Balcony Seating
Provenance
- Camera
- NIKON D850
- Lens
- 14.0-24.0 mm f/2.8
- Settings
- 14mm · f/8.0 · 2.0 sec · ISO 1000
- Paper
- Ilford Galerie Smooth Cotton Rag 310 gsm
Rows of cinema chairs arranged across the dress circle balcony. Plasterwork ceiling partially damaged, sections missing or sagging. Diffuse light entering from the decaying interior. Painted walls visible behind the seating rows. No projection equipment or screen in frame.
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.
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In situ





Print datasheet
- Title
- Balcony Seating
- Series
- Marina Picture Palace
- Catalogue
- MPP-001
- Process
- Giclée
- Captured
- 31 March 2019
- Camera
- NIKON D850
- Lens
- 14.0-24.0 mm f/2.8
- Aperture
- f/8.0
- Shutter
- 2.0 sec s
- ISO
- 1000
- Focal length
- 14 mm
- Paper
- Ilford Galerie Smooth Cotton Rag 310 gsm
- Paper size
- 290 × 200 mm
- Location
- Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
- Authenticity
- C2PA verified provenance →
- Recognised by
- Highly Commended in Multimedia at the 2016 National Trust of Australia (NSW) Heritage Awards
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Map · Mapbox · OpenStreetMap
About this print
The dress circle of Marina Picture Palace in Rosebery sits largely intact, its rows of chairs still in place beneath a plasterwork ceiling that has begun to give way. Designed by architect William de Putron and opened on 28 May 1927, the auditorium was built to serve a growing suburban neighbourhood that had no other dedicated cinema. The balcony offered a clear view of a large rectangular proscenium in the classical style. By the time the Marina closed as a cinema on 8 February 1984, the dress circle had long been a fixture of Saturday afternoons in Rosebery.
Brett Patman
The series
Marina Picture Palace
Marina Picture Palace opened on 24 June 1927 on the corner of Gardeners Road and Sutherland Road, between Mascot and Rosebery. The architect William DePruton, who was also one of the original owners, designed it as a 1,210-seat single-screen picture palace, opening with a double bill of Mary Pickford in *Sparrows* and John Barrymore in *The Beloved Rogue*. The Snider & Dean Circuit ran the cinema from 1939 until the early 1960s. After a series of openings and closings under independent operators, the building reopened as the Rosebery Cinema on 1 October 1982 and closed as a working cinema for the final time on 8 February 1984. The stalls were converted into Videomania, a video shop that traded with much of the cinema's original decoration intact, until that closed by 2002. The building was converted to 47 apartments in the 2010s.
Print sizes
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