Trent Parke is an Australian photographer. He is the husband of Narelle Autio, with whom he often collaborates. He has created a number of photography books; won numerous national and international awards including four World Press Photo awards; and his photographs are held in numerous public and private collections. He is a member of Magnum Photos.
Early life
Parke was born and brought up in Newcastle, New South Wales. He started photography when he was twelve. At age 13 he watched his mother die from an asthma attack.[1]
Career
Parke has worked as a photojournalist for The Australian newspaper.[1]
In 2003 he and his wife, the photographer Narelle Autio, made a 90,000 km trip around Australia, resulting in Parke's books Minutes to Midnight[2] and The Black Rose.[1]
Parke became a member of the In-Publicstreet photography collective in 2001.[3] He became a Magnum Photos nominee in 2002 and a member in 2007; the first Australian invited to join.[4][5]
Selected publications
As author
Dream/Life. Kirribilli, N.S.W, Australia: Hot Chilli Press, 1999. ISBN0-646-37991-7.
The Seventh Wave: Photographs of Australian Beaches. Kirribilli, N.S.W, Australia: Hot Chilli Press, 2000. Hardback ISBN0-646-39747-8. Paperback ISBN0-646-39746-X. With Narelle Autio. Includes an essay on the beach in Australian culture by Robert Drewe.
The Black Rose. Adelaide, Australia: Art Gallery of South Australia, 2015. Published to accompany an exhibition at the Art Gallery of South Australia, 14 March – 10 May 2015.
So now then. Cardiff: Ffotogallery, 2006. ISBN9781872771656. Edited by Paul Seawright and Christopher Coppock. Photographs by Parke, Shelby Lee Adams, Adam Broomberg & Oliver Chanarin, Chien-Chi Chang, Weng Fen, Julio Grinblatt, An-My Lê Susan Meiselas, Boris Mikhailov, Simon Norfolk, Paul Shambroom, Massimo Vitali and Michael Wesely. Essays by David Campany, "Straight pictures of a crooked world"; Martha Langford, "What use is photography"; and Jan-Erik Lundström, "Look and tell: some further thoughts on the documentary genre". An anthology of international documentary photography commissioned by Hereford Photo Festival. Edition of 1000.
100 Great Street Photographs. Munich, London, New York: Prestel, 2017. By David Gibson. ISBN978-3791383132. Contains a commentary on and a photograph by Parke.
The Summation of Force – eight channel film directed by Parke, Autio, and Matthew Bate[6][7]
Documentaries about Parke
Dreamlives (2002). Directed and produced by Jennifer Crone. Includes Trent and Autio. OCLC701130326
Trent Parke: The Black Rose (2015). Directed by Catherine Hunter. Includes Parke, Autio and Geoff Dyer. Broadcast on ABC, 21 April 2015.[8]
Recognition and awards
Martin Parr and Gerry Badger say that Parke's first book Dream/Life is "as dynamic a set of street pictures as has been seen outside the United States or Japan".[9]
Awards include:
1996–1998: 5 Gold Lenses, International Olympic Committee.[10]
1999: Second prize, Daily Life category, World Press Photo Award (for "Bathurst Car Races").[11]
2000: Second prize, Daily Life stories category, World Press Photo Award 1999 (for "The Seventh Wave").[12]
2000: Canon photo essay prize, Sasakawa World Sports Awards.[10]
2001: First prize, Nature stories category, World Press Photo Award 2000, with Narelle Autio (for "Australian Roadkill" series).[13]
2014: Winner of Photography category, Prudential Eye Awards by Global Eye Program.[17]
2014: Deutscher Fotobuchpreis 2015, Gold medal, Konzeptionell-künstlerische Fotobildbänd (Conceptually-artistic photobook) category, went to Steidl for Minutes to Midnight, along with three other winners.[18]