Heavy West Easy East
Provenance
- Camera
- NIKON D750
- Lens
- 24.0-70.0 mm f/2.8
- Settings
- 70mm · f/4.5 · 1/3200 · ISO 800
- Paper
- Ilford Galerie Smooth Cotton Rag 310 gsm
A stretch of Parramatta Road unfolds, its aged asphalt bearing the weight of constant traffic. This historic artery, once a colonial track connecting Sydney and Parramatta, now carries the city's ceaseless flow, reflecting its enduring urban narrative.
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
- Heavy West Easy East
- Series
- Parramatta Road
- Catalogue
- PRO-011
- Process
- Giclée
- Captured
- 4 September 2016
- Camera
- NIKON D750
- Lens
- 24.0-70.0 mm f/2.8
- Aperture
- f/4.5
- Shutter
- 1/3200 s
- ISO
- 800
- Focal length
- 70 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
Late afternoon light falls hard across the brick pavement under a laundry awning near Lloyd George Avenue. A lone shopping trolley sits against the wall at number 452. Timber power poles and green route signs line the footpath. Ashfield 4, Petersham 7, Sydney 13. Traffic banks up westbound. The brick paving is cracked and uneven, littered with small debris. Shadows from the awning posts stripe the path in long diagonals.
Brett Patman
The series
Parramatta Road
Parramatta Road follows a much older route, used for thousands of years by the Wangal, Wallumedegal, Burramattagal, and Cadigal peoples before colonial adoption around 1789 to 1791. Today it is one of Sydney's main thoroughfares: 23 km of heavy traffic, with used car dealers at the Parramatta end ("Auto Alley") and a mix of historic shopfronts, new apartment blocks, and WestConnex demolition at the eastern end. The series moves between streetscape and individual buildings - 107 Parramatta Road in Annandale (an 1890s Victorian Filigree shopfront with original living quarters above accessible only by ladder), the Marco Polo Motel at Summer Hill, the Olympia Milk Bar in Stanmore, Mario's Meat Market, and shopfronts whose ground floors have been busy for a century while the rooms above have been empty for fifty years.
Print sizes
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