Side Lit Hallway

Provenance

Camera
NIKON D7000
Lens
14.0-24.0 mm f/2.8
Settings
19mm · f/8.0 · 3s · ISO 100
Paper
Ilford Galerie Smooth Cotton Rag 310 gsm

Sunlight streams through a high window, illuminating a long, empty hallway inside a decaying building at Callan Park. Peeling paint and worn floorboards show years of neglect within the former asylum.

Edition
Open edition

Open edition
Printed to order, no fixed quantity. Each print is hand-signed by the photographer.

Limited edition
A fixed number of prints exist. Once sold, the edition closes permanently. Each print is individually numbered and signed.

$100.00 AUD
Size
Type
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Signed, numbered, with COA. Made to order in 3 to 5 business days. Shipped in protective packaging with edition certificate, paper-stock reference and a printed care guide.
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In situ

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Print datasheet

Title
Side Lit Hallway
Series
Callan Park
Catalogue
CPA-050
Process
Giclée
Captured
29 October 2015
Paper
Ilford Galerie Smooth Cotton Rag 310 gsm
Paper size
290 × 200 mm
Location
Rozelle, New South Wales, Australia
Authenticity
C2PA verified →
Recognised by
National Trust of Australia (NSW), 2016 Heritage Award, Multimedia

Where this was photographed

Rozelle, New South Wales, Australia

Map · Mapbox · OpenStreetMap

About this print

Sunlight enters through a high window into a long hallway in one of the buildings at Callan Park. The light falls across the timber boards of the floor and the lower walls of the corridor. The walls are plastered and painted, the paint peeling in patches across the upper sections. The hallway extends to a door at the far end.

Callan Park's pavilion design used linked corridors between the ten ward blocks of the Kirkbride Complex. The corridors and the continuous covered veranda that connected them were part of the moral-therapy design that made Callan Park Australia's first purpose-built hospital of its kind. The hospital was proclaimed in 1878 and closed in 2008, after merging into Rozelle Hospital in 1976.

From the field notes

An old hallway with mould starting to take over the paintwork on the walls.

— Brett Patman

Callan Park

The series

Callan Park

2016–2018 · 66 photographs

Callan Park opened in 1885 as the Callan Park Hospital for the Insane, on land at Rozelle in Sydney's Inner West. The Kirkbride Complex was designed by colonial architect James Barnet and superintendent Frederick Norton Manning, intended as a working example of the more progressive psychiatric care principles of the period. The hospital was reorganised through the twentieth century and many of the wards remain. Brett photographed across multiple visits between 2016 and 2018.

View all in this series →

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Print sizes.

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Anatomy · true ratio
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