Luke Hardy
Luke Hardy is a photographic artist who has spent a significant period of his adult life living in various Asian countries. Out of this experience he has built a body of essentially portrait-based work reflecting on Buddhist and Hindu ritual, often involving water and purification. More recent work contemplates altered states and the thin line between the spiritual and the sensual. His subjects tend to be meditative, half-awake, sometimes somnambulistic.
Hardy has had a lifelong affinity with Japan and Things Japanese, starting from when he was a child absorbing Japanese popular culture on television and in the cinema. This grew into a more serious consideration of Japanese art and literature, although to this day classic Japanese cinema, particularly the work of Ozu, Teshigahara, Masaki Kobayashi and Kurosawa, is a favourite point of contact.
Hardy cannot account for the obsession but, as a photographer, he suspects his fascination with Japan has to do with the way Japanese culture “frames” all that it sees: even a distant feature in the landscape can be “borrowed” to complement the effect of a personal garden.
Hardy has travelled countless times throughout Japan in all of its seasons, over the last thirty years, initially engaging his camera as a means of documentation, but lately, as his practice has become more conceptual, using it to capture authentic elements that he incorporates into meticulous imagined compositions, as in his two series yuki onna and the yet-to-be-exhibited shadowings.
He first exhibited work in Tokyo in 1991 in galleries operated by the UN in Aoyama, Tokyo, alongside award-winning Japanese photographer Masanori Kobayashi.
Hardy’s work is held in private collections in Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore, the UK, Canada, Australia and the USA. His work has been nominated for the Blake Prize [2008] and the Head On Portrait Prize [2006, 2010]. Other works of his have also been shortlisted for Head On prizes. His photographs appear in a number of publications, including Australian Art Review, Photo Review Australia, the Australian Photography and Gallery Compendium and Burma: Art and Archaeology [The British Museum, 2002].
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Exhibitions
Foxfires / Kitsune-bi
Stanley Street Gallery
Shadowings
Exhibition coming soon
Patina 2015
Janet Clayton Gallery
Karaoke 2013
ArtHere Exhibition Space
Dragonfly 2011
Meyer Gallery
Yuki Onna 2009
Meyer Gallery