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Photographs tell stories

27/4/2025

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Stop. Look Both Ways
by Murray Savidan


Stop. Look Both Ways, Photography by Murray Savidan is a book of non-commissioned photographs taken from 1967 through to 2024. 
     It is not a celebration of Savidan’s career as he is much more than a street photographer. In fact, he has been a leader in the field for over 50 years as a fashion photographer, commercial director, studio photographer and street photographer both in Aotearoa and overseas. Savidan has also worked in film, shooting films and commercials and working as a cameraman and director.
      I was very keen to review this book. As an amateur photographer myself and someone who follows many Instagram pages of street photographers I was fascinated to see if street photography has changed over the last 50 years or if the essence was still the same in 1967 compared to now. Clearly technology and processing images has changed, but has the relationship between the photographer and subject changed?  
      The large, linen-bound, hardback book transports you to 188 images from Japan, Tanzania, Zanzibar, Cuba, New Orleans, Egypt, Rome, Shanghai, Greece, New Zealand, Nepal, Germany, France, Australia and more. 
      I enjoyed referring to the image index to see where the photographs were taken. Did I identify the location correctly? 
      Savidan goes one step further and, when it added to the image, he shared more information or his thoughts about it; for instance page 55, Madagascar, 2011. ‘This dignified man told me proudly that he was 83 years old.’ And, page 182, Peru, 2008. ‘We stopped here briefly on the train to Cusco. It was about 14,000 feet above sea level.’ It was also helpful to have the year and technical details of what camera was used.
      I was not surprised to learn that, growing up, Savidan’s parents had a subscription to the National Geographic magazine. As a small boy he was transported from Remuera to new environments, cultures and people. You can see the influence of this in his multi-cultural photography.
      When you pore over the 226 pages you quickly realise that Savidan ignores the rules when it comes to composition and editing. You could argue that several images are too dark to see the fine details. But it is also intriguing to think why has he done this? Does he want the image to portray an emotion or does Savidan want you to slow down and look deeper? 
      You also get a sense of Savidan breaking the rules when it comes to the composition of the book. The images are not ordered chronologically or by location. It makes the experience of looking through the book a fun adventure for your brain, as you are taken from Hue, Vietnam to Antananarivo, Madagascar in a sweeping look. 
      Savidan is a photographer who likes to tell stories, but his name is not on every New Zealanders lips when they are asked to list New Zealand photographers. Savidan either shies away from the limelight or is the perfect street photographer as his focus is blending into the environment and capturing a story or moment. With no ambition to receive thousands of likes for his image on Instagram or Facebook, but to capture and experience something unique. Similar to catch-and-release fishing, you have a moment of joy and you can choose to share the experience through an image with others or not.
      Stop. Look Both Ways is a fascinating insight into Savidan’s travel and experiences in Aotearoa, New Zealand and overseas. I enjoyed the experiences and felt honoured that he was willing to share these unique images in this book. 

Review by Renee Hollis
Title: Stop. Look Both Ways
Author:  Murray Savidan
Publisher: Ugly Hill Press
ISBN: 9781738583676
RRP: $70
Available: bookshops
​
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Atlas a work of genius

15/4/2025

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Atlas of the New Zealand Wars
Volume One 1834—1864,
Early Engagements to the Second Taranaki War
by Derek Leask


​​Derek Leask’s first volume of the ‘Atlas of the New Zealand Wars’  is a magisterial book in every respect. Its size and weight makes reading it on one’s knee a definite hazard to blood circulation, but its authority as a record of the seminal events in our history is at least commensurate with its bulk. James Belich, arguably the doyen of Land Wars historians, says ‘Derek Leask’s Atlas is a magnificent labour of love. It adds a whole new — visual — dimension to our understanding of the New Zealand Wars.’
     Thirty years in the making, this eagerly-awaited work has benefited from the author’s career as a diplomat both in Wellington and various European capitals, with all that that implies for access, especially, to works of cartography that may otherwise have languished unseen. It must also be said that Leask’s status as a polymath has contributed hugely to the success of this outstanding book, for his academic fields do not include History per se.
      Onward, then, to the work itself. At the risk of sounding fanciful, it can be suggested that an historical atlas is the nearest one can get to an historical video, for the shortcomings of history books can include events that move too swiftly or too sweepingly for ready understanding. This is particularly the case where time and distance act as barriers to comprehension, and in that context the presence of maps that are not only contemporary, but long-hidden in some cases, acts as an entrée both to analysis and evaluation alike.
     Certainly, deriving full value from some of the maps requires dedication with a magnifying glass, but what would you? Atlases are not novels, and deserve to be pored over in the knowledge that, given their original size, the incorporation of contemporary maps is itself a masterpiece of the bookbinder’s art. Into the bargain, the author’s crisp, comprehensive and scholarly prose provides the best backup possible to the stories depicted in the maps.

       Of more concern to this reviewer was that criticism of the maps originating in the fact that the prevalence of maps drawn by British or colonial cartographers somehow indicates bias in compilation. Such criticism not only overlooks the part played by cartography in warfare’s pre-aviation age, but is unfair in not recognising that, because Maori did not habitually use maps, their absence in all but three cases does not constitute bias.
       Similarly, further criticism of the Atlas has centred upon some choosing to see it as a reinforcement of the notion that the New Zealand Wars were bipolar in nature, featuring only Crown vs Maori with no recognition of the variety of motives that precipitated a variety of stances, coalitions and alliances among kupapa during a period of some three and a half decades. Such criticism overlooks the fact that alliances during any period of civil war necessarily shift in nature and operation, including the English and American versions at ten years and some five years respectively. Not to mention that Charles Edward Stuart faced more Scots than he had at his back during the final battle of the later Jacobite rebellion at Culloden.
       More positive, perhaps, is the impression that the single thing that makes this Atlas a work of genius is an Introduction—front, centre and unmissable—that outlines the central themes of the Wars as they shifted over the period under review. ‘Land and sovereignty’ says Leask, ‘were two strands of the same rope’ and his Atlas shows this all the way through. That is not contested.
     ​  However, one wonders. This reviewer has long pondered the extent to which land alienation in New Zealand was a consequence rather than an aim of contested sovereignty so that the Wars of the Sixties, at bottom, represented something of a ‘High Noon’ in the vexed question of who was to rule. In that context, perhaps the interaction of Hone Heke with the Kororareka flagpole was a little more than serial vandalism?  

Review by MJ Burr

​Title: Atlas of the New Zealand Wars, Volume One 1834—1864, Early Engagements to the Second Taranaki War
Author: Derek Leask
Publisher: Auckland University Press
ISBN: 9781776711291
RRP: $89.99
Available: bookshops

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