Kerrie Di Cataldo
Silo
Edition 1/1
20 x 20 inch
Printed on Hahnemühle Fine Art
$145 AUD
Includes GST & postage within Australia
Bio
Kerrie Di Cataldo
Bio-Data Associate Dip. Arts (photography major). Encompassing both film and digital techniques, Kerrie is interested in the emotional response and feeling generated by the photographic medium. Alternative processes and techniques as well as experimental images offer profound possibilities. The unpredictable element of photography provides the power to excite and surprise. Patience and thought provide the recipe for an image to invoke a lasting impression. Time, place and memory converge. Portrait photography exposes its own innate qualities. When its elements align, the narrative is revealed. The power of visual perception to portray the essence of the subject, attract, and invite contemplation, is paramount.
Awards/Exhibitions: Tresillian Centre, Nedlands (WA) (Highly Commended) 1995.
Town of Vincent (WA) Photographic Award (winner) 1997.
Selected for Solo exhibition, Artrage (WA) 1997.
Invitation to exhibit Solo exhibition, Nannup Festival (WA), 1998.
City of Gosnells (WA) Photographic Award (joint winner) 1998.
York (WA) Photographic Award (Creative, winner) 2012.
York (WA) Photographic Awards (Creative, Highly Commended), 2017.
Minnawarra Art Awards (WA) finalist 2016, and winner of Local Artist Award.
Minnawarra Art Awards (WA), finalist 2016, 2017, 2019, 2021, 2024.
Collective Exhibition (Perth Centre for Photography),2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023 and 2024.
International Monochrome Awards (USA) 2021 Honourable Mention X 4.
CLIP Award (Perth Centre for Photography), semi-finalist 2022.
Percival Photographic Portrait Prize, Qld. Finalist 2018, 2020, 2022, 2024.
Course: The Compelling Portrait (with Toni Wilkinson, Perth Centre for Photography) 2024.
Represented: Numerous private collections, Central Perth Campus, TAFE Art and Design; Town of Vincent (WA); Mt Lawley (WA) Senior High School; Holmes a’Court Collection.
Reviews: “Di Cataldo has photographed images of old, decaying agricultural machinery in distortion, so as to produce lyrical patterns reminiscent of the visual and tactile experiences that their original use once invoked…
Statement
Old silos, no longer in use, linger in a paddock in the Shire of Beverley. Architectural antiques standing as a monument to earlier times.
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