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In 2013 Digby was an artist-in- residence in Oaxaca, Mexico where she photographed Day of the Dead celebrations. Together with Sarah Gibson, she developed the blog “Journeys to the Underworld” exploring the Mexican attitude to death.
Digby Duncan's documentary is very much of its time, but it's also an essential document of the gay rights movement in Australia. With footage and interviews from the protest movement of the late 1970s, including a number of the original '78ers (the people marching in the first Sydney Mardi Gras), it showcases community reactions including ...
- Digby Duncan
Digby Duncan was born in Albury NSW. As a young adult she moved to Sydney working as a public accountant, a documentary filmmaker and film producer for many years before returning to photography. Her first solo exhibitions, Sea Script and Lingua Marina , Gallery East 2003 and 2004, captured the textures and calligraphy-like patterns formed by ...
- Sydney, NSW, 2000 Australia
- sandy@arthere.com.au
- 0402 112 755
Digby Duncan | Artist Exhibiting artist at 'Things I Wanted To Say But Never Did' | Group Exhibition. Opens to the public 4th September 2019, 6pm - 8pm. Tell us about yourself.
Ways of thinking. Australia, 1990. Film. Please note. Sorry, we don't have images or video for this item. In a remote Central Australian community, a young Warlpiri couple are in conflict. Jean Napanangka wants to stay with her people, but her husband, Alan Jungarrayi, wants to move to the town to find work.
This scrapbook was compiled by photographer and filmmaker Digby Duncan. It documents the first Mardi Gras, a street festival turned riot, held on the evening of 24 June 1978 as part of the Day of International Gay Solidarity, organised by the Gay Solidarity Group.