT after all. Darwin has a population of about 100 000. The true culture here is that belonging to the indigenous population which makes up about 40% of the total. It's taken me 25 years to come to grips with the indigenous culture. It's so different to what I am used to. I could only compare to going to another non-westernized country. Indigenous culture doesn't abide by western rules. It doesn't have a 'centre'. It's part of what they do every day. They live it. Painting, dance, song, craft all form part of their daily life and isn't separated for general public viewing except by westerners who want to make a dollar.

Try this link for more local information on what's going on around town. http://www.offtheleash.net.au/

Don't get me wrong. I like this place. I do attend what functions are available and suit my taste. It is limited and poorly supported. A lot is home grown and accessible. Everyone knows everyone, no one get deligated to famous status and if they try it on they get dragged down pretty quick. Those who make it outside must behave themselves when they come home. We have our own culture and it differs from all other places.
 

Paul Abbott

New member
Hey Tom, your second shot is a beautiful and striking abstract image. It's well seen...
The only niggle I have is with the custom crop size...I ended up having a look at seeing how it fares with a 1:1 crop, biased towards the left.






Untitled - Tom Dinning
 
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