The call from the picture editor on The Australian came early on a Tuesday. Not unusual, but the pictorial brief was to photograph inside the Freemasons’ Grand Lodge in the centre of Sydney, drawing back the veil of secrecy around the organisation which features in Dan Brown’s new book, The Lost Symbol.

The end result in situ in The Australian. See below for how it unfolded

I’m not a fan of Dan Brown, nor do I profess to be Freemansony. I knew very little about the subject when I walked into the lift at the Freemasons United Grand Lodge..

I knew that with Freemasons there were handshakes, secret passwords, aprons and something to do with architecture.

Accompanied by a reporter, we arrived to be met by a handful of members from the NSW chapter, including the Grand Master, Dr Gregory H Levenston, who accompanied us on the tour.

Naively, I thought there’d be dungeons or men in robes chanting Latin carrying candles through dimly lit halls, but no such luck. Just four blokes with smiles from ear to ear welcoming us into their Lodge.

The one common theme throughout the Lodge is the Masons use of the symbolism of the tools of the medieval stonemason, the Square and Compass, which in one form or shape appeared in most of the artwork which adorned the walls and appears on many old Freemason halls dotted across rural Australia.

Deputy Chris Craven explaining some of the regalia.

The aim of the tour was to lift the veil of secrecy from what the Freemasons, a fraternal society that exists all over the world with its origins tracing back to medieval times.

As I discovered, the society shares with a philosophical belief in a Supreme or “higher” being. A giant “G” hangs from most of the Lodge rooms, which I was told stood for “The Grand Architect”. As it was explained, the Grand Architect could represent anything from Vishnu, Jesus Christ or anything you personally regarded as “a higher being”.

Photographically, the brief was to capture the experience of the Masonry tour, as it was one of the only times media had been through the doors, despite it being freely open to the public.

So, I shot it as it happened, walking room to room, floor to floor, watching our guide, Deputy Chris Craven, a Deputy Grand Secretary with the Freemasons, explain the history and relevance of the various objects, old clothing, books, artworks and furniture decorating the Lodge. Shooting in the light, at a very high ISO rating, ensured I had moody frames that were sharp… mostly.

An example of what we call 'generics', that can be used alongside a range of articles relevant to the subject matter.

I also shot various generics for any other stories relating to the Freemasons. As it turned out, The Daily Telegraph was reviewing Brown’s book and used them as illustrations the day after we published.

Result: As the shots were used in Sydney's Daily Telegraph

The photographic exception was of a portrait of the Grand Master, Dr Gregory H Levenston, whom, after the tour, I asked to pose in the room I felt reflected this dark, relatively little known society. He had already been put through the press ringer, by a TV news crew who had asked him to perform every setup idea under the sun - walking this way, that way, opening that cupboard. You get the idea.

Grand Master Gregory Levenston before the final shot.

So after the TV crew had left, I ushered him into one of the lodge rooms for what promised to be a very quick portrait. I used A/L at 2000 ISO and metered his skin tone standing underneath a tungsten light. The beauty of the room was its moodiness, with spot lighting, down lighting and little incandescent light bulbs scattered from the roof to the floor. Simply, it was a matter of getting this Grand Master into a reasonable composition and letting the lighting do the work for me.

Subtly underexposing the image ensured the background highlights weren’t too blown out and resulted in the image being saturated in colour and tone. Asking the GM to look towards the tungsten downlights showered him in a warm yellow glow against the sky blue roof and red painted walls.

Getting my shot: The Grand Master in the light

We left as quickly we arrived, into the lift, onto the street, into a cab and on to our next job.

Sadly, no-one was chanting Latin at the next assignment either.

11 comments

Show oldest | newest first

    • Michael says:

      06:08am | 23/09/09

      Yeah shame about the supreme being part, I started reading about their organisation after I had heard lots of references to them usually negative, I liked what i read and was really interested in joining, but I refuse to lie about what I believe, even if religion is forbidden to be discussed once inside, what honour would I have if i lied to join? Apparently there’s splinter organisations that allow atheists, but I never went looking for them.

    • John says:

      09:12am | 23/09/09

      really interesting insight, thanks.

    • Lyndon says:

      11:12am | 24/09/09

      awesome work. thanks for sharing your experience

    • Matt says:

      12:29pm | 25/09/09

      The Grand Architect…is Jesus? Cmon.

      It’s Lucifer. And no I’m not religious…it’s logical that Lucifer schemes and plans whereas Jesus loves and lets be.

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Q1hnkp5Zqw - See what this Freemason Shriner says.

    • Erika says:

      02:04pm | 25/09/09

      A few years back, I had the privilege of attending a full Masonic ceremony as a guest of Victoria’s then youngest Mason. As the granddaughter of a ranking Mason who rarely talked about his secret boys club, it was fascinating to peer inside this usually secretive world. The Masons are being forced to change - not just by Dan Brown, but by their diminishing number and a need to attract new members to ensure their survival into a new generation. Beautiful photos!

    • Toby says:

      06:01pm | 26/09/09

      Always a fan of your work Fui Fui Mooy Mooy!

    • lauderdale says:

      09:22am | 05/10/09

      There are indeed Masonic Bodies, The Grand Orient de France being one, which permit Atheists and Agnostics to be members and which make no demand that their Brethren believe in a “Supreme Being”. There are also Organisations such as Le Droit Humain and at least one other Co-Masonic Body in Australia which have women members fully equal to and working in their Lodges with men.

    • Charlie says:

      03:00pm | 27/10/09

      Indeed, the French initially founded the Freemasons, or at least the first ‘freemasonesque’ assembly. They are derived not from the old Knights Templar, as some believe; but rather travelling masons. Those masons would form rituals and practises which were handed around to other masons as they travelled from one cathedral building site to the next. It was also the first effective guild in medieval times in Northern Europe.

      Fantastic pictures. You have captured the enchanting world of the Masons in a few photos better than D.Brown could ever in mere writing.

    • John says:

      12:19pm | 25/03/10

      Maybe a stupid question but would all the members be considered agnostic? or am I reading it incorrectly?

    • Servaas says:

      08:21am | 11/12/10

      Well, the bottom guys could probably be anything including agnostics. They are mostly well-meaning guys looking to join a society as they have, like all of us the need to ‘belong’. That is the many in the lower degrees who would call me a liar for writing this and the truth is they honestly think I’m a liar, seeing that as far as they know it is only a gathering of men longing to be boys who form a gang and share some classic moments together. The ‘G’ is however, as the one reader mentioned above, Lucifer. That is their big secret, Jesus is according to them the fake Son of God and Lucifer is actually God’s son. It is at the end of the day a very technical, yet equally evil, form of Satan worship. The average Freemason I’d say could be classified as an agnostic in practice, although they would call themselves many different things while the higher degree guys worship more specific. An actual atheist would have no reason to partake in such a fraternity into the higher degrees. But then again, atheism itself is very suspect and is rather a theoretical concept as no man acts as if there is no God or higher being.

 

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