Every Which Way

Provenance

Camera
NIKON D850
Lens
14.0-24.0 mm f/2.8
Settings
14mm · f/8.0 · 1.3s · ISO 100
Paper
Ilford Galerie Smooth Cotton Rag 310 gsm

Inside Waterfall Sanatorium, debris litters the floor in disarray. Twisted wires and decaying fixtures hang from the ceiling. This former tuberculosis hospital, operational from 1909, now slowly succumbs to the elements.

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
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Type
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Signed, numbered, with COA. Made to order in 10 to 20 business days (framed). Shipped in protective packaging with edition certificate, paper-stock reference and a printed care guide.
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In situ

Every Which Way at Waterfall Sanatorium, a corridor runs deep into the building, its pink-painted walls faded to a chalky.Every Which Way at Waterfall Sanatorium, a corridor runs deep into the building, its pink-painted walls faded to a chalky.Every Which Way at Waterfall Sanatorium, a corridor runs deep into the building, its pink-painted walls faded to a chalky.Every Which Way at Waterfall Sanatorium, a corridor runs deep into the building, its pink-painted walls faded to a chalky.Every Which Way at Waterfall Sanatorium, a corridor runs deep into the building, its pink-painted walls faded to a chalky.
01 PROVENANCE

Print datasheet

Title
Every Which Way
Series
Waterfall Sanatorium
Catalogue
WSA-018
Process
Giclée
Captured
24 June 2018
Camera
NIKON D850
Lens
14.0-24.0 mm f/2.8
Aperture
f/8.0
Shutter
1.3s s
ISO
100
Focal length
14 mm
Paper
Ilford Galerie Smooth Cotton Rag 310 gsm
Paper size
290 × 200 mm
Location
Waterfall, New South Wales, Australia
Recognised by
Highly Commended in Multimedia at the 2016 National Trust of Australia (NSW) Heritage Awards
03 THE STORY

About this print

Debris litters the floor of a room at Waterfall Sanatorium. Twisted wires and decaying fixtures hang from the ceiling above. The walls are plastered, the paint peeling in patches across the surfaces. The floor is concrete, covered in the residue of the collapsed services and the broken fittings of the room.

Waterfall opened on 14 April 1909 as the Hospital for Consumptives and was renamed Waterfall Sanatorium around 1912. It was the largest tuberculosis facility in NSW by 1919, with 788 patients. The sanatorium closed in 1958 when antibiotic therapy and thoracic surgery made the isolation model unnecessary. The older buildings have stood largely disused on the wider site.

04 FROM THE FIELD NOTES

A corridor runs deep into the building, its pink-painted walls faded to a chalky blush. Doors stand open on both sides, timber panels stripped back to bare wood. Ceiling plaster sags in heavy sheets above a motionless fan. Graffiti covers the lower walls in green and pink aerosol. Loose cables, crushed cans and debris litter the concrete floor. Daylight pushes through a doorway at the far end, filling the passage with a flat, diffused glow.

Brett Patman

Waterfall Sanatorium

The series

Waterfall Sanatorium

2016–2018 · 54 photographs

The first patients arrived at the Hospital for Consumptives, Waterfall on 14 April 1909, with initial provision for 180 men. A women's wing opened in May 1912 for 120; by 1919 it had become the largest sanatorium in New South Wales, holding 788 patients. The site sat at about 1,000 feet (305 m), 26 miles (42 km) south of Sydney, on the medical theory that tuberculosis needed 'high and rarefied atmosphere in the country away from the grime and pollution of cities'.

View all in this series →

05 SIZE GUIDE

Print sizes

The anatomy view shows what this finish is as a physical object: paper margin, mat band, frame depth, acrylic profile. The comparison strip shows how each size sits relative to the others at true scale. Click a size or a finish to update both.

Anatomy · true ratio
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